Brian Aldiss

Writer

Popular As Brian Wilson Aldiss

Birthday August 18, 1925

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace East Dereham, Norfolk, England

DEATH DATE 2017-8-19, Oxford, England (92 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

#52522 Most Popular

1925

Brian Wilson Aldiss (18 August 1925 – 19 August 2017) was an English writer, artist and anthology editor, best known for science fiction novels and short stories.

Brian Wilson Aldiss was born on 18 August 1925, above his paternal grandfather's draper's shop in Dereham, Norfolk.

When Aldiss's grandfather died, his father, Bill (the younger of two sons), sold his share in the shop and the family left Dereham.

Aldiss's mother, Dot, was the daughter of a builder.

He had an older sister who was stillborn and a younger sister.

As a three-year-old, Aldiss started to write stories which his mother would bind and put on a shelf.

1939

At the age of 6, Aldiss went to Framlingham College, but moved to Devon and was sent to board at West Buckland School in 1939 after the outbreak of World War II.

As a child, he discovered the pulp magazine Astounding Science Fiction.

He eventually read all the novels by H. G. Wells, Robert Heinlein, and Philip K. Dick.

1943

In 1943, he joined the Royal Signals and saw military action in Burma.

His army experience inspired the novel Hothouse and the Horatio Stubbs second and third books, A Soldier Erect and A Rude Awakening, respectively.

After the war, he worked as a bookseller in Oxford.

He also wrote a number of short pieces for a booksellers' trade journal about life in a fictitious bookshop, which attracted the attention of Charles Monteith, an editor at the publisher Faber and Faber.

1954

According to ISFDB, his first speculative fiction in print was the short story Criminal Record, published by John Carnell in the July 1954 issue of Science Fantasy.

In 1954, The Observer newspaper ran a competition for a short story set in the year 2500.

Aldiss's story Not For An Age was ranked third following a reader vote.

The Brightfount Diaries had been a minor success, and Faber asked Aldiss if he had any more writing they could look at with a view to publishing.

1955

As a result, Faber and Faber published Aldiss's first book, The Brightfount Diaries (1955), a 200-page novel in diary form about the life of a sales assistant in a bookshop.

About this time he also began to write science fiction for various magazines.

Several of his stories appeared in 1955, including three in monthly issues of New Worlds, also edited by Carnell.

1957

Aldiss confessed to being a science fiction author, to the delight of the publishers, who had a number of science fiction fans in high places, and so his first science fiction book was published, a collection of short stories entitled Space, Time and Nathaniel (Faber, 1957).

By this time, his earnings from writing matched his wages in the bookshop, and he made the decision to become a full-time writer.

1958

Aldiss led the voting for Most Promising New Author of 1958 at the next year's Worldcon, but finished behind "no award".

He was the literary editor of the Oxford Mail newspaper from 1958 to 1969.

1960

His byline reads either Brian W. Aldiss or simply Brian Aldiss, except for occasional pseudonyms during the mid-1960s.

Greatly influenced by science fiction pioneer H. G. Wells, Aldiss was a vice-president of the international group in Wells' honour.

He was (with Harry Harrison) co-president of the Birmingham Science Fiction Group.

He was elected president of the British Science Fiction Association in 1960.

1961

In 1961, he edited an anthology of reprinted short science fiction for the British paperback publisher Penguin Books under the title Penguin Science Fiction.

1963

This was remarkably successful, went into numerous reprints, and was followed up by two further anthologies: More Penguin Science Fiction (1963) and Yet More Penguin Science Fiction (1964).

1964

Around 1964, he and long-time collaborator Harry Harrison started the first ever journal of science fiction criticism, Science Fiction Horizons, which during its brief span of two issues published articles and reviews by such authors as James Blish, and featured a discussion among Aldiss, C. S. Lewis, and Kingsley Amis in the first issue and an interview with William S. Burroughs in the second.

1967

In 1967 Algis Budrys listed Aldiss, J. G. Ballard, Roger Zelazny and Samuel R. Delany as "an earthshaking new kind of" writers, and leaders of the New Wave.

Aldiss supported the New Wave movement, helping the magazine New Worlds to get financial backing from a 1967 Arts Council grant and publishing some of his more experimental work in the magazine.

Besides his own writings, he edited a number of anthologies.

For Faber he edited Introducing SF, a collection of stories typifying various themes of science fiction, and Best Fantasy Stories.

1969

He wrote the short story "Supertoys Last All Summer Long" (1969), the basis for the Stanley Kubrick-developed Steven Spielberg film A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001).

Aldiss was associated with the British New Wave of science fiction.

1973

The later anthologies enjoyed the same success as the first, and all three were eventually published together as The Penguin Science Fiction Omnibus (1973), which also went into a number of reprints.

1999

Aldiss was named a Grand Master by the Science Fiction Writers of America in 1999 and inducted by the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2004.

He received two Hugo Awards, one Nebula Award and one John W. Campbell Memorial Award.