I’ve got three people I’m going to mention for birthdays on July 11. Hugh B. Cave, Cordwainer Smith, and Roy G. Krenkel. Continue reading
Tag Archives: Roy G. Krenkel
And Still More Birthdays
Before I look at several folks born on this date, please indulge me by allowing me to explain one of the reasons I do these posts.
No, it’s not because I have nothing else to say. Anyone who has been reading this blog for a while should know that usually isn’t the case. (Well, okay, maybe a little.)
One of the main reasons I do these posts are for historical reasons. The fields of science fiction, fantasy, horror, and weird fiction have long histories. Aside from a few well-known authors such as Lovecraft, Howard, Asimov, Clarke, and a few others, most of the writers of the past are unknown to the general reading public.
Why does this matter, you ask? Because every few years some new writer will write a novel/short story/screenplay/ransom note/etc that young readers, critics, and other writers will hail as original and groundbreaking. Only it won’t be. It will have been done years or decades before by someone else. And usually done better, although YMMV as to how much better. The new work will be shinier, have more up to date technology, and express the correct sociopolitical opinions du jour. But the central conceit will be anything but original.
IOW, those who fail to learn from the past are doomed to repeat it. Case in point the undead myth that women weren’t represented in the field before [insert year of speaker’s birth here]. This is one of those myths that just won’t die, in spite of some of us trying to put a stake in its heart.
There was a conversation that came across my Twitter feed yesterday (and is probably still going on for all I know; I am on Twitter sporadically these days) in which someone stated that Asimov, Clarke, and Heinlein came to dominate the science fiction field in their later years while many writers contemporary to the time these three did their most well-known work and were just as admired and respected became forgotten. And while this topic is better suited for another post, part of what I’m trying to do with these birthday posts is to prevent some of these formerly well-respected but now obscure writers from being completely forgotten.
So, with that in mind, here are today’s birthdays. Continue reading
Roy G. Krenkel Was Born 98 Years Ago
I’m trying to get ready to start the second summer term, so this is going to be short. But I wanted to point out that today was Roy G. Krenkel’s 98th birthday. Krenkel is best remembered today for his work with early comics giants such as Al Williamson and paperback covers for Ace, DAW, and Lancer.
Krenkel was a friend of Frank Frazetta, of whom Frazetta said, “I met Roy Krenkel back in 1949 or 1950, and he has never ceased to be a constant source of inspiration to me—a truly conscientious artist who will not tolerate incompetence.”
Much of Krenkel’s best remembered work was for fantasy adventure, particularly Edgar Rice Burroughs and Robert E. Howard. Edgar Rice Burroughs grandson Danton Burroughs considered him to be one of the great ERB illustrators.