She’s working on a biography of Avram Davidson, one of those truly great and irritable iconoclasts who occasionally grace this benighted field. She got to know him in the last few years of his life when their peripatets crossed and he lived a ferry-boat ride away in Bremerton. The book will be a wow.
Eileen’s also, like me, been threatening people with novels for the last, say, 20–25 years now… (I’ve read parts of two of them and they’re both swelclass="underline" I want to read the whole things, right now.)
But the best of what she’s done is in this here book you just read (you are reading this last, aren’t you?). There’s even the recipe from the Tiptree Bake Sale Book (and I know from personal experience she makes one mean cherry cobbler, too). There’s “Nirvana High,” which is a collaboration with Leslie What (who was at that same mid-’70s Clarion workshop and is just now publishing her first novel). There’s also that rarity — a four-way collaboration that is not a joke-story, “Green Fire”; I don’t know who did exactly what — I know that they made it work.
I either read, or heard Eileen read, an earlier version of “Computer Friendly” — I was doing my Sidney Greenstreet imitation for weeks afterwards (“I don’t know what you’re going to do, sir, but by gad, I’m sure it will be astounding, simply astounding! Meehehe-hee.”) What I wasn’t prepared for in this final version was the depth of feeling — nay, poignancy — of its central concept, and the seeming ease with which Ms. Gunn brought the whole thing off.
And she never ever takes the easy way out — there are plenty of mediocre writers out there who can do that, and fast, too! — she follows up on what the stories want to be saying.
Take “Fellow Americans,” for instance. She wrote the story for the original anthology Alternate Presidents. (When it was published, the book had a wonderful, evocative cover of Thomas Dewey holding up the misprisioned Chicago Tribune with its headline, “Truman Defeats Dewey”…) On its surface, the story seems to be about Richard Nixon — The Tricky Dick Show — and there’s Dan and Marilyn Quayle (“S. Danforth Quayle? Wasn’t he the Mayor of Duckburg?” — Calvin Trillin) — and I guarantee, if you’ve read it, you’ll never forget Nixon’s story of taking LSD and Pat crying for the music trapped in the piano… But this is just the outside — fine as it is — of the story. Yeah, Dick Nixon was veep in the ’50s, blew the ’60 election, and the Senate try, entered showbiz. And Dan is the same dweeb veep he was when the story was written.
But the election Eileen chose to write about was the 1964 one. Goldwater won. Not only that; he was re-elected in ’68. (It shows how much times have changed that, before his death a few years ago, the real Goldwater sounded like a reasonable man compared to the flaming Nazi gasbags who’ve taken over his Republican Party…) Eileen’s story is Goldwater’s story — the Party’s story is Nixon’s showbiz one. Goldwater was the Republicans’ Harry S Truman, setting up, in Gore Vidal’s word, The Imperial State — the one we’ve been living with the last 40 years or so.
This was the quietest (and funniest) story in an anthology not noted otherwise for subtlety. (As someone once said, in American politics, there are still people pissed off about the Compromise of 1850 and the Gadsden Purchase…) Ms. Gunn took a Cold Hard Look at the Whole Thing, not just the alternate election she wrote about. She did not do the Easy Thing — which would have been: Goldwater and Nuclear Defoliants in Viet Nam.
And there’s never been a story like the title one of this collection. It’s pure distillation of the ’80s/’90s Power Cleavage/Dress for Success syndrome which swept the business schools and worlds like that year’s Tortilla and Screen Door Jesuses. The story has something to say.
As do they all.
It’s so good to finally have them all in one place you can reach for in the bookshelf, instead of looking in ten or twelve anthologies and magazines.
I couldn’t be prouder of Eileen, or of this collection, if it were of me, and this book was one of mine.
March 30, 2004
author biography
Eileen Gunn is a writer and editor. Her fiction has received the Nebula Award in the United States and the Sense of Gender Award in Japan. She has been nominated for the Hugo, Philip K. Dick, and World Fantasy awards, and short-listed for the James Tiptree, Jr. award. She was the editor/publisher of the edgy and influential Infinite Matrix webzine (2001–2008), and edited, with L. Timmel Duchamp, The WisCon Chronicles 2: Provocative essays on feminism, race, revolution, and the future.
Originally from the Boston area, she has lived in Los Angeles, New York, and San Francisco, and now makes her home in Seattle, with her husband, the typographer and book designer John D. Berry. She has an extensive background in technology advertising, and was Director of Advertising and Sales Promotion at Microsoft in the mid-1980s; her stories sometimes draw on her understanding of the Byzantine dynamics of the corporate workplace.
Ms. Gunn recently retired from the board of directors of the Clarion West Writers Workshop after twenty-two years of service, and is presently at work on a novel and on a biography of the writer Avram Davidson. Her website is at www.eileengunn.com.