SciScoop Science News header image

Sylvia Engdahl’s Novels Come Back To The Future

Books Sunday, August 3, 2003 . This is a SciScoop post by Ricky James

  • Share/Bookmark

Sylvia’s first published novel, Enchantress From The Stars (1970), is also her most successful. Enchantress was an Honor Book runner-up for the 1971 Newbery Award, widely recognized as the highest honor given in children’s literature, and one of the very few science-fiction works to ever be considered for that honor. Enchantress later won the Children’s Literature Association’s 1990 Phoenix Award, which is given each year “from the perspective of time” to a children’s book first published 20 years prior to the award’s presentation. It also was a finalist for the Book Sense Book of the Year in the Rediscovery category for 2002, the same year a little book called Seabiscuit won in the Adult Nonfiction category. Out of print for many years, Enchantress From The Stars was first reissued in 2001 by Walker as well as this year by Penguin Books, with beautiful all-new illustrations by Leo and Diane Dillon. An excellent in-depth review is here.

Also reprinted this year is a revised version of another novel set in the Enchantress universe, The Far Side of Evil (1971). This is the only teen novel I’m aware of that depicts a heroic captured spy resisting torture to stop a nuclear war and allow development of space travel – a Cold War era storyline that still resonates today.

Sylvia’s trilogy about Noren, a independently minded young scientist who lives a life at odds with a planetary society based on religion, has recently been published in a single 700+ page volume as adult science fiction entitled Children of The Star by Meisha Merlin Publishing. This compilation includes This Star Shall Abide (1972), Beyond the Tomorrow Mountains (1973), and The Doors of the Universe (1981) – novels that made a very deep personal impression on me as a teen. This Star Shall Abide won a 1973 Christopher Award for “affirmation of the highest values of the human spirit.” Other Christopher Award winners in various media include the movies Gandhi and Schindler’s List, the PBS television documentary The Civil War, the pop song We Are The World, and the book Roots by Alex Haley.

Sylvia has also published quite a few scholarly articles including “Perspective on the Future: The Quest of Space Age Young People“, “The Mythic Role of Space Fiction” and “The Evolutionary Significance of the Metanormal“. She also published a non-fiction book detailing the history of belief in other planets called The Planet Girded Suns.

As you can see, there are awards for sci-fi worth winning besides the Hugo, and Sylvia Engdahl has joined very exclusive ranks in receiving those awards for her work. Time spent delving into her writings is time well spent, for they are truly works that have stood the test of time. Congratulations and thanks, Sylvia!


3 Responses to Sylvia Engdahl’s Novels Come Back To The Future

apsmith

August 3rd, 2003 at 8:17 pm

I hadn’t heard of her, but I had some similar experiences with SF authors who focused on the younger audience when I was a teenager. Good memories – and nice to know of another one to look at and point my children to!

Avatar

Sylvia Engdahl

August 3rd, 2003 at 10:36 pm

Hi, Ricky! It’s really good to meet you here at SciScoop. Back in the old days we corresponded the hard way, via U.S. Snail. It’s hard to believe now, but we managed to co-edit and co-author several books that way; since we lived on opposite sides of the country we rarely met face-to-face. I’ve become so used to online communication (in which I’ve been involved one way or another since 1985) that I can scarcely remember what it was like to be without it.

Ricky is too modest about his stories! They are excellent, and were considered excellent by our editor at Atheneum, one of the top children’s book editors in the field. But they were deliberately directed to kids who hadn’t read much science fiction previously, as were my own books; that was the market for which I was publishing. So they shouldn’t be judged by the SF short-story market’s criteria.

To add to what he said about about my novel The Far Side of Evil, while it’s true that its setting is a planet in a situation comparable to our Cold War, it’s not about the Cold War–it’s about what I call the Critical Stage, which on our world has lasted somewhat longer than I expected when I wrote the novel during the Apollo era.
Hence the revision of the new edition. Please don’t anybody read the old edition–it’s not convincing in the light of what we now know after 30 years of neglecting the space program. In the new Walker edition, statements about the significance of space travel have been brought up to date. And incidentally, though the novel is for teens–older teens than Enchantress from the Stars–a great many adults also like it. (The characters in it are all adults.)

What Ricky didn’t mention here is that I’m a strong advocate of space colonization and have expressed my thoughts about the reasons it’s essential to our survival in some detail at my website, with links to other places on the Web that focus on why we must colonize space more than on the technical details of space flight. I’d welcome comments! Now that I’ve found this place I’ll probably be writing here about space here, too (as well as about other things). In the meantime I hope everyone will take a look at my Space Quotes to Ponder page, which includes what many well-known people have written about why humankind must expand beyond our home world.

Sylvia

Avatar

Joshua

August 4th, 2003 at 11:38 am

Hi Sylvia,
Just thought I’d say hi! Welcome to Sci-scoop.

Avatar

Comment Form

About

SciScoop Science News is a forum for news, views and controversial conjectures. Please contact us if would like to submit a guest post.

SciScoop Top Authors