Long before 1961, when Yuri Gagarin and Alan Shephard became the first humans to journey beyond Earth's atmosphere, writers envisioned spaceflight and life on other planets. These authors, all born before 1900, took their readers to the moon ... beyond ... and into our future.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Charles R. Tanner (1896-1974)

Charles R. Tanner was born in Cincinnati, OH on 17 Feb 1896 and died Jan 1974. He and his wife Frances had three children: Ann Marie, Jim and Robert.

Tanner was an American science fiction and fantasy author who wrote in the late 1930s and early 1940s. His first short story was "The Color of Space", published in the March 1930 issue of Science Wonder Stories. Read it HERE ...

Meet the Author ... 
Originally published in Amazing Stories, February 1941


Back about 1905, a little chap about nine was browsing among a pile of books and magazines which had been left by his recently deceased grandfather. There were Strand magazines, and Cosmopolitans and Argosies, and every one had some sort of science-fiction story in it. There was “The First Men on the Moon,” by H.G. Wells; “A Round Trip to the Year 2000,” by William Wallace Cook; and I don’t know how many others.

All day long, that little chap lay on his belly, surrounded by magazines, and read, and marveled, and wondered. The next day, little Charley Tan­ner went to the library and looked and looked, and went home with a book called "Starland" by Robert Ball. Another sci­ence fiction fan was born.

From that day to this, I’ve read science-fiction wherever and whenever I’ve found it. First, I found it only in the old Munsey publications; then one day, in a drug store, I picked up a mag­azine called The Electric Experimenter in which there was a story called “The New Adventures of Baron Munchausen.” From then on, I was sold on that magazine. I started reading All-Story because it printed a story named “Under the Moons of Mars” by Norman Bean. Norman Bean is Edgar Rice Bur­roughs now, but I still read his Martian stories with interest, in fact, I just laid one down to write this article.

I started reading Cavalier when it published “The Second Deluge” by Garrett P. Serviss. And I remember sitting on a dock in New York, waiting with my company to go to, France, and reading the second part of “Palos of Dog Star Pack,” by J.U. Giesy.

Having made the world safe for, I returned home to find, during the next years, that science-fiction was all too scarce. And then came the day when I saw, with a delight that I can hardly express, that a new magazine was about to appear, a magazine devoted entirely to science-fiction. Only those old fans who have followed the course of this magazine from the beginning can imagine the impatience with which I awaited, and the thrill with which I read, that first copy, that April 1926, edition of Amazing Stories


In a few years there were two magazines — then three. And one day one of the magazines offered a prize contest, and I won first prize! I was an author! I could write! I sat down and began to write anything and everything, in the firm belief that I was going to be rich in about three months. But alas, it didn’t work out quite that way. I had concentrated so much on the reading of science-fiction that the only thing I could write really well was that form of story. So I began to specialize. 

Thus it came about that I wrote my most successful stories to date — “Tumithak of the 
Corridors” and its sequel. I’m still proud of that story and of the fact that after eight years,the old readers of AMAZING Stories still remember it and occasionally mention it in their letters.

But, beginning in 1933, a series of misfortunes too long to be recounted here made me abandon writing for several years. Just when I believed that I was done for good, a letter came from Amazing Stories requesting a story for their first issue under the banner of Ziff Davis. Dubiously, and yet with hope in my heart, I wrote “The Vanishing Diamonds,” in which I introduced a character which I still think is the best I’ve conceived, to date — Professor Isaac N. Stillwell.

Even the thrill of selling my first story was nothing to the thrill of the Chicago Convention. For the first time, I met fans that I had known of for years; for the first time, I met authors whom I had admired for ages; for the first time, I talked with the editor of my favorite magazine — and sold him a story!

And when it was all over, I went back to my home in Cincinnati, and sat down at my typewriter - and I've practically been there ever since. I hope this enthusiasm keeps up, for if it does; you’ll be hearing from me again, I assure you. ~Charles R. Tanner.