A Bertram Chandler
Article - My Life and Grimes
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All Aboard For Armageddon
Anjin-sama and the Admiral Revisited
Appreciation of Jack Vance
Around the World in 23,741 Days
Australian S. F. Fans
Better a Bad Review Than None At All - Perhaps
Cook's Tour of Convenience Food Country
Curse of Ned Kelly
Death of a Thousand Cuts
Durable Desperadoes
Ellison Show
Gold is Where You Find It
Grimes-San and the Naked Lady
Grimesish Grumberlings
Heard But Not Seen
If This is Tokyo it Must Be Friday
International SF
Japanese Branch of the SF Family
John Grimes - Autobiographical Notes
John W. Campbell
Kelly Country Foreward
Late (Introduction)
Lost In Space And Time Without (Alas!) Ferdinand Feghoot
Misplaced Apostrophe and Other Crimes
My Life and Grimes
My Life and Grimes
My Life and Grimes'
Notes on the Battle of Kiel
Nothing Like a Good Whinge
Nudism In Fiction
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Times Ain't What They Were - But Were They Ever?
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My Life and Grimes
I was born on March 28, 1912, in Aldershot, in the county of Hampshire, in England. Most of my earlier years, however, were spent in the small market town of Beccles, in Suffolk. (Just in case anybody is interested, Beccles is the birthplace of David Frost.) I was exposed to education first at the Peddars Lane Council School and then at the Sir John Leman Secondary School which was founded by John Leman during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. I pride myself on my collection of neckties-British Merchant Navy, three major shipping companies, one learned society-but an Old School Tie I do not possess, although I could obtain one if I so desired. The reason for this is that I am not one of those who regard their schooldays as the happiest days of their lives.
Had I not succeeded in becoming the Headmaster’s bete noir I should probably have matriculated and stood a going chance of good on to a university, in which case I should have become an industrial or research chemist. As it was, my promotion to a higher form being blocked, I left school at the age of 16 to go to sea as an apprentice in the Sun Shipping Company (known to its personnel as the Bum Shipping Company) of London.
This was a tramp concern, its few ships engaged mainly upon Indian coastal trades, although there were occasional wanderings elsewhere in the Far East and, although very infrequently, to Australia, the U.S.A., the Black Sea, and the Mediterranean. (While I was with them just once to Australia - to Fremantle - and just once to the U.S.A., to New Orleans and Houston).
Having completed my four years’ apprenticeship, I studied and sat for my Certificate of Competency as Second Mate of a Foreign Going Steamship and rejoined the service of the Sun Shipping Company as third officer. After a further three years, mainly on the Indian coast-and on the Calcutta coal trade at that-I’d had tramps in a big way. After a spell ashore working at various odd jobs, I joined the Shaw Savill line as fourth officer. Shaw Savill - a very old company that now seems to have gone into its decline-maintained passenger and cargo services from England to Australia and New Zealand. Whilst in their employ, I became very well acquainted with the part of the world in which I was eventually to take up residence-also, during World War II when the Shaw Savill’s vessels deviated from their well - worn tramlines, I came to know New York quite well.
My first visit to New York was shortly after Pearl Harbor. On a later visit, greatly daring, I decided to visit the editor of my favourite magazine,
Astounding Science Fiction
. At our first meeting, John Campbell complained that he was very short of material and suggested that I become one of his contributors. I thought that he had to be kidding; nonetheless, the next time in New York I had for him a 4,000 word short story -
This Means War
- that it had taken me all of a fortnight to peck out of my ancient Remington. Finally back in London - we’d crossed the Atlantic in a very slow convoy-I found a letter, and a cheque, waiting for me.
That started me off. For the remainder of the war years, I wrote mainly for
Astounding
. John, in those days, would ask his contributors to use a nom-de-plume when submitting to other magazines, so
Astounding
rejects sold elsewhere would cany the George Whitley byline in the U.K. and U.S.A. and that of Andrew Dunstan in Australia.
Then the war was over and, shortly thereafter, I got as high as I was destined to get in the Shaw Savill service - chief officer. My last ship in their employ was a cargo-passenger liner, and in her, during a voyage from Liverpool to Sydney, I met the lady who was to become my second wife. Resignation from Shaw Savill, emigration to Australia, divorce, remarriage, a fresh start.
I joined the Union Steam Ship Company of New Zealand - like Shaw Savill, a very old company and, also like Shaw Savill, one that seems to have gone into its decline and fall - as third officer. Most of my service was in ships under the Australian flag, although my first command,
Kanna
, was of New Zealand registry. Australian coastal trades, New Zealand coastal trades, trans-Tasman, Pacific Islands... Some of my experiences I have used in fiction, some have yet to be used. The things that happen to me should happen only to John Grimes. (They usually do, eventually, sometimes - but not always - slightly improved upon.)
Ah, yes. Grimes. Somehow he just sort of happened - a minor character at first and then taking charge. And always one jump ahead in rank. When I was still chief officer he was Captain Grimes. When I was made master he was Commodore Grimes. When I was sort of honorary commodore he was made an honorary admiral. When my wife wants to annoy me she refers to him as Hornblower.
My ambition is to write
the
Australian science fiction novel,
Kelly Country
. This will be one of those alternate universe efforts, a world in which Ned Kelly - freedom fighter as well as bushranger - successfully fights the Australian War of Independence and founds a dynasty. And just as George Washington had his British shipmaster, John Paul Jones, to handle the naval side of things, Ned Kelly will have
his
British shipmaster, John Grimes, to do likewise.
Grimes - the original Grimes, not his nineteenth century ancestor - has already been involved with Ned Kelly. This was in
Grimes at Glenrowan
, written for Isaac Asimov’s, the first of the Kitty and the Commodore series. (In the third story,
Grimes Among the Gourmets
, I draw heavily upon my recent experiences in Japan.)
Nonetheless, at times I can sympathize with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who killed off Sherlock Holmes and then was pressured by his readers to resurrect him. Quite often I have toyed with the idea of sending Grimes on Long Service Leave. There have been two non-Grimes novels written during the last few years. One,
The Bitter Pill
, was published only in Australia and failed to find a market elsewhere. The other,
Selemsatta Rising
, has been bounced by everybody.
Perhaps if I rewrite it, with Grimes as the protagonist, it will sell...
Notes on Grimes
Like Gaul, Grimes is divided into three parts - Early, Middle and Late. The novels and short stories featuring Grimes were not written in the correct chronological order career-wise. Only one publisher, Hayakawa Shobo of Tokyo, has endeavoured to sort matters out.
Early Grimes
All these cover Grimes’ Survey Service career, from Ensign to Commander.
The Road To The Rim
To Prime The Pump
The Hard Way Up
The Broken Cycle
Spartan Planet
The Inheritors
The Big Black Mark
Middle Grimes
All these deal with Grimes’ life and hard times subsequent to his resignation from the Federation Survey Service and prior to his becoming a citizen of the Rim Worlds Confederacy.
This period keeps stretching...
The Far Traveller
Star Courier
To Keep The Ship
Matilda’s Stepchildren
Star Loot
The Anarch Lords
Find The Lady (
Eventually published as
The Last Amazon)
Late Grimes
Probably there will be one or two Late Grimes novels prior to
Into The
Alternate Universe
and at least one subsequent to
The Way Back
.
Into The Alternate Universe
Contraband From Other Space
The Rim Gods
Alternate Orbits
Originally Published in Chicon - IV 1982