Talk:Harlan Ellison/Archive 1

California Sorcery
More on one of the sources: California Sorcery is a collection of fiction from "The Group" (California writers including Ray Bradbury, Harlan Ellison, and Robert Bloch who were responsible for the bulk of The Twilight Zone scripts). The book has an overview of the development of the group, with biographical details on each member provided there and, in brief, before that member's story. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Koyaanis Qatsi (talk • contribs) 11:22, 25 May 2002

The Last Dangerous Visions
Can we please quit cutting this part out? It's getting annoying. -james_anatidae, 2004-05-09, 02:22 EST


 * That's it, I'm requesting page protection. I don't really care about the book, its these useless deletions that are bugging me. -james_anatidae, 2004-06-11, 03:02 EST


 * Since this part is based on hearsay and rumor, it's pretty obvious why it keeps getting cut from a factual article. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.72.128.212 (talk • contribs) 03:25, 15 June 2004


 * Seems pretty factually-based to me. Which bits, exactly, do you think are unfounded or improperly qualified in the article? I'll need a lot more convincing before I'll let that paragraph stay deleted on this basis. Bryan 07:54, 15 Jun 2004 (UTC)

Charles Platt "incident"
On the issue of the Charles Platt "incident", the paragraph comes across as unsubstaniated rumor mongering. A secret non-aggression "pact" that H.E. supposedly violated many times? Sounds libelous without further evidence. If we must keep this paragraph, I'd prefer to indicate it as an apocryphal story about this author, of which there are many. I'd even support a separate section devoted to these types of stories, as long as it is clear that the validity of many of them are in dispute (or at least that the details may have gotten grossly distorted over the years). If citations are available, they should be referenced. In any case, the paragraph does seem out of place to me (as opposed to the LDV paragraph, which, while apparently controversial, at least seems to be written in a factual manner) - chad.netzer 07:22, 10 May 2004 (UTC)

Direct contact with Ellison / stubbing the article
Harlan Ellison contacted us to complain about several errors in this article. Danny is in communication (or will be) with him to get more details and research this a bit more. In the meantime, we should take it slow and easy with the article.

It is likely that the anon who copied text from Harlan Ellison's website was authorized to do so by Ellison. That text is problematic for us, in that it's written in a press release style, but of course the information there will be helpful to us in improving the article.

One problem is that Ellison has had trouble with a persistent detractor posting stuff on the web that isn't true (as I understand it), so we have to take even more care than we normally do in making sure that everything we say in the article is properly researched.

I'm sure we'll get it right soon, and in the meantime, I hope this note is helpful in clarifying what is going on. :-)

Jimbo Wales 23:25, 19 Nov 2004 (UTC)


 * It's been a couple of months now, is there a progress report? I popped by here in search of information about his lawsuit vs. AOL, and I find that that's among the deleted material even though it's quite well known and publically documented. Bryan 02:36, 26 Jan 2005 (UTC)


 * Yes, what's going on? Much of the removed material was informative and hardly objectionable even from HE self. --Malyctenar 11:58, 27 Jan 2005 (UTC)


 * I'd also love to hear what's going on. GeneralPatton 13:20, 3 Feb 2005 (UTC)


 * I've put the question directly to Jimbo's user talk page now, in case he no longer has this article watchlisted. Lacking any further information I think restoring the old contents is the best course of action, I'll do that in a few days if nothing more comes up. Bryan 16:49, 15 Feb 2005 (UTC)


 * And now it's been almost a month since I posted the question on Jimbo's talk page with no reply. I'm going to just restore all the deleted material now, if Harlan Ellison still has problems with it he can either edit it himself or point them out here for us to deal with publically. This article's been in complete stasis long enough. Bryan 16:42, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Dangerous Visions
Look, Dangerous Visions may be a great short story collection. It may in fact be the greatest science fiction short story collection of all time; I don't know, but it's within the realm of possibility. However, as the saying goes, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. I am removing the line, "and Dangerous Visions is widely considered the greatest and most influential SF anthology of all time." A claim like that needs some kind of evidence - a poll of fans from a known journal, for instance, or a bunch of quotes from other writers agreeing that it's the greatest. Some kind of back up for such an extraordinary claim. Until then, it really shouldn't be in the article. Andyandy68 18:54, 25 August 2006 (UTC)

Cordwainer Bird
Before I add certain data to the article, considering the controversy about HE, I thought it pertinent to put a query in this part of the data. Cordwainer Bird is given as a pseudonym of HE in the Controversy section, but that pseudonym was used by him for a few soft porn stories early in his career; only later as a protest for items that he wrote but disowned for one reason or another. This fact is given by himself in the book Strange Dreams. I would add it to the publicaions area if it seems reasonable. Dumarest

71.28.147.45 (talk) 07:02, 15 December 2007 (UTC) 12/14/07 Just wanted to put here that I'm watching "Voyage to the bottom of the sea" episode "The Price of Doom" and the title credit shown is spelled exactly "Written by CORD WAINER BIRD" (with the space after Cord) unlike what the main article says is "cordwainer bid". It appears to be an original credit and not something done with the DVD edition.
 * Then, by all means, correct the article. Sir Rhosis (talk) 08:17, 15 December 2007 (UTC)

216.96.8.15 (talk) 08:24, 17 December 2007 (UTC) Ok so I did as you suggested and sure enough someone reversed my change immediately even though I just watched the episode yesterday. Perhaps someone else could rent the show and independantly confirm I am not insane?


 * I just checked the article--your correction is there. If it is reverted, correct as need be in future.Sir Rhosis (talk) 21:45, 17 December 2007 (UTC)

The Last Dangerous Visions (2)
That the only citation for the allegations about Last Dangerous Vision is from a book by Christopher Priest (the British author of INVERTED WORLD and "Palely Loitering," not the comics writer who later took the name as a pseudonym), which was intended to be provocative (Priest is one of several contributors to LDV who have expressed one degree or another of discontent with the delays).


 * Priest himself submitted a story for the anthology, but it was rejected.[citation needed] -- This is an unbalanced view of a minor point of controversy and should be cut. Priest has said all along -- since the earliest fanzine version of his polemic -- that he withdrew his story. Ellison later (several years later as I remember, in Aboriginal SF) made the counterclaim that it had been rejected. Priest continues to dispute this. --DeafMan 17:01, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
 * I agree. Looking at this article in any depth, there are any number of links to "citation needed", most of which seem to have been there for some time, and most of which are used to tag well-known apocryphal stories about the author, which may well be current in fandom, but which probably result from Ellison telling a story about himself in a GoH speech and it passes the rounds. If there's a link to someone who can at least say, first-hand, that they heard Ellison say this of himself (or better yet, to Ellison saying it of himself) then that's allowable, though we need to be clear that what the source is. Likewise for Christopher Priest. But a lot of this is "I heard it somewhere and everyone says it's true", I think. Yonmei 07:12, 22 September 2006 (UTC)


 * On the other hand if an apocryphal story about Ellison is well-known and current in fandom then it's best to include a description of it here with the explicit caveat that it is apocryphal. If we remove all mention of it then future editors will just keep re-adding it, or otherwise complaining about how the article's "missing" well-known pieces of information. There still need to be sources for this, of course, but if it's a well-known story then that shouldn't be hard. Bryan 07:44, 22 September 2006 (UTC)
 * But then, there needs to be some kind of source to show that the story is well-known and current in fandom. But a section of "Apocryphal Stories" which have no first-hand sourcing would be useful. Yonmei 09:45, 22 September 2006 (UTC)

Charles Platt "incident" (2)
The idea of "secret non-aggression "pact"" is nonsense and should definitely be removed as inaccurate. It's a garbled version of a true part of the story, that they had a truce agreement at one time, which isn't a secret. There's a description about it from Charles Platt in the following message: http://groups-beta.google.com/group/rec.arts.sf.written/msg/e1b8b77a080e614a

--Seth Finkelstein 00:30, 20 Dec 2004 (UTC)


 * I took out the part describing it as "apocryphal" because it lacks court documentation. Why?  There's no *reason* there would be court documentation.  Abritration agreements, if it even rose to that level of seriousness, are by definition extrajudicial.  I wouldn't object to someone describing it as apocryphal if their response is better-reasoned.

Last Dangerous Visions question
While digging for references on whether Ellison had first publication rights on the stories in Last Dangerous Visions, I came across a page which states that authors who want to publish the stories they'd put in that book can pull their stories from LDV and do so. It says "In fact, at least one author has pulled a story, attempted to submit it elsewhere, and then RETURNED the story to TLDV when the results were not satisfactory." Does anyone know if that's true, and if so which author/story it was? Also, the article could use a better reference confirming that Ellison does indeed have first publication rights than the one I dug up, which merely indicates that Ellison believes he does (or believes he can get away with claiming that he does). Bryan 01:02, 23 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Oh, I should also mention this link in relation to the ones I added to the article:. The relevant bit: "Harlan Ellison phoned about various Ansible pieces, saying in particular that his huge wrath at the inclusion of that Last Dangerous Visions story in NESFA's Cordwainer Smith collection had a lot to do with HE himself having partly rewritten Smith's imperfect draft for TLDV ... only to learn for the first time of the story's pre-emption (courtesy of the Scott Meredith agency) when he saw the NESFA volume." This doesn't affect the matter of who owns what rights, I just figured I should point it out for future reference. Bryan 01:13, 23 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Birthplace
An anonymous user changed the location of Harlan's birth to Cleveland. This is consistent with information provided at Ellison Webderland. Much of his early life was spent in Painesville, however, as noted in his writings. --WCFrancis 15:31, 11 May 2005 (UTC)

Article protection
Danny reverted the article and then protected it with the following summary:
 * 19:14, 5 Jun 2005 Danny protected Harlan Ellison (for reasoning contact me privately)

Without adding a protected article tag or making any comment here on talk. This action strikes me as having pretty dubious standing, so I'm unprotecting the article. Bryan 06:19, 6 Jun 2005 (UTC)

The inline link to "The Book on the Edge of Forever" appears to be dead.

Foolscap Debacle
I still think this is such a non-event that it really does not have a place in this article. I really don't think it is either very encyclopaedic, very noteworthy, and I doubt anyone is going to be interested in this in ten years. Am I totally off in my judgement? I'm just asking, because I keep shortening the write up, and I don't want to annoy people if they truly can make a case for this having a prominent place in the controversy section. --Codemonkey 22:05, 28 September 2005 (UTC)
 * Obviously it hardly constitutes an important incident, but if you remove it, people will keep adding it back in. Best to wait a couple of years and remove it then. --221.249.13.34 05:05, 29 September 2005 (UTC)
 * I agree stongly with Codemonkey that this rumor-mongering is totally out of place if Wikimedia is serious about being a real encyclopedia. It is highly POV (It was worse before the mention of Ellison's comments) reporting of a minor incident. I happen to believe Harlan's version. Giving weight to a rant posted on the internet by someone who either could not make the effort to even spell "Harlan" right in his posting or thought it would be a cute insult to spell it incorrectly is as inappropriate here as the personal attacks in that rant would be. Keeping it here weakens Wikipedia. If it were to result in an edit war, then page protection would be in order.WCFrancis 09:51, 29 September 2005 (UTC)
 * I can't say I believe either of them 100%, but by whichever account you go by, it's still a pretty minor incident, if that. And I don't think we will have to wait years for the editing to die down. While the PA reader community is wonderful and capable of many great deeds, I seriously doubt their collective long term memory is big enough to last beyond 1 or 2 months with regards to a event such as this one. --Codemonkey 16:14, 29 September 2005 (UTC)
 * See also Recentism. Couple of years? With luck, we can delete it in a month's time or so. –Hajor 15:28, 29 September 2005 (UTC)
 * How about a couple of days? Just removed it. WCFrancis 03:11, 2 October 2005 (UTC)


 * I'm reminded of this whenever I come across his name. Dorfl 19:03, 22 July 2006 (UTC)
 * I agree, I saw his name mentioned in a SciFi article just last week and all I could remember about him was Gabes "I love your Star Wars FanFic" comment. I think the massive difference in relative fame alone justifies the inclusion of this event, Gabe and Tycho can draw in crowds of 37 thousand people over a single weekend, trying to ignore that is just a subjective bias. 82.144.224.90 12:06, 31 October 2007 (UTC)
 * Thanks for the comment, but this thread has been dead for over a year now. The general consensus is that the incident is to minor to be included in this article.  I'm guessing the fact that you perceive the "relative fame" of Penny Arcade and Gabe to be greater than that of Ellison is probably a factor of age or experience. I assure you that the man who wrote the most well known episode of Star Trek, most recognized and controversial sf anthology and some of the most widely read short stories of the 20th century is at least as notable as the author of a web comic that's been around for less than ten years.  69.248.12.198 17:06, 31 October 2007 (UTC)
 * A factor of age and experience, what a brilliant dismissal, bravo. But actually I think you're most likely spot on, I agree that this is a factor of age and experience. What your personal feelings are on the relative 'worth' of their works are you can't ignore the fact that it is their relative fame that defines whether the incident is worth mentioning. Now I'm sure penny arcade is not a site you visit often, and if you did any and all of the humour would be lost on you. You can't however ignore the facts that penny-arcade.com recieves over two million pageviews *per day*, runs its own childrens charity, hosts the largest computer game expo in the united states and has enough fans worldwide to justify the production of its own computer game. This is overwhelmingly against an author who hasn't published anything major in over a decade and whose only great claim to fame you mention was been an episode of a TV show that screened 40 years ago. Age and experience, I agree, your age, my experience. 82.144.243.247 10:52, 2 November 2007 (UTC)
 * Lets say both of our experiences. I'm not trying to start a flame war here and you bring up some valid points.  I don't know much about Penny Arcade; I had only read the comic a few times before your original post.  Two million daily readers is nothing to sneeze at.  But I'm sure you'll agree that neither is writing one of the most widely read and reprinted short stories in the English language ("Repent, Harlequin!" Said the Ticktockman).  Ellison's stories have also been adapted into award winning computer games.  He's been creative consultant for several award winning television series (Babylon 5 for instance).  His stories and scripts have won more awards than I care to list on the talk page.  Penny Arcade has also won some prestigious awards, and I suspect that it will continue to do so.   My point - and I think we can probably agree here - is that the importance of each subject depends on your frame of reference.  It may be that Ellison is of relatively little importance the millions who read Penny Arcade.  It may also be that Penny Arcade is of little importance the millions who read Ellison's work.  (Neither is of much relative importance to say, William Shakespeare, another author who hasn't published anything major in over a decade :) ).  That being the case, the incident that was discussed in this thread is of little importance to either subject and should probably be left out of the article.  69.248.12.198 15:09, 2 November 2007 (UTC)
 * Sounds like fan protection, especially since Harlan's version of events is simply that he didn’t like them rather than he didn’t actually verbally assault them. I think it would be safe to say that on page views alone Penny Arcade is wider read (and thus more famous) than Ellison, IMHO it was this that caused the altercation. Since any changes on the PA page would be protected as feircly though I think it's best to leave the page alone, I'm sure Ellison is just overjoyed that someone is watching his back on wikipedia. (unsigned from IP address 62.49.6.235 10:23, 19 October 2005 )
 * Entry came back yesterday. Entered by unregistered user from IP 172.190.196.39 (AOL IP) who did not take part in this discussion here. I removed it again; I still consider it non-notable misunderstanding blown way out of proportion with no place in a serious encyclopedia. WCFrancis 03:39, 9 December 2005 (UTC)
 * I agree, it was polite to remove all mention of an old man getting bitch-slapped in public. Regardless of who started it, it seems to be uncontested by both parties that Gabe pretty conclusively ended it. -- Rogerborg 15:58, 4 October 2006 (UTC)
 * I find it strange that anyone wouldn't know what foolscap was, especially because it was part of that Convention's advertising: it had the word 'foolscap' and then 3 different definitions of it. So someone's having a go, here. Overall, this section is very silly. I don't think Wikipedia is a gossip column. Otherwise, wouldn't we be writing about everything our Celebs did, here? Bad form, overall. 24.207.42.17 03:10, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

(restart tabs) Following this discussion, I deleted this section. The only citations provided were to Gabe's own page making it look like a vanity section. Yonmei 08:13, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

Controversy

 * "All the same, Ellison has also garnered a controversial reputation, being fiercely protective of his work and of any copyright infringement." User:E Pluribus Anthony

How does protection of your work from theft garner a controversial reputation? Harlan is not the only writer to vigorously pursue every legal means of protection of his work. The implication that this is "controversial" is questionable at best.

Ellison has always been outspoken and has always had a low tolerance for fools, jerks and idiots. He can be strikingly caustic due to his mastery of the english language. Curmudgeon he may be but he has every right to protect every bit of his intellectual property.

I am not sure what word to substitute for "Controversy" in the later heading, but review of the material does not actually describe controversy as much as it does contentiousness, with the possible exception of his embracing of causes that were controversial at the time with total commitment. WCFrancis 17:26, 1 November 2005 (UTC)


 * I just noticed this: I disagree. Given the considerable body of information in the article and elsewhere (e.g., online and in other media) about HE's reputation, a spade is a spade.  Someone who asserts their proprietary rights may or may not be controversial: there are (presumably) a plethora of individuals (particularly 'celebrities' and, more to the point, authors and commentators like HE) who assert their rights without being known for doing so.  There's nothing inherently wrong with either, nor in being perceived a curmudgeon (and I've been so called!), but it needs to be said.  Not including this upfront obfuscates the subject matter of concern; anything else may be semantics and possibly POV.


 * As well, perhaps the latter section can be entitled Reputation or similar, but the section heading is currently summative. E Pluribus Anthony 04:31, 9 December 2005 (UTC)

I changed "fiercely litigious when he feels his rights or his work is threatened" to simply "fiercely litigious". Litigation implies a right has been threatened and so this is unnecessary. Whether that litigiousness was frivolous or meritorious is something that can be hashed out subsequently, but flabby writing aids no one. In that same vein I removed "justified or not" from comments about his reputation since, again, a reputation is presumed to not be the last word. I also changed an introductory sentence which claimed Ellison is "fiercely protective ... of copyright infringements" to something less counter-intuitive.(Unknown user)

And I changed the "fiercely litigious" line for another reason: it implies that Ellison fires off lawsuits over lesser or trivial issues. The text I entered ("Ellison is fiercely protective of his work, and has sought legal action against potential copyright infringements") is both accurate and without insinuation about litigiousness, fierce or otherwise. I also clipped two sentences from the "Last Dangerous Visions" section, as they were clearly written as an argument against Ellison rather than a presentation of fact. Signed, Brian Siano

And I have reverted Siano's changes. Litigious does not imply that one's suits are frivolous, it implies that they are numerous, as Ellison's undoubtedly are. Siano's argument amounts to this: true information that may lead one to a bad impression should be excised. Such is not the nature of encyclopedias or other non-propaganda sources.

In addition, I reinstated the details about Priest's book, including the rebuttal. The article as written did not fully balance the views of proponents and critics. Noting that Priest criticized his practices without showing *why* he did so renders the comment meaningless.

I removed the details about Priest's book because they were written in a manner intended to malign Ellison. Here is the text, with the questionable comments marked with a + sign: "Priest documented a half-dozen instances in which Ellison promised TLDV would appear within a year of the statement, but +of course those promises were unfulfilled+. (Why 'of course?') _Ellison has a record of fulfilling obligations in other instances, including to writers whose stories he solicited, and has expressed outrage at other editors who have displayed poor practices. This high demand on the ethics of others, however, has not resulted in Ellison returning TLDV stories to their authors or their estates._" (This is reaching for an effect, to insinuate that Elliuson is a hypocrite.) If you're going to write an encyclopedia entry, fine. Write one. But don't throw in this shoddy moralizing and editorial commentary, pretend it's merely "facts," and accuse others of censorship when they correct you.

Brian, I think you make some good points. But removing those sentences entirely is overkill. I have reinstates the Priest stuff BUT I have taken out the insuating parts--the "of course" and the "this high demand sentence". If you have an opinion on the litigious thing, I'd like to hear it.

litigious:

Adjective 1. Of, relating to, or characterized by litigation. 2. Tending to engage in lawsuits.

Ellison's Response
Ellison's response is not appropriate for an encylopedia. It reads like vandalism and the fact the subject himself wrote it is irrelevant. I'm not going to take it down just yet because I would like to hear competing arguments for its retention.

To who ever deleted the Ellison response to Wikipedia: Who are you to delete a response that the author wishes to have distributed? It says so in the text. How does it read like vandalism?

Response: because it's more of a rant than a biographical entry. This is not a place for people to give resumes or make personal correspondence. Is there *any* precedent for allowing an encylopedic subject to comment on his entry *within* the bio? Of course not. A fair compromise would, I think, be a link--but we have to vigilant to keept his from devolving into a screaming match, which is exactly what Ellison's rant was.

It's said above that it's irrelevant whether Ellison wrote it. I disagree. I think it's highly relevant. Because we all tend to view ourselves in less-than-objective light, a person's entry about themselves should be presumptively suspect. Structurally, it simply doesn't make sense--in the course of a very short biography, half the space will be devoted to what he thinks of one internet site??? If Ellison can point to factual inaccuracies, he should feel free to correct them, but his opinions on Wikipedia are not relevant here anymore than a more prominent's author's opinions on Encylopedia Britannica would be relevant there.


 * Hmm, I wonder why people don't feel obliged to sign their comments here? Makes it really hard to follow the argument, folks! PDD 00:42, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

Text of Ellison's Comments

 * Posted by WCFrancis 03:55, 9 December 2005 (UTC).


 * Um, Harlan, if you're still reading this... you can get a cent sign (¢) by holding down the "Alt" key on your keyboard and, while holding it down, typing 0162 on the numeric keypad. Firebug 04:50, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


 * I like much of HE's work; however, the above reads like a juvenile rant. If the above was written by him, it is badly written/styled and may give aspiring writers (and definitely Wikipedians) pause.  And what's with the 'screaming'?  In [cyber]space, no one can hear you scream. E Pluribus Anthony 05:36, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


 * It would be more "Ellisonian" to say that I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream. *Dan T.* 13:44, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


 * Agreed! That title reminds me of The Matrix, when Smith removes Neo's mouth on the spot, but he still 'screams' ... :) E Pluribus Anthony 14:22, 9 December 2005 (UTC)
 * Read the story. They have this place called a library. If you really can't get away from the keyboard you can buy a book from Amazon.com. I don't recall what collection it's in, but do a little research. WCFrancis 00:51, 11 December 2005 (UTC)
 * Case in point – your first sentence on its own would've been just fine. And your sarcasm and emphasis is necessary ... because?  There are things called manners and respect.  If you cannot comment rationally or civilly, don't.  End communication. E Pluribus Anthony 04:01, 11 December 2005 (UTC)
 * Allow me to apologize for the sarcasm, which was out of line. I also failed to research it before opening my mouth keyboard. The story is available on the Sci-Fi.com site, with permission, I'm sure. The link is available at the end of the article I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream. I immediately thought of the story when I saw the scene you mentioned and thought that it might be deliberate homage. I do recommend the story highly. I am embarassed by my sarcasm and my failure to check facts. WCFrancis 04:13, 11 December 2005 (UTC)
 * Anyway, the story in question is online... apparently with Ellison's permission (he's vigorous in protecting his copyrights, so he'd certainly object if it wasn't!) *Dan T.* 04:10, 11 December 2005 (UTC)
 * Apology accepted. :) And thank you both for the constructivism!  Now I must get away from this pesky keyboard ... ;) E Pluribus Anthony 04:17, 11 December 2005 (UTC)
 * Without reading the rant, it seems highly unlikely that this is Harlan given the signature, "Yr. pal, Harlan". He would not abbreviate in such a way, even facetiously. JHG 11:27, 10 December 2005 (UTC)
 * Read the board. HE uses that a lot. And I don't think Rick would allow sockpuppets. WCFrancis 00:51, 11 December 2005 (UTC)

Mr. Ellison: I absolutely love your stuff, and relish your embracing (creating?) controversy to the heavens. But IMHO you're flat wrong regarding Wikipedia. An IBM study done last year showed that vandalized entries are corrected in an average of 5 minutes. Another study compared Wiki entries side by side with Encyclopedia Britannica entries and found, where the quality of the articles was not equivalent, it was the EB entry that was found wanting. You're just upset because a life as filled with curmudgeonry as yours has been (I make zero claim to any lack of appropriateness of said curmudgeonry) has attracted detractors who, as all detractors do, say bad things the person they're detracting doesn't like (whether true or not). I wish like hell I had your talent, and I admire the life you've lived, but on this issue I think I'm on fair ground saying you're overreacting. Your devoted reader, Longshot14 17:12, 20 February 2006 (UTC)

The above rant, which sure sounds like Harlan Ellison, should be enshrined permanently on this discussion page. May it be the one piece of text on Wikipedia that is permanent. Tempshill 06:29, 24 February 2006 (UTC)


 * I second the motion! If the authorship could only be verified, there would be little need to recount the various "controversies" in an attempt to portray this almost sympathetically obnoxious enigma.  Any residual of the usual wounded wonderment of Harlanites at the cruel and relentless conspiracy to paint HE as some kind of a kook would be answered in a stroke.  And we could return to concentrating on his cutting-edge contributions to SF writing and fandom.  At the Edgar Allan Poe article Poe's unusual personality is handled in one sentence: "Poe suffered from bouts of depression and madness, and he may have attempted suicide in 1848."  Let it be with our own beloved, wayward Harlan! But not yet of course.Vendrov 07:29, 1 September 2007 (UTC)


 * Funny you should say that. When I wrote the above response "Mr. Ellison:", I was about 900-ish pages into The Essential Ellison, a 1234-page Ellison anthology of short stories and novelettes.  The final story came a day or two after I wrote the above words.  It's called Xenogenesis and is an article about a speech he made at a con, for which he prepared by writing a startlingly large number of fellow writers regarding their Worst Fan Experiences(tm).  Even with the author's caveat that 95+% of fans are nowhere near the rank calibre of the ones he describes, what he describes is enough to make anyone want to puke, spontaneously, and *not* in a cup to save for later.


 * I don't know whether the above rant is or is not Ellison, but now I think I begin to get a glimpse of why he feels that way. I stand by my statement regarding the utility of Wikipedia; but the frustration and outrage he's described not only for himself, but for Spider Robinson, Alan Dean Foster, Isaac Asimov, and (my personal favorite sf writer) David Gerrold, was enough to make me sick.


 * Should Mr. Ellison read these words (Ha!), I hope he knows I'm no Norman Epstein, either in hoped-for anonymity (my name is his for the asking) nor in temperament (no *way*). In any event, where I think he misses the mark re: Wiki is that many of the fights he's had to fight (rather I should say "documented in those articles I've read so far" had to fight) he did more or less on his own.  But remember that 95+% bit.  Wiki can cut, this is true.  But despite the detractors Mr. Ellison has also garnered a great many fans and friends who can (and do) set the record straight.


 * Look at me. A Wiki n00b and already on a major hypertext high.  "Set Pretentiousness=off" Longshot14 06:54, 24 February 2006 (UTC)