Murray Leinster
Murray
Leinster (June 16, 1896 - June 8, 1975) was the nom de plume of William
Fitzgerald Jenkins, an American science fiction and alternate history writer.
He was born in Norfolk, Virginia. During World War I, he served with the
Committee of Public Information and the United States Army (1917-1918).
Following the war, Leinster became a free-lance writer. In 1921, he married Mary
Mandola. They had four daughters. During World War II, he served in the Office
of War Information. He won the Liberty Award in 1937 for "A Very Nice Family,"
the 1956 Hugo Award for Best Novelette for "Exploration Team," a retro-Hugo in
1996 for Best Novelette for "First Contact." Leinster was the Guest of Honor at
the 21st Worldcon in 1963. In 1995, the Sidewise Award for Alternate History was
established, named after Leinster's story "Sidewise in Time."
Murray Leinster wrote and published over 1,500 short stories and articles over the
course of his career. He wrote 14 movie and hundreds of radio scripts and
television plays, inspiring several series including "Land of the Giants" and
"The Time Tunnel".
Murray Leinster first began appearing in the late 1920s in pulp magazines like Weird
Tales and then sold to Astounding Stories in the 1930s on a regular basis. After
World War II, when both his name and the pulps had achieved a wider acceptance,
he would use either "William Fitzgerald" or "Will F. Jenkins" as names on
stories when "Leinster" had already sold a piece to a particular issue. He was
very prolific and successful in the fields of western, mystery, horror, and
especially science fiction. His novel Miners in the Sky transfers the lawless
atmosphere of the California Gold Rush, a common theme of Westerns, into an
asteroid environment.
He is credited with the invention of parallel universe stories. Four years
before Jack Williamson's The Legion of Time came out, Leinster wrote his
"Sidewise in Time", which was first published in Astounding in June 1934. This
was probably the first time that the strange concept of alternate worlds
appeared in modern science-fiction. In a sidewise path of time some cities never
happened to be built. Leinster's vision of nature's extraordinary oscillations
in time ('sidewise in time') had long-term effect on other authors, e.g., Isaac
Asimov's "Living Space", "The Red Queen's Race", or his famous The End of
Eternity.
Murray Leinster's 1946 short story "A Logic Named Joe" describes Joe, a "logic",
that is to say, a computer. This is one of the first decriptions of a computer
in fiction. In this story Leinster was decades ahead of his time in imagining
the Internet. He envisioned logics in every home, linked to provide
communications, data access, and commerce. In fact, one character said that
"logics are civilization."
In 2000, Leinster's heirs sued Paramount Pictures over the film Star Trek: First
Contact, claiming that as the owners of the rights to Leinster's short story
"First Contact", it infringed their trademark in the term. The U.S. District
Court for the Eastern District of Virginia granted Paramount's motion for
summary judgment and dismissed the suit (see Estate of William F. Jenkins v.
Paramount Pictures Corp., 90 F. Supp. 2d 706 (E.D. Va. 2000) for the full text
of the court's ruling). The court found that regardless of whether Leinster's
story first coined "first contact", it has since become a generic (and therefore
unprotectable) term that described the overall genre of science fiction in which
humans first encounter alien species. Even if the title was instead
"descriptive"—a category of terms higher than "generic" that may be protectable—there
was no evidence that the title had the required association in the public's mind
(known as "secondary meaning") such that its use would normally be understood as
referring to Leinster's story. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the
lower court's dismissal without comment.
Selected Bibliography
Series
- Land of the Giants
- 1 Land of
the Giants (1968)
- 2 The Hot
Spot (1969)
- 3 Unknown
Danger (1969)
- Med Service
- The Med
Series (1983)
- Med Ship
(2002)
- 1 S.O.S.
from Three Worlds (1966)
- 2 The
Mutant Weapon (1959)
- 3 Doctor
to the Stars (1964)
- 4 This
World is Taboo (1961)
- To the Stars
- Space Ferry
(1952)
- Space
Platform (1953)
- Space Tug
(1953)
- City on the
Moon (1957)
Collections
- The Last
Spaceship (1949)
- Sidewise in
Time (1950)
- The
Forgotten Planet (1954)
- Colonial
Survey (1956)
- Out of This
World (1958)
- Monsters and
Such (1959)
- The Aliens
(1960)
- Twists in
Time (1960)
- Get Off My
World! (1966)
- The Best of
Murray Leinster (1976)
- First
Contacts: The Essential Murray Leinster (1998)
- Planets of
Adventure (2003)
- A Logic
Named Joe (2005)
Omnibus
- A Murray
Leinster Omnibus (1968)
Anthologies
- Great
Stories of Science Fiction (1951)
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