Ralph 124C
41+: A Romance of the Year 2660 by Hugo Gernsback
208 pages, PaperbackPublished February, 2014 by Martino Fine BooksFirst Published in Modern Electronics 1911.
Some books
are more important than they are actually good. Ralph for short (better than
R1+AROY) is an important historical document, despite not exactly being good
writing or storytelling. If read the right way, it can be very entertaining.
Written in 1910 or 1911 by Hugo Gernsback in his magazine Modern
Electronics. This was of course, a new field, electronics. John Ambrose
Fleming, the first professor of electrical Engineering at University College in
London got that gig less than a decade earlier. Gernsback was a publisher, but
he saw himself as an inventor. This radical thought experiment showed him going
far beyond what was currently technologically possible.
Perfect
for Science fiction, just one problem, the genre didn’t exist yet. Ralph as a
story is very, very important, not just because of how crazy ahead of the time
it was. First serialized in 1911 in his electronics journal Ol’ Hugo had no
idea that in sixteen years he would be inventing not technology, but a
storytelling genre.
There is a
reason the science fiction award is called the Hugo, and yes, I am aware that
SF in a sense already existed, but Gernsback, Amazing Stories, and indeed Ralph
play a role in inventing the genre we see expressing itself across media.
Now the edition I read is based on the text of an edition from the 50s, and it
had been revised a bit in 1928, but still the ideas are quite revolutionary for
1928, but in 1911 it is CRAZY.
From a universal
translator, thumb drive newspapers. Anti-gravity flying cars, microfilm,
vending machines, satellites, tape recorders, solar energy, and a few others are
accurate or close to accurate predictions. This is all fun stuff to read about,
and the technologies that were pretty close to the eventual thing that was
invented. Even more fun is the stuff that never happened. One of my favorites
was a postage stamp-sized newspaper you buy to download the news.
This is an
important book, but make no mistake, the story and characters are thin. You are
reading it for the thought experiment of the technology at the time. For
that, it is a valuable snapshot of wild speculation of many sitting at a
typewriter in 1911 and thinking about the future and certainly a better example
than Poe’s The Unparalleled Adventure of One Hans Pfaall," which still
people traveling in balloons in a thousand years.
As far as
a work of Pre-Science Fiction I think this novella is a must-read. The faults are many, but the strengths are
enough to validate its importance.