The Man Who Lost the Sea

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Authors: Theodore Sturgeon

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Theodore Sturgeon playing guitar to entertain fellow conventioneers at the 1962 World Science Fiction Convention in Chicago, at which he was Guest of Honor. Photograph by Dean Grennell.

Copyright © 2005 the Theodore Sturgeon Literary Trust. Previously published materials copyright © 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961 by Theodore Sturgeon and the Theodore Sturgeon Literary Trust, except “The Man Who Figured Everything,” which is copyright © 1959 by Don Ward and Theodore Sturgeon and the Theodore Sturgeon Literary Trust. All rights reserved. No portion of this book, except for brief review, may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without written permission of the publisher.

Published by
North Atlantic Books
P.O. Box 12327
Berkeley, California 94712

Cover design by Paula Morrison

The Man Who Lost the Sea
is sponsored by the Society for the Study of Native Arts and Sciences, a nonprofit educational corporation whose goals are to develop an educational and cross-cultural perspective linking various scientific, social, and artistic fields; to nurture a holistic view of arts, sciences, humanities, and healing; and to publish and distribute literature on the relationship of mind, body, and nature.

North Atlantic Books’ publications are available through most bookstores. For further information, visit our website at
www.northatlanticbooks.com
or call 800-733-3000.

The Library of Congress has cataloged the printed edition as follows:

Sturgeon, Theodore.
     The man who lost the sea / by Theodore Sturgeon; edited by Paul Williams ; foreword by Jonathan Lethem.
         p. cm.—(The complete stories of Theodore Sturgeon ; v. 10)
     Summary: “The tenth in a series of volumes of collected stories by noted science fiction writer Theodore Sturgeon. Features stories written between 1958 and 1961”—Provided by publisher.
     eISBN: 978-1-58394-754-8
     1. Science fiction, American.  I. Williams, Paul, 1948–  II. Title.
     PS3569.T875A6 2004
     813′.54—dc22

2004024132

v3.1

EDITOR

S NOTE

T
HEODORE
H
AMILTON
S
TURGEON
was born February 26, 1918, and died May 8, 1985. This is the tenth of a series of volumes that will collect all of his short fiction of all types and all lengths shorter than a novel. The volumes and the stories within the volumes are organized chronologically by order of composition (insofar as it can be determined). This tenth volume contains stories written between spring 1957 and autumn 1960.

Preparation of each of these volumes would not be possible without the hard work and invaluable participation of Noël Sturgeon, Debbie Notkin, and our publishers, Lindy Hough and Richard Grossinger. I would also like to thank, for their significant assistance with this volume, Jonathan Lethem, the Theodore Sturgeon Literary Trust, Marion Sturgeon, Jayne Williams, Ralph Vicinanza, Tina Krauss, Dixon Chandler, Cindy Lee Berryhill, T. V. Reed, and all of you who have expressed your interest and support. For those who would like more information about Theodore Sturgeon and the Theodore Sturgeon Literary Trust, the website address for the Trust is:
http://www.theodoresturgeontrust.com/

BOOKS BY THEODORE STURGEON

Without Sorcery
(
1948
)

The Dreaming Jewels
[aka
The Synthetic Man]
(
1950
)

More Than Human
(
1953
)

E Pluribus Unicorn
(
1953
)

Caviar
(
1955
)

A Way Home
(
1955
)

The King and Four Queens
(
1956
)

I, Libertine
(
1956
)

A Touch of Strange
(
1958
)

The Cosmic Rape
[aka
To Marry
Medusa](
1958
)

Aliens 4
(
1959
)

Venus Plus X
(
1960
)

Beyond
(
1960
)

Some of Your Blood
(
1961
)

Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
(
1961
)

The Player on the Other Side
(
1963
)

Sturgeon in Orbit
(
1964
)

Starshine
(
1966
)

The Rare Breed
(
1966
)

Sturgeon Is Alive and Well …
(
1971
)

The Worlds of Theodore Sturgeon
(
1972
)

Sturgeon’s West
(with Don Ward) (
1973
)

Case and the Dreamer
(
1974
)

Visions and Venturers
(
1978
)

Maturity
(
1979
)

The Stars Are the Styx
(
1979
)

The Golden Helix
(
1979
)

Alien Cargo
(
1984
)

Godbody
(
1986
)

A Touch of Sturgeon
(
1987
)

The [Widget], the [Wadget], and Boff
(
1989
)

Argyll
(
1993
)

Star Trek, The Joy Machine
(with James Gunn) (
1996
)

THE COMPLETE STORIES SERIES

1.
The Ultimate Egoist
(
1994
)

2.
Microcosmic God
(
1995
)

3.
Killdozer!
(
1996
)

4.
Thunder and Roses
(
1997
)

5.
The Perfect Host
(
1998
)

6.
Baby Is Three
(
1999
)

7.
A Saucer of Loneliness
(
2000
)

8.
Bright Segment
(
2002
)

9.
And Now the News …
(
2003
)

10.
The Man Who Lost the Sea
(
2005
)

11.
The Nail and the Oracle
(
2007
)

12.
Slow Sculpture
(
2009
)

13.
Case and the Dreamer
(
2010
)

CONTENTS
Foreword

By Jonathan Lethem

I never met Theodore Sturgeon, but I did have a chance to introduce him to my father, in a Sturgeonish fashion. Paul Williams and I were visiting Woodstock, New York, on our way from a science fiction convention in Massachusetts. In Woodstock we were to meet my father, who had driven to pick me up from and return me to his cabin in the Catskills. In Woodstock Paul and I met Noël Sturgeon, Theodore Sturgeon’s daughter. We were an hour or so early for the rendezvous with my dad, and, of course, more than a decade late to hope for an encounter in the flesh with Theodore Sturgeon.

This was in 1993, at the start of North Atlantic Books’ noble publishing marathon
The Complete Stories of Theodore Sturgeon
, of which this is the tenth volume. At that time the project was a whisper or a promise. Or perhaps I should say it was a drive in the woods, for that is what it was that day. We went for a drive in the woods and Paul and I contemplated the territory of Sturgeon’s life in his Woodstock years, with Noël’s eloquent guidance, her narration and her silences. She led us down backroads to contemplate the place where Sturgeon’s writing shack had been hidden. We absorbed the presence of his absence, and I absorbed the delicate weight of his daughter’s spoken and unspoken memories, and those of her father’s friend Paul. I remembered what I knew of Sturgeon, the stories when I’d first read them as a kid. Noël spoke of her childhood with an artist father, and I thought of my own.

Then we went back into Woodstock and met my father in a café. By the time I was able to introduce Noël to my father I felt I was returning a favor, or at least trying to. I felt that I was completing a circle. Leaving Paul and Noël behind, driving off into the Catskills,
I spoke to my father of Sturgeon, and I spoke to him differently. That night I slept beside my father in two sleeping bags in a cabin lit only by candles and by the stars, and told him more of my life as an adult than I ever had. I was still with Sturgeon, though I was alone with my father and had never been with Sturgeon at all.

These stories are like that: they speak of human beings connecting with other human beings or attempting to do so at great odds, and at odd angles; of human beings failing at or sabotaging their own best efforts for fear that what they want most doesn’t make any sense, or that the odds are too great; of human beings learning again and again that their thin howling selves are part of a chorus which stands shoulder to shoulder in a traffic jam, a mob scene of lonely selves, of members of a great estranged family of beings. Sturgeon wrote miraculous short stories. Some fly, some stumble, but all are miraculous. By that I mean he always wrote of miracles, of deliverance and miracles and of a lust for completion in an incomplete world. He wrote of needs and their denial, with such undisguised longing and anger that his stories are caustic with emotion. His stories are carved in need. Many of the fine examples gathered here in Volume 10 are by happy coincidence the first ones Sturgeon wrote in those woods; he moved his family to Woodstock in 1959.

Paul Williams once said, in conversation, that Sturgeon’s “only method was the tour de force.” That has long seemed to me the only critical remark on Sturgeon’s art that needs making. It is impossible to imagine the work arising from anything but the peculiar circumstances of its making. Sturgeon found his urgency directed in becoming, in bursts of stylistic juice, the John Dos Passos, the William Faulkner, the Ring Lardner, the James Thurber, the Virginia Woolf of science fiction. The pulp form gave him the motifs of transcendence and metamorphosis, and the imperative of optimism, he needed to cut against what seems to me an instinctive morbidity. See how his imagination collapses into the gothic in the non-SF tales; alternately, consider how
The Man Who Lost The Sea
, the finest literary fugue this side of James Salter’s
Dusk
, relies on its rocket. Yet Sturgeon’s work is the opposite of Pop Art; he never predicted much; his cheerleading’s embarrassing. He can seem misplaced in science fiction; I’d
argue he’d have been misplaced anywhere. And would he have written his masterpieces without that form to write against? I doubt it.

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