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The Old Pemmican Factory
by Robert J. Sawyer
Copyright © 2006 by Robert J. Sawyer
A special report on Canadian SF for the January, 2006, issue of
Locus, the trade journal of the Science Fiction field.
Damon Knight had a great name for the American commercial SF
genre: he called it the Old Baloney Factory. Well, as with so
many things, we have a branch plant of the U.S. parent company
here in Canada call it the Old Pemmican Factory.
The seminal text the book that spawned the Old
Pemmican Factory was the 1994 anthology
Northern Stars,
edited for Tor by New York's David G. Hartwell and
Montreal's Glenn Grant, in honor (and honour) of the fact that
the World Science Fiction Convention was coming back to Canada
for the first time in twenty-one years.
I vividly remember David Hartwell exhorting me, and everyone
else in Northern Stars, to hustle copies to anyone we
could during the Winnipeg Worldcon. "A book like this needs a
push," Dave said.
Except, it turned out, it didn't; not in Canada. Despite a
dustjacket that screamed American stereotypes of the Great White
North with a moose on it, no less! Canadians
snapped up the book, and not just at the con. Northern
Stars sold as well in the States as any anthology in the
genre (and was even picked up by the Quality Paperback Book
Club). But it sold spectacularly well in Canada, reaching
not just the core-SF audience but a wider mainstream audience,
too (with many thanks due to H.B. Fenn and Company, then and now
Tor's Canadian distributor).
David Hartwell and Tor publisher Tom Doherty took sharp
notice of this, and suddenly Tor was aggressively acquiring
authors who lived in Canada. They already had Spider Robinson,
and they added Phyllis Gotlieb (at its founding, the only
Canadian member of the Science Fiction Writers of America),
Candas Jane Dorsey, Terence M. Green,
Matthew Hughes, Donald Kingsbury,
Scott Mackay, Robert J. Sawyer,
Karl Schroeder, Peter Watts, and
Robert Charles Wilson (the only one not edited by
Hartwell Bob works with Patrick and Teresa Nielsen Hayden;
Tor also publishes Cory Doctorow, but he emigrated from Canada in
2000, two years before they published his first novel).
Despite the Canadian fixation on the term "speculative
fiction" (perhaps in hopes of fooling national and provincial
arts councils into giving the odd grant to an SF writer), the
preponderance of hard SF and space opera, especially by the more
prolific names and among their more recent works, is hard to
miss; indeed, as I write this, Analog is serializing Karl
Schroeder's latest novel, Sun of Suns.
More than a decade after Northern Stars, Tor still
publishes most of the Canadian SF out there, although, in the
interim, two Canadians have won the Warner Aspect first-novel
competition: Nalo Hopkinson and Karin Lowachee. They've both
risen to prominence in and out of Canada, their home-turf success
doubtless in part because H.B. Fenn is also Warner's Canadian
distributor the expertise Fenn gained in promoting the
early Tor Canadian authors benefited these more-recent arrivals.
Granted, Nalo isn't a hard-SF writer (but, then again,
Warner no longer markets her as SF; she's packaged as mainstream
now), but Karin writes space opera. Outside of Tor and Warner,
the major Canadian SF writers are Julie E. Czerneda (DAW) and
James Alan Gardner (Eos), also purveyors of quality space opera,
and, of course, William Gibson, whom I classify as a hard-SF
writer (but who isn't marketed as SF anymore anyway).
So, if you like hard SF and space opera, check out the
products of the Old Pemmican Factory which, despite the
occasional misleading cover, are almost totally moose-free.
Robert J. Sawyer's latest novel
is Mindscan.
More Good Reading
More about Canadian SF
Random Musings index
Encyclopedia Galactica entry on Canadian Science Fiction
Ten recommended Canadian SF novels
Northern Lights: ten years of news notes about Canadian SF authors.
Entry on Rob from Canadian Who's Who
My Very Occasional Newsletter
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