The three men are Richard Wolinsky of KPFA; Lawrence Davidson, science fiction buyer for the famous Cody's Books of Berkley; and Richard A. Lupoff, SF novelist, editor and fan.
For years, they talked about pulling together an oral history of early SF from those interviews. They had contracts with publishing companies a few times, but things didn't quite work out - until they did.
Space Ships! Ray Guns! Martian Octopods! is that oral history, subtitled Interviews with Science Fiction Legends. It assembles and organizes conversations between one or more of the three interviewers (in various permutations) with fifty-nine people who were nearly all SF writers (and many were also editors or agents, and all but the earliest generation were fans first, in the old familiar way), from Forrest J. Ackerman to Roger Zelazny. It was published a few months ago.
Of the interviewers, only Wolinsky is still with us, Lupoff and Davidson having both died over the past decade. Among the interviewees, I think only Robert Silverberg is left, but I'd be happy to have missed someone. So this is a little bit like Queequeg's coffin, popping up above the waves at a moment when everything else related to it has been dragged down into the murky depths. (Or maybe I'm being overly dramatic about an oral history of a time that is, let's be honest, around a hundred years ago.)
Wolinsky organizes this vast mass of individual transcripts into seven longish chapters, running roughly chronologically from the early days of Hugo Gernsback's Amazing in the 1920s through roughly 1960. We hear from all of the interviewees where they said something relevant, and many of them are seeming to respond to each other, turning the book occasionally into a conversation. They don't always agree with each other in all aspects, of course, and Wolinsky has done a bit of editing to quietly correct misstated facts and add in some explanatory notes - people don't always get everything 100% right when talking live on the radio.
I don't think there's anything new here - obviously, the interviews themselves were public when they were made, and have been incorporated into the standard view of the field and fan lore - but Wolinksy and his fellow interviewers talked to an incredibly broad spectrum of SF personalities, especially in the early days - general pulpeteers like Ed Earl Repp and Louis Lamour, early fans-turned-editors like Julie Schwartz, and notable minor writers like Stanton A. Coblenz, Raymond Z. Gallun, E. Hoffman Price, and Harry Bates.
There's a lot of the usual fan self-back-patting, talking about how smart and forward-looking and wonderful they all were, in the early days of the world when pulp magazines roamed free and the world was their oyster. This is mostly the reminiscences old men - and a very few women - about the days when they were young and pounding out reams of paper for what was a surprisingly good wage, so there's the usual golden glow about all of those memories.
But Wolinsky's editorial voice reins that in, and he's very clear on how the field has changed since then - as well as pointing out some of the obvious flaws in that bright fannish world of the '30s. Space Ships! is a fun book, with a lot of quirky and distinctive voices - a few of those early writers were interviewed at a time in their lives when they clearly didn't worry about burning bridges, avoiding profanity, or any other considerations of propriety - all corralled into telling what turns into a mostly coherent, consistent story of a whole field building itself out of the materials it found at hand.
