Edmund Cooper (30 April 1926 – 11 March 1982) was an English poet and prolific writer of speculative fiction, romances, technical essays, several detective stories, and a children's book. These were published under his own name and several pen names.
Biography
Born in Marple, near Stockport, Cheshire, Cooper left school at the age of 15. In 1942 he became engaged at 16 to a teacher four years older than he was, and married her four years later on 13 April 1946.[1] He worked as a labourer, then a civil servant, and in 1944 he joined the Merchant Navy.[2] After the war he trained as a teacher,[1] and began to publish verse, then short stories, then novels. Deadly Image, the first novel to appear under his own name, was completed in 1957 and published in 1958 in the United States.[2] (The novel was published in the UK later in 1958 in a variant form and under its better-known title The Uncertain Midnight.) The Uncertain Midnight was adapted without authorisation for Swiss television in 1969.[2] His short story The Brain Child (1956) was adapted as the movie The Invisible Boy (1957), which featured the return of Robby the Robot from Forbidden Planet.[2]
Cooper reviewed science fiction for the Sunday Times from 1967 until his death in 1982.[2]
In 2009, Carol Lake published Those Summers at Moon Farm (United Writers, Cornwall: 978-1-85200-141-4), a roman à clef about the writer and family. The author's comments says 'Although inspired by real people, this story is fiction'. Dedicated in part to Joan and Edmund Cooper, Lake acknowledges one of Cooper's daughters, 'for sharing memories and anecdotes'.
Work and criticism
Cooper was an atheist and an individualist. His science fiction often depicts unconventional male heroes facing unfamiliar and remote environments.[3] His novel The Uncertain Midnight was noted for its treatment of the subject of androids, which was considered original at the time of writing.[4] Also treated is the subject of the colonisation of planets, which is the basis of Cooper's Expendables series, published under the pen name Richard Avery (the name of the hero of Transit). The Expendables series features an unusual diversity, both in its cast of characters, and in the frank nature of their conversations and attitudes on racial and sexual topics.
Two[5] of Cooper's books depict future Earths dominated by women after the genetic or physical need for men has been reduced. His attitude to women is said to have been controversial.[6] Cooper was quoted as saying: "Let them have totally equal competition ... they'll see that they can't make it."[7] The theme of both books is actually the need to retain both sexes. Five to Twelve ends with the phrase "if we do not make any more mistakes, we can create a balanced world of men and women". The more cynical Who Needs Men? ends by asking whether love of woman for man is worth death for that love.
Publications
Novels
As George Kinley
1954 Ferry Rocket, Curtis Books
As Broderick Quain
1954 They Shall Not Die, Curtis Books
As Martin Lester
1954, The Black Phoenix, Curtis Books
As Edmund Cooper
1957 The Invisible Boy (chapbook) Ungar Electronics Tools
1979 Jupiter Laughs and Other Stories, Hodder & Stoughton, Readers' Union, Coronet
1980 World of Difference, Robert Hale
Short stories by Edmund Cooper
1963 "The Piccadilly Interval" in Tomorrow Came, Panther
1969 "The Lizard of Woz" Reprinted by permission of the author in Flying Saucers (1982) by Isaac Asimov, Martin Harry Greenberg and Charles G. Waugh, ISBN0-449-21400-1
^Ash, Brian: Who's Who in Science Fiction: Sphere Books Ltd; 1976 : "Cooper's forte is his portrayal of suspiciously Heinlein-type male heroes ... who act out their particular destinies (not always gloriously) against unfamiliar backdrops."
^Ash, Brian: Who's Who in Science Fiction: Sphere Books Ltd; 1976
^ abJonathan S Farley. "Edmund Cooper bibliography"(PDF). Archived from the original(PDF) on 15 September 2012. Retrieved 28 September 2017. page 4, Short Stories "Brain Child, The : The Saturday Evening Post (as 'The Invisible Boy'); 23 June 1956"; page 11, Filmography "Invisible Boy, The : Brain Child, The: Herman Hoffman; USA; 1957", "O .B.N. in arrivo : Death Watch: part of series ' Racconti di fantascienza di Blasetti, I':Alessandro Blasetti; Italy; 1978"