The Novel & the Romance
In April 1926, Hugo Gernsback opened his new science fiction magazine, Amazing Stories, with an essay--a manifesto--entitled "A New Sort of Magazine." He wrote:
It is entirely new--entirely different--something that has never been done before in this country.
And:
a magazine of "Scientifiction" is a pioneer in its field in America.
And:
By "scientifiction" I mean the Jules Verne, H. G. Wells, and Edgar Allan Poe type of story--a charming romance intermingled with scientific fact and prophetic vision. [Boldface added.]
And this:
It must be remembered that we live in an entirely new world. Two hundred years ago, stories of this kind were not possible. Science, through its various branches of mechanics, electricity, astronomy, etc., enters so intimately into all our lives today, and we are so much immersed in this science, that we have become rather prone to take new inventions and discoveries for granted. Our entire mode of living has changed with the present progress, and it is little wonder, therefore, that many fantastic situations--impossible 100 years ago--are brought about today. It is in these situations that the new romancers find their great inspiration.
Science fiction, then, was an innovation in 1926, a type of literature that would not have been possible one hundred years before. (1) That wasn't just hype on Gernsback's part. I think we have to accept it as fact.
Science fiction in 1926 was a fusion of romance and science, as well as a kind of fiction focused on the future instead of the past. That, too, was an innovation.
Even though science fiction is a fusion of romance and science, it would seem to have introduced discontinuity into the pulp genres and into literature as a whole, for all other genres originated in the pre-science past, whereas science fiction breaks from the past. All other genres are continuous with each other. As a genre, science fiction--pure science fiction--stands alone. Another innovation.
There has been a very long discussion regarding the differences between the novel and the romance in American literature. Nathaniel Hawthorne made the distinction. Edgar Allan Poe may have made it before him. American literary scholar Joel Porte (1933-2006) wrote on the subject in The Romance in America: Studies in Cooper, Poe, Hawthorne, Melville, and James, published in 1969. I don't have that book available to me, but Charles N. Watson, Jr., of Syracuse University wrote a review of it. Entitled "The American Romance and Its Critics," his review appeared in Poe Studies in December 1971 and is available online at the following URL:
https://www.eapoe.org/pstudies/ps1970/p1971218.htm
Please note that Watson repeatedly referred to authors in his essay as "romancers," just as Hugo Gernsback called nascent science fiction authors "new romancers."
The upshot is that, in America at least, the romance is a separate genre than is the more realistic novel. In other words, there are two types of stories or books, the romance and the novel. The novel is realistic and is bound to the world as it is. The romance is not tightly bound to the world; its landscape is that of the human heart. Even the words tell us about these two forms, for romance refers to the historic (and pre-science) past, while the root of novel is "new." The word Gothic of course also refers to the past, and there is a clear connection between Gothic and romantic or Romantic. Sometimes, in fact, they are joined and the Gothic romance emerges.
If this distinction holds, then Gothic novel, romance novel, and romantic or Romantic novel would seem self-contradictions. So would romantic or Romantic science fiction and Gothic science fiction. And yet we have the scientific romances of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. (2) We also have Neuromancer, a possibly new kind of romance written by a new romancer, William Gibson (1984). Hugo Gernsback predicted Mr. Gibson in his manifesto of 1926. Or maybe William Gibson self-consciously applied Gernsback's term to his own new romance of nearly sixty years later.
British and French authors of the nineteenth century typically wrote novels. The most well-known and well-liked American authors of that same century more often wrote romances. Here is William Dean Howells, an American realist, on one difference, at least in American literature:
Yet every now and then I read a book with perfect comfort and much exhilaration, whose scenes the average Englishman would gasp in. Nothing happens; that is, nobody murders or debauches anybody else; there is no arson or pillage of any sort; there is not a ghost, or a ravening beast, or a hair-breadth escape, or a shipwreck, or a monster of self-sacrifice, or a lady five thousand years old in the whole course of the story; "no promenade, no band of music, nossing!" as Mr. Du Maurier's Frenchman said of the meet for a fox-hunt. Yet it is all alive with the keenest interest for those who enjoy the study of individual traits and general conditions as they make themselves known to American experience.
If there are parallels in the pulp genres or in genre fiction, then the older genres, or genres that are oriented towards the past (as well as on descent or decay)--weird fiction, horror, adventure, historical romance--can be seen as romances, whereas science fiction, being bound to science and the real, material world, takes as its proper form that of the novel. These aren't perfect parallels, of course, and we should never let ourselves be hidebound by our scholarly ideas, categories, or theories. In any case, certain other genres are or may be realistic--Westerns, detective stories, war stories, railroad stories, sports stories--but these genres were probably more often romanticized in the pulps rather than allowed to remain in a purely realistic mode. For example, Hungry Men by Edward Anderson (1935) is a very realistic novel about hobos riding the rails and looking for work in Depression-era America. It could have been in a pulp magazine such as a railroad story magazine (I don't think that it was) except that it was probably too realistic for that kind of publication. The lives of the men in the story are in no way romanticized. They are in fact somewhat grim. (Grimness can be romanticized, too, and often is.) (3) To use examples from the cinema: with its weird atmosphere and apparently supernatural manifestations, High Plains Drifter (1973) is clearly a romance or a Gothic story in the American mode. In contrast, another of Clint Eastwood's Westerns, The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976), which is really astonishing in recapturing the feel of the historical past (in our nation's bicentennial year no less), is far more realistic. I'm sure you can come up with your own examples.
One point of all of this is that new romance, more particularly Gothic science fiction, would seem contradictions in terms. How can these two seeming opposites be forced together? In his story "The Gernsback Continuum" (1981), author William Gibson used a like expression "raygun Gothic." Does that work? Can there really be a Gothic science fiction? Not only can there be, I guess, but there really is such a thing, or at least people have tried it.
A final point for today: if there was going to be a science fiction magazine with stories written by "new romancers," could it have happened anywhere else but in America? I'm not sure that it could have, and I wonder why Hugo Gernsback, born in Luxembourg, emphasized that his magazine was new for "this country," the United States. Could there have been a previous magazine of science fiction or new romances published in Europe or elsewhere? Could he have been familiar with and referring to the German magazine Der Orchideengarten, first published in--when else--1919?
To be continued . . .
Notes
(1) One hundred years before--in 1826--John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, men of the eighteenth century and among the last of the revolutionary generation, reached their ends.
(2) I have just learned about a book called The Space Machine: A Scientific Romance by British author Christopher Priest (1943-2024). It was published in 1976, or Year Zero in the punk music calendar. The Space Machine is set in Victorian England and is of a piece with the science fiction novels or scientific romances of H.G. Wells. Christopher Priest's first science fiction story was published in 1966, that essential pop-cultural year. He was influenced in his work by J.G. Ballard. On April 23, 2026, Bloomsbury Continuum published his study of Ballard's work, The Illuminated Man: Life, Death and the Worlds of J. G. Ballard, a posthumous collaboration with his wife, Nina Allan. Note the word in the publisher's name: continuum.
(3) Edward Anderson (1905-1969) also wrote Thieves Like Us (1937), which was made into a movie in 1974. His title is the source of the song title "Thieves Like Us" by New Order. This is how circles are made. I have been writing about New Order and Joy Division. I'm planning to write more.
By the way, Edward Anderson had five stories in pulp magazines during the 1930s. Thieves Like Us appeared in its entirety in the pulp magazine Speed Mystery in December 1945. That title mixes the Italian Futurists' speed with the romance of mystery. (Notice how once a word is set in italics it seems to move forward and with greater speed.) Maybe American stories of cars and the road are also made by new romancers. Maybe they belong next to science fiction as realistic romances. Astoundingly enough, Edward Anderson also had three letters in Astounding Stories in 1931-1932. When his first was published, he shared a letters page with Gertrude Hemken (1912-1992) of Weird Tales fame.
A final by-the-way: when I read Thieves Like Us, I found out that the word Hoosier can be used as an insult, as in "Those guys are a bunch of Hoosiers," meaning "a bunch of amateurs." Today we would say "losers." Then, when I worked in Missouri, I heard people use Hoosier in the same sense. I felt like my cultural heritage was being insulted. Do I have to remind everybody that Steve McQueen, Bill Blass, Robert Wise, Twila Tharp, Edith Hamilton, Connie Booth, and Scatman Crothers were or are all from Indiana? There are more where they came from--literally. You know what else was from Indiana? Weird Tales.
Original text copyright 2026 Terence E. Hanley