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The Palencar Project

The Palencar Project

David G. Hartwell

Introducing the Palencar Project

One day I was walking down the hall past the Tor Books art department and noticed, not for the first time, a fine painting by John Jude Palencar in the hallway. On that day, my curiosity got the better of me and I asked Irene Gallo what it was to be used for, or if it had been used and I had missed it.

She said that in fact it was unassigned, and she needed to find a book for which it would be appropriate.

And without missing a step I said, "I could commission stories based on it." You see, writers of a certain age and experience know what that means.

Long ago in the time of the pulp fiction magazines the cover artists often got paid more than the writers for their work. A good cover, after all, could really sell a lot of magazines. For the less prosperous magazines, sometimes a good cover was bought before the fiction was even written. This gave an ironic and ambiguous meaning to the phrase "the cover story" -- which was sometimes, actually fairly often, written to fit the art.

Canny editors would invite a hungry writer up to the office to see the art, and tell them they would get their name on the cover if they could write a salable story using the cover image in a short amount of time. Occasionally, an editor would invite several such hungry writers, and tell them all to write a story for that cover, and buy the first or best, and maybe one or two others. Only the first bought would get the cover credit -- the author's name in display type on the cover.

This kind of thing went on for decades, and even into the 1960s and early 1970s in the digest magazines. And for all I know may still be going on today.

And that's what gave me the idea. I could ask a bunch of really first-rate writers to write stories, knowing that each would be different, and make a kind of event of it. I asked fewer than ten writers, and five of them did it. And the rest declined only because they had too much work committed already for this past summer and fall.

Those writers and stories are:

Personally, I am delighted with the results. And I hope to do it again -- in fact, I did do it again, in The Anderson Project.

New World Blues

The Palencar Project: Book 1

L. E. Modesitt, Jr.

One of five stories inspired by the same painting by John Jude Palencar. Anthologized in The Palencar Project and later collected in The One-Eyed Man: A Fugue, With Winds and Accompaniment.


Read this story online for free at Tor.com.

Dormanna

The Palencar Project: Book 2

Gene Wolfe

One of five stories inspired by the same painting by John Jude Palencar. Anthologized in The Palencar Project and later in The Year's Best SF 18.


Read this story online for free at Tor.com.

Thanatos Beach

The Palencar Project: Book 3

James Morrow

One of five stories inspired by the same painting by John Jude Palencar. Anthologized in The Palencar Project.


Read this story online for free at Tor.com.

The Woman Who Shook the World-Tree

The Palencar Project: Book 4

Michael Swanwick

One of five stories inspired by the same painting by John Jude Palencar. Anthologized in The Palencar Project and later in The Year's Best SF 18. It is included in the collection 'Not So Much' Said the Cat (2016).

Read this story online for free at Tor.com.

The Sigma Structure Symphony

The Palencar Project: Book 5

Gregory Benford

One of five stories inspired by the same painting by John Jude Palencar. Anthologized in The Palencar Project and later in The Year's Best SF 18 (2013), edited by David G. Hartwell, and Ex Libris: Stories of Librarians, Libraries & Lore (2017), edited by Paula Guran. The story is included in the collection The Best of Gregory Benford.


Read this story online for free at Tor.com.