Posted on 03/18/2008 5:25:49 PM PDT by gallaxyglue
Arthur C. Clarke, 1917 - 2008
Posted at 4:21 pm in Science
I am incredibly saddened to hear that Arthur C. Clarke has died. He had been ill for sometime, and finally succumbed earlier today.
It is no exaggeration at all to say we owe the world to Clarke. He is most famous for having written the book and movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, of course. But he also was the first person to conceive of a geostationary orbit; one in which a satellite orbits the Earth once every 24 hours, giving it a view that always shows the same face of the Earth. This is (mostly) where we put weather and communication satellites today.
His science fiction and fact books inspired a generation of rocket scientists, engineers, astronomers, and more. His fiction in the 1950s is a blueprint for how to explore space, and had the US government listened I might have been writing these words from my cabin on a lunar base.
I personally had some tangential contact with him. We sent him a copy of my first book to get a blurb from him; he sent one back too late to use on the book, but I have the letter still and I treasure it. I also met a good friend of ACCs, Fred Durant, at James Randis first Amazing Meeting. We chatted for a while, and he asked me if I had ever read Clarkes The Coming of the Space Age. I said sure, back in high school. He asked if Id like a copy, and I again said sure! He then got a little wistful, and said that he bought the last remaining first edition hardcovers years back, and Clarke was ticked because he had wanted them. Then Fred smiled, and said Clarke was even more ticked when Fred made him sign all the copies.
It took a moment for me to realize that Fred was offering to send me a signed, first-edition hardcover of Clarkes book. I couldnt believe it.
That book sits on my shelf, not one meter to my left. Its one of my most prized possessions.
Clarke inspired me when I was in high school. His stories of lunar colonization were (and still are) wonderful reading, cleverly plotted and well-written. Im very sad hes gone, but I am so very very happy he was alive. His name will be remembered as long as we ply the lanes of space.
Open the Pod Bay Doors, Hal.
I am deeply saddened.
2001 moved me in many ways as I came of age.
I had read the book before I ever saw the movie, although they are the same.
No videos or internet then... - sigh
A true giant is gone,his City and the Stars got me into S/F
stayed with him to the last Rama installment.
That was a good tale you shared
RIP Mr Clarke
I loved his books.
I just started rereading The City and the Stars.
He’s a very gifted, moving writer.
Just our imaginations which took us to the far reaches of the galaxy through his writing.
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