CVC Veri A Guide to the Epic of the Martian Empire
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41 pages
English

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Description

Introduction
By Lee Streiff

"In 1937 James Streiff and Bob Parks created 'the Epic of the Martian Empire'; in 1942 Paul Carter added his vision of the Cosmic Vortex to it, and the Universe was never the same again..." Lee Streiff

Once we lived in the world of the Martian Empire, but that now seems like a long time ago – it all began in those last remaining years before World War II changed our consciousnesses forever. It was an ephemeral, still time; a quiet space in which we could dream about the future without the burden of its consequences: ghastly war – genocide – the atomic bomb.

It was in 1937... and my brother James was 13, and in the eighth grade at Robinson Junior High School in Wichita, Kansas. And in James's mind he was fashioning a cosmic empire filled with strange and wonderful creatures and races – in which a stalwart group of Exiles from the planet Mars were the chief actors and heroes.

This Empire, the Martian Empire, eventually spread over most of the known Universe before it finally faded away in 1948'. During the eleven years it flourished however, the Martian Epic became very elaborate – covering some 15 billion years of Martian history – and Martian technology, manners and morals, art, music, religion, language and literature. And it generated a narrative Epic that encompassed many galaxies.

Although a number of people became involved in this epic – Bob Parks, John Roth, Robert Frickel, Charles Goodrum, and Robert Arnold, among others – it was first and foremost the vision of James, who worked out and brought together the maps, timelines, the celestial spaces, the customs, and the characters that made up the Martian Empire in all its diverse grandeur.

In early 1937 I was only four years old – and so it was that most of my childhood and youth were somehow surrounded or suffused with the images and tales of the Epic. However it was not until I reached the age of eleven that I became the brief inheritor of, and participant in the affairs of the Epic itself.

It was during World War II in 1943. that I first took over the job of running the business of the Martian Empire while all of its members were away from Wichita, in the Army, Navy, and Air Force. Knowing that he would soon be drafted, James began grooming me for the task early in that year. He reported for active Military duty on June 3, 1943, and that changed the course of my daily life. I was now on my own, with a heavy responsibility,

I published The Martian News Letter, the official journal of the group, using carbon paper – and a bit later a hectograph; published, The Order of Shultz, which circulated the business of the inner circle; reorganized The Files; answered correspondence among the far flung Martians scattered around the globe; and did research for a number of topics for James, using my contacts in the world of Science Fiction Fandom.

When James returned from active service in February of 1946, my task had been completed, and in any case, my interests were largely turning in other directions. By 1947, in my sophomore year at East High School, I was even leaving Science Fiction itself behind and was now involved in art and literature. But then that is another story.

In the Following seven Chapters, Lee Streiff describes in his "Guide to the Epic of the Martian Empire" of how the tales and creation of the Epic... all came about.

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Publié par
Date de parution 21 février 2013
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781456611903
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 2 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0398€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

This Book is dedicated
 
In Loving Memory to
 
James L. Streiff
 
1924-2007
 
 
“To Veri, to Veri, to a place in the stars”
James L. Streiff
 



 


Copyright 2012 Lee Streiff,
All rights reserved.
 
 
Published in eBook format by eBookIt.com
http://www.eBookIt.com
 
 
ISBN-13: 978-1-4566-1190-3
 
 
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the author. The only exception is by a reviewer, who may quote short excerpts in a review.
 


ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS & CREDITS
 
 
A Special Thanks to: Alison Streiff, Scott for all her help with the Guide Book and to Celeste Streiff, Hammond for the layout and re-typing.
 
For the Artwork
• All drawings and maps unless otherwise noted are by James Streiff
• Cover Art by James Streiff
• Cover Design by Celeste Streiff, Hammond
• Bob Arnold for Figures 2.6 Scenes in Elysium & 3.4 Venus Ruins and Vegetation and Figure 3.13, the Atomic transmutation gun
• John Cockroft 1946 drawings, Figure 4.6, - 6.6 & 7.2 Martian News Letter Cover
• Lee Streiff for the Star map of the 81 st dimension; N-dimensional Chess Board, (concept by James Streiff) & Figure 7.2 The Rocket Ship “LaRue”
• Celeste Streiff, Hammond for the illustration; of the later rendering of the Ex-Robot Dictator, the Demon Veri, Noshabkenning & all the chess game pieces.
• E.A. McKinley, 1946, A Martian Outpost, Figure 6.4; Quarts Desert on Phobos Figure 6.5
• Givovanni Schiparelli’s Maps of Mars; Figures 2.5 & 2.7
• Vortex location photo of Alison Lee Scott & George Laughhead taken by Neal Smith, August 2009; used with permission of Alison Scott (photo can also be seen on the website of “Beats in Kansas.””
 
Music
All Music by James Streiff: CVC Veri Song (in Martian Script & in English), Excelsior, Hymn to Klono, & Ode to a Scarecrow’s Mother-in-law.
 
Mentions
• The Inner Circle
• Charles Goodrum/ Betty Fredrick/ John Roth/ Lowell Rhoades/ Emily Cross/ Robert Frickel/ John Pruessner/ Victor Lebow/ Ralph Pennington/ Bob Arnold/ Warren Ohrvall/ Gladys’ Dart/ Morton Wills/ James Streiff & Bob Parks.
• Outer Circle: Neil Potts/ Paul Gibbons / E.F. Branson, & Paul Carter (Blackfoot Idaho writer) & John Cockroft (California Artist)
• The Science-Fiction Society
• Later around 1946: E.A. McKinley, from Wellington Ks (Artist). Also, Doris Currier and Davy McGirr from Salem Mass. /Lee Streiff/ Michael McClure/ Bruce Conner (quote)/ Bill Eldred/ Francis Honey/ Phyl Gardner (Artist)/ Ed Robbins/ G. Robbins/ John Dye/ M. Taylor/ G. Peterson/ Mrs. Ohlerking/ Bob Burnham/ Vernon Smith/ John Roth/ Bob Parks/ & James Streiff (Artist & Creator).
 


 
 

 
James Streiff, 1946
 
 

 

 
* CVC Veri Song by: James Streiff, written in Martian Script
 
Introduction
By Lee Streiff
 
“In 1937 James Streiff and Bob Parks created ‘the Epic of the Martian Empire’; in 1942 Paul Carter added his vision of the Cosmic Vortex to it, and the Universe was never the same again…” Lee Streiff
 
It now seems like a long time ago — in those last remaining years before World War II changed our consciousnesses forever. It was an ephemeral, still time; a quiet space in which we could dream about the future without the burden of its consequences: ghastly war — genocide — the atomic bomb.
 
It was 1937… my brother James was 13, and in the eighth grade at Robinson Junior High School in Wichita, Kansas. And in his mind he was fashioning a cosmic empire filled with strange and wonderful creatures and races — in which a stalwart group of Exiles from the planet Mars were the chief actors and heroes.
This Empire, the Martian Empire, eventually spread over most of the known Universe before it finally faded away in 1948’. During the eleven years it flourished however, the Martian Epic became very elaborate — covering some 15 billion years of Martian history — and Martian technology, manners and morals, art, music, religion, language and literature. And it generated a narrative Epic that encompassed many galaxies.
Although a number of people became involved in this epic — Bob Parks, John Roth, Robert Frickel, Charles Goodrum, and Robert Arnold, among others — it was first and foremost the vision of James, who worked out and brought together the maps, timelines, the celestial spaces, the customs, and the characters that made up the Martian Empire in all its diverse grandeur.
Central to the Epic were the Cultural Hero, The Mighty Moscovitch (whose name should always be written in red ink — or in some other way be made distinctive); The evil Martian Aristocrats (who drove the Exiles who created the Empire off Mars itself); Shultz’s Beer Parlor; Varnish (a virulent elixir); various gods and creatures (Erf and Merf the dragons; KLONO, god of Planets and justice; NOSHABKENNING, god of Space; the Little Men, messengers of KLONO; and on and on); but at the center of it all was The Parks, Streiff Construction Co. — whose partners were the prime movers of most of the action.
In early 1937 I was only four years old — and so it was that most of my childhood and youth were somehow surrounded or suffused with the images and tales of the Epic. However it was not until I reached the age of eleven that I became the brief inheritor of, and participant in the affairs of the Epic itself.
It was during World War II in 1943. that I first took over the job of running the business of the Martian Empire while all of its members were away from Wichita, in the Army, Navy, and Air Force. Knowing that he would soon be drafted, James began grooming me for the task early in that year. He reported for active Military duty on June 3, 1943, and that changed the course of my daily life. I was now on my own, with a heavy responsibility,
At first my duties were minimal: receiving correspondence from members of the group and sending them on to James, and keeping The files of the Parks, Streiff Construction Co. up to date.
Increasingly however, my role grew larger, until by July of 1944, when James returned from Africa, I was, to all intents and purposes, in charge, and was responsible for the fate of the whole enterprise: I published The Martian News Letter , the official journal of the group, using carbon paper — and a bit later a hectograph; published, The Order of Shultz , which circulated the business of the inner circle; reorganized The Files ; answered correspondence among the far flung Martians scattered around the globe; and did research for a number of topics for James, using my contacts in the world of Science Fiction Fandom.
And I decided to improve on things, as well. Among the first things I did was to try to bring some order to the scattered parts of the legend. In actuality there was much about the origin and development of the Epic itself that I did not know. I had — and was familiar with, the letters, the essays, the pictures, the old copies of “the Martian News Letter,” the assorted documents, the scribbled notes, the obscure messages written in Martian script, and so on, but I did not know exactly how it had all come to be in the first place; and I did not have a mental model of what all the parts were suppose to add up to. And, The Files did not help in this; they were diffuse:
The files were a way of storing bits and pieces for recovery, but they did not tell a connected tale, or even relate things to one another so I chose to do two things: (1) to put the events of the Epic into a chronological narrative order, and (2) to make a sort of encyclopedia of the facts, figures, characters, and events. Encyclopedia’s I understood — I had read most of the two sets our family owned, and much out of The World Book of our neighbor, Mrs. Peggy Easley, as well, by the time I was seven. Thus, the form of an encyclopedia, as a repository of knowledge, made sense to me.
I set to work then culling The Files for data, extracting information from letters, and asking James questions in our extended correspondence. I began to type up some of the papers that were inscribed un James almost indecipherable hand writing, and started writing little transitions that linked some of the material together. I also made various inventories of different areas (music, publications and such) and tried to establish dates for items. I even started a cross-referencing card file that made it easier to find things in The Files .
When James returned from active service in February of 1946, my task had been completed, and in any case, my interests were largely turning in other directions. By 1947, in my sophomore year at East High School, I was even leaving Science Fiction itself behind and was now involved in art and literature. But then that is another story.
 
In the Following seven Chapters, Lee Streiff describes in his “Guide to the Epic of the Martian Empire” of how the tales and creation of the Epic… all came about.
 
CHAPTER 1 The Basics: The Files , the Cosmology, and the gods.
The Epic of the Martian Empire began in the fertile imagination of James Streiff somewhere around 1937’ when he was in the 8 th grade at Robinson Junior High School. Partially put together from the stories, pictures and characters in the Science Fiction magazines of the day that he read; partially invented out of what he knew of history and science; and greatly elaborated in conversations with his friends, the Epic grew over the next six years as James moved on to East High School and later to the University of Wichita. As time went on, ever more people became involved in the Epic, until something like fifteen similarly minded friends were all picking up and enlarging on it.
 

Figure 1.1 James Streiff and Robert Parks, at fifteen, circa 1939
 
As far as the influence of science-fiction was concerned, originally E.E. Smith’s “Gray Lensman,” series in Astounding Science F

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