Stories the Dogs Tell: Clifford D. Simak’s City

Stories the Dogs Tell: Clifford D. Simak’s City

SimakCityGnome

City by Clifford D. Simak. First Edition: Gnome Books, 1952.
Cover by Frank Kelly Freas (click to enlarge)

City
by Clifford D. Simak
Gnome Press (224 pages, $2.75 in hardcover, May 1952)

Clifford D. Simak was a Midwestern US newspaperman who wrote science fiction on the side, and published stories beginning in the 1930s in magazines like Wonder Stories until finding a home in John W. Campbell’s Astounding in the 1940s (and later Galaxy in the 1950s). City was his earliest significant work, published in 1952 but composed of stories published mostly in Astounding from 1944 onward. An enduring work, it won one of the very earliest awards for SF or fantasy, the International Fantasy Award, in 1953 (two years after Stewart’s Earth Abides, which I reviewed here in January, won the same award). It’s Simak’s most popular book along with his Way Station, published a decade later.

Gist

The book tells the future of humanity as it abandons cities for country estates and then moves off Earth to settle other planets, and in parallel the rise of an artificially created Dog civilization. By the end, humans have largely propagated outward to other planets, and Earth is left to the intelligent dog civilization, to whom these stories are myths.

Take

This is a beautiful work that suffers from its origin as a group of separately written stories over seven years. The effect is a kitchen-sink fix-up novel in which each story develops a new concept, sometimes to solve the problem set up by the previous story, rather than an integrated work planned from the beginning. And it’s sentimental at times. But that Simak could take an initial premise, about the transformation of human civilization by technology, and extend it, again and again, with notions of bootlegging the intelligence of dogs (and ants), speculations about how the world is much vaster than the tiny portion humans have perceived, and how humanity might well give way to other species, is an impressive achievement.

Summary

The book consists of eight stories plus an (much later-written) epilogue. The framing sections in which dog scholars present these stories as myths were, of course, not present when the stories were first published, but were added in the book. The edition I’m reading, with pages references below, is this very handsome Old Earth Books hardcover edition of 2004.

City by Clifford D. Simak. Old Earth Books, 2004
Cover by Douglas Klauba (click to enlarge)

The first story, “City” (first published in Astounding May 1944), is set about 50 years in the future of Simak’s writing in 1944 or so, and it projects the development of several technologies — helicopters, planes, hydroponics, atomics—into a future in which cars are obsolete, cities are unnecessary “huddling places”, and most people have chosen to live out in the country (since transportation is so easy and economical). The story concerns the problem of unoccupied houses in the unnamed city where John J. Webster lives, and what to do with them.

Subsequent stories follow succeeding generations of the Webster family. The second, “Huddling Place” (Astounding July 1944), concerns Jerome A. Webster living comfortably on the Webster family estate surrounded by benevolent robot servants, as his son Thomas is about to head for Mars. (Were Simak’s robots influenced by Asimov’s? Not noticeably. Simak’s robots are elegant, serene servants; they would reappear in later works like the 1972 novel A Choice of Gods.) Jerome is uncomfortable leaving home even to see his son depart. When an urgent request comes for Jerome to journey to Mars himself, to treat Juwain, a Martian philosopher he once knew, he can’t bring himself to do even that. He understands that the condition of agoraphobia that has settled into the human instinct.

In the third story, “Census” (Astounding Sept. 1944) a World Committee has formed, planets in other star systems are being settled, and there is a hidden population of “ridge runners” who have chosen to live in the hills unaccounted for — extraordinary people like those in the past who’d become successful artists, politicians, or crooks. An enumerator (census taker), Richard Grant, visits the Websters in search of them, and meets their talking dog Nathaniel; the Websters have pursued the options of advancing dogs into a sentient species. Grant tracks rumors of a mysterious stranger in the woods, Joe, who has created an advanced ant civilization. Grant reveals he is searching for someone to finish a thesis by that Martian philosopher Juwain, one that might change mankind — and the dogs. But Joe, reading a fragment, sees an error and will not reveal it. He’s not interested.

The single most striking story is “Desertion” (Astounding Nov. 1944), set on Jupiter, in which men are transformed into creatures able to survive on its surface and explore. (The plan is, page 98b, “Man would take over Jupiter as he already had taken over the other smaller planets,” an expression of the manifest destiny common in 1940s and ‘50s SF.) A sixth man, Fowler, prepares for his expedition, knowing that the previous five never returned, and no one knows why, and this man takes his dog Towser. They are both transformed and sent out, and both overwhelmed by the experience, perceiving and understanding more than they ever could before. The man realizes they’re now using their brains fully: “Maybe the brains of Earth things naturally are slow and foggy. Maybe we are the morons of the universe…” Pages 107.7 And 108t: “perhaps because we were human beings… Poorly equipped for thinking, poorly equipped in certain senses that one has to have to know. Perhaps even lacking in certain senses that are necessary to true knowledge.” And they realize, they can’t go back. — Spoiler! — because, as expressed in the final lines,

“I can’t go back,” said Towser.

“Nor I,” said Fowler.

“They would turn be back into a dog,” said Towser.

“And me,” said Fowler, “back into a man.”


City by Clifford D. Simak. Ace 4th printing, 1973
Erroneously credits it as a Hugo Winner,
confusing the Hugo with the earlier International Fantasy Award

The next story, “Paradise” (Astounding June 1946) was first published a year and a half after the four previous stories, as if Simak thought a while before deciding to continue. It picks up where the last one left off. Fowler decides to return to the Jupiter compound and be transformed back into a man, so that he can explain his experience and thus why the earlier explorers never came back. He subsequently returns to Earth and his story spreads. Fowler meets the latest Webster, who worries that the news that Jupiter is a paradise could spell the end of humanity as it’s been, subverting its “destiny.” Joe is still around, revealing that he and the other mutants have stolen Juwain’s philosophy — which has to do with sensing the viewpoints of others, achieving complete understanding, a kind of “semantics.” The mutants don’t need it — they have telepathy — but humans do.

In “Hobbies” (Astounding Nov. 1946) Jon Webster exists in a world in which almost all humans have left Earth, and those left behind are too rich, and have nothing to do except pursue hobbies, like painting or creating elaborate cocktails, or writing the book he is writing. He returns to the family estate, where he learns about the “cobblies,” perhaps other dimensions or planes of access, that the dogs have learned about. The dogs are building a brotherhood of animals, “in a direction that man passed by without a second glance.” Webster realizes mankind has wasted its time, and returns to Geneva, where the last 5000 humans on Earth live, and seals the entire city off from the outside world — giving the dogs their chance.

In “Aesop” (Astounding Dec. 1947) a dog civilization has come into being, having all but forgotten humans, thinking of them generically as “websters” in lower case. They live by their Canons, which prohibit any destruction of life; animals don’t eat each other, they eat from feeding stations manned by mutant humans or robots. Jenkins, the head robot, is now 7000 years old. The dogs and robots decide the past doesn’t exist; each moment is a new world in a series of parallel realities. But they now face a world of overpopulation, since the animals don’t eat each other. The solution is the parallel worlds the mutants have accessed.

The final story, “The Simple Way” (published not in Astounding but in Fantastic Adventures Jan. 1951) brings Jenkins and Jon Webster together again, to solve the destiny of the ants, to whom the world is left.

Harry Harrison’s Astounding: John W. Campbell Memorial Anthology, 1973
Jacket design Jack Sposato. First appearance of “Epilog”

An “Epilog” written years later and so not in early editions of the book (it was written for Harry Harrison’s 1973 John W. Campbell memorial anthology Astounding published in 1973, shown above), tells of Jenkins on a world of mice and ants, as he discovers the ants are dead. A spaceship lands, with Andrew, a wild robot, who tells of other worlds: “There are worlds out there, and life on some of them. Even some intelligence. There is work to do.” And invites Jenkins to join them.

Comments and Quotes

  • The most striking aspect of the book — in the framing “Notes” to each tale, added in the book publication — is the retrospective introductions to the stories by later dog scholars, who don’t quite believe that humans actually existed. They are a myth. They describe the setting and context for these myths about the strange creatures and their strange concepts. Like “city.”

    These are the stories that the Dogs tell when the fires burn high and the wind is from the north. Then each family circle gathers at the hearthstone and the pups sit silently and listen and when the story’s done they ask many questions:

    “What is Man?” they’ll ask.

    Or perhaps: “What is a city?”

    Or: “What is a war?”

    There is not positive answer to any of these questions. There are suppositions and there are theories and there are many educated guesses, but there are no answers.

    This of course is one of those things science fiction does so well, to imagine an alternate perspective from the one we take for granted and suggest that humanity’s current privileged position is merely contingent on circumstances…and will change.

  • The first story especially reveals an antipathy toward technology that recalls Ray Bradbury, in its character’s irritation with an automated lawn-mower.
  • Simak makes an intelligent insight: that as humanity has dispersed from cities, the threat of nuclear war is reduced, since there are no more centralized targets. Much more subtly the book reflects Simak’s horror at the events in Europe at the time (the early 1940s), the prospect of nuclear war and the “horror that men would inflict on one another,” as a 1976 introduction by Simak describes, included in the Old Earth Books edition.
  • There’s an aside in the first story about a “Bureau of Human Adjustment” in which it’s revealed that humans are being “adjusted,” mostly covertly, to new ways of life now that the old jobs have disappeared (page 26). This has a modern ring to it (Yuval Noah Harari, in his second book Homo Deus, describes how many humans will have to adjust to being unemployed later in the 21st century). And presumably it explains the agoraphobia revealed in the second story.
  • It’s amusing how the Dogs (in the latter-day introductions) assume the robots were invented by them, since the robots’ functions are so ideal — they serve as the Dogs’ hands! This is a clever insight, reflected today by the way human creationists assume the universe exists for humanity’s own sake. (The Dogs also dismiss the notion of traveling off the planet as fantasy, since “everyone knows” that stars are just lights hanging in the sky, page 40.)
  • “Huddling Place” emphasizes the idea of country living, away from the cities: “a manorial existence, based on old family homes and leisurely acres, with atomics supplying power and robots in place of serfs.” And with devices (like virtual reality, though it’s not called that here) to transport one’s image and presence anywhere, in order to transact business anywhere in the world, with the twist of a dial, page 45.
  • Offhand, the stories assume the existence of an intelligent Martian race — as did other books of the era, by Heinlein, Clarke, Silverberg, et al., and of course Bradbury.
  • The first couple stories are highly parochial; what’s happening in the rest of the world? Is everyone living on lavish family estates with robot servants? Everybody? The unexamined assumption here is that most people would prefer living on country estates, not in cities. But I suspect this merely reveals the author’s own preference and thus bias. Simak grew up in rural Wisconsin, where many of his stories are set (most famously Way Station), and though he lived most of his life as a newspaper man in Minneapolis, he apparently missed his childhood environment, and presumed that most other people would be attracted to it as well.
  • The third story “Census,” in which it’s revealed that the Webster family has pursued the option of advancing dogs, through surgery, has a Lamarckian element to it, but anyway it’s an “uplift” event, in the term later popularized by David Brin.
  • “Desertion” has a couple crucial themes. First, that perception outside the narrow range of human existence might be extraordinary, full of experiences humans can literally not imagine (however close SF writers like to try). (E.O. Wilson has emphasized this theme, how the range of human perception is narrow compared to what’s available in the EM spectrum for example, in his books.) On the other hand the idea on page 107 — quoted in part above — about how grand mysteries “beyond the pale of human thought, beyond even the pale of human imagination,” and “Things that any brain should know if it used all its reasoning power” is off the mark, I think. It’s an attractive notion, like the debunked notion that humans use only 10% of their brain capacity, but 75 years on there’s no reason to think the human mind is anything but acutely optimized for its environment. On the other hand, page 108 has remarks that anticipate Wilson, but are a tad teleological: “Because our human bodies were poor bodies. Poorly equipped for thinking, poorly equipped in certain senses that one has to have to know. Perhaps even lacking in certain senses that are necessary to true knowledge.”
  • In “Paradise” there’s a reference to semantics, and I know that something called “General Semantics” was a craze in the 1940s, but I don’t know enough about it to think if Simak was alluding to that.
  • Again in “Hobbies” we have the idea of a vaguely mystical theme about some higher truth that mere men cannot access: “…just a groping after truth, and the groping is in a direction that man passed by without a second glance.” This supports the implication that the dogs are actually a superior species because they can access this truth that humans ignored.
  • Here’s a key thought from late in the book: the ants have been successful because they are stable in their environment. Humanity, at least in the past 10,000 years, is notably unstable — especially in the past few decades and centuries, as humanity is changing the planet’s environment — and that may be why we are doomed.

The memorable take-aways from this book are those sense-of-wonder moments that expand our ideas of humanity’s place in the universe. First, the suggestion that humanity might be succeeded by another sentient species that, ironically, comes to consider humans mythical. Science fiction reminds us not to take ourselves for granted. And second, however I might quibble with particular points, is that yearning for the transcendental experience, the appreciation of a higher reality we as humans can only suspect, that is an essential virtue of science fiction. The men and dogs find it on Jupiter. The dogs and their brotherhood of animals on Earth do. And in a whiff of tragedy, the men left behind on Earth, and who venture out to the planets, apparently do not.

An earlier version of this article originally appeared at Views from Crestmont Drive.


Mark R. Kelly’s last review for us was A Case of Conscience by James Blish. Mark wrote short fiction reviews for Locus Magazine from 1987 to 2001, and is the founder of the Locus Online website, for which he won a Hugo Award in 2002. He established the Science Fiction Awards Database at sfadb.com. He is a retired aerospace software engineer who’s lived almost his entire life in Southern California. Find more of his thoughts at Views from Crestmont Drive.

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