Perry Rhodan
Perry Rhodan is the world's most prolific literary science fiction series, published since 1961 in Germany.
Perry Rhodan is unabashed space opera, picking up (or reinventing) virtually every theme that has ever appeared in science fiction. While critics outside the genre and many within have habitually savaged the series, its multi-decade commercial success has become a literary phenomenon in itself. If nothing else, Perry Rhodan provides a mirror of the contemporary zeitgeist, reflecting concerns such as the 1960s Cold War, 1970s New Age, and 1980s peace movement in its story line. The series and its spin-offs have captured a substantial fraction of the original German science fiction output and exert an undeniable influence on German writers in the field.
History
Written by an ever-changing team of authors, Perry Rhodan is issued in weekly novella-size installments in the traditional German Heftchen (pulp booklet) format. The series was created in 1961 by K. H. Scheer and Clark Darlton. Initially conceived for thirty volumes, it became an enduring success and passed 2200 installments in 2003. There have been several reissues, including a revised edition in hardcover format. Significant spin-offs include the Atlan series and the Planetenromane paperbacks that provide additional playgrounds for stories set in the Perry Rhodan universe but usually not considered canonical. Over the decades there have also been comic strips, numerous collectibles, several encyclopedias, audio plays, inspired music, etc. The series has seen partial translations into several languages. It also spawned the movie Mission Stardust (1967), which is so appallingly bad that fans of the series playfully deny its very existence.
Story
The story line starts in 1971 with the first manned moon landing by U.S. Space Force Major Perry Rhodan and his crew, who discover a marooned extraterrestrial space ship. Appropriating the alien technology they proceed to unify Terra and to carve out a place for humanity in the galaxy and the cosmos. As the series progresses major characters are granted virtual immortality and the story continues over the course of millennia, including flashbacks several thousands and even millions of years into the past, and the scope widens to encompass other galaxies, extremely remote parts of space, parallel universes, and weirder cosmic structures. The series is told in an arc storyline structure - called a "cycle" - similar to that later used by Wiseguy, Hill Street Blues and Babylon 5. An arc would have anywhere from 30 to 400 issues devoted to it.
English series
Sometime in the 1960s, science-fiction über-fan Forrest J Ackerman organized the publication in the U.S. of an English translation of the series, with his wife Wendayne ("Wendy") doing most of the translation. #1, containing German issues 1 and 2, was published by Ace Books starting in 1969. The series was a commercial success, eventually being published 3 times per month. Forry also incorporated elements from the SF pulp magazines, such as short stories, serialized novels and a film review section. Other translators on the series included Sig Wahrmann, Stuart J. Byrne and Dwight Decker. Ace eventually changed management and the new management did everything it could to kill their cash cow. They felt the series was too "kiddy" to be published by them and maybe too expensive with the licensing fee as well. Ace ended their run of Perry Rhodan - double issue 117/118 was their last of the regular series - by publishing 3 "lost" episodes that had been skipped because of not having enough action. They also published 5 of the Atlan "side series" stories (Atlan is a major character in the Rhodanverse) and one of the Plantenromane novels. All was not lost, however. Forry and Wendy worked hard to ensure that Rhofans could continue to get their fix. They created Master Publications and released #119 to #136 before having to cease their subscription-only edition of the series. That was the end of an English version until the 1990s. John Foyt founded Vector publishing to start an American version of the series again. It would be published in magazine format, against the advice of some of his employees, instead of book format. This version only lasted 4 published issues and one electronic issue - #1800 to #1804. The German publishers are now trying to get a big Americvan publisher to release the series in English, but without success to date.
American Publishing History: Ace Books
- 1 to #5 - Double issues. Each volume contains two episodes.
- 6 to #108 - Single issues. "Maga-book" format, or the format of a magazine in the style of a book. Letter and film review in #6. Would later include short stories - old and new - and reprints of classic serialized novels such as "Edison's Conquest of Mars" by Garrett P. Serviss (reprinted as "Pursuit to Mars"). Of special note is a lost chapter of the H.G. Wells novel "The Time Machine" that was published in this manner.
- 109 to #118 - double issues again.
Perry Rhodan Specials #1 to #5 - Double issues. #1 to #3 are lost episodes published with an Atlan episode. #4 are two Atlan episodes and #5 is a Planetenroman
Master Publicantions
- 119 to #135 - Magazine size and format.
- 136 - Book format. To fill out remaining subscription orders, the book format also printed Stuart J. Byrne's Star Man series. #136 was published with the first five episodes of Star Man in one volume. The remaining Star Man episodes were published as a separate volume.
Vector
- 1800 to #1803 - Magazine format. #1800 is published in a manner similar to the German series. 1801 to 1803 are large-sized magazine format.
- 1804 - Electronic format only.
Copies of the Ace books and the rarer magazine versions can be found online at eBay and other online vendors and at used bookstores. The magazine versions are very hard to find at a used bookstore.
In space
Dutch ESA astronaut André Kuipers was inspired to become an astronaut from an early age by the Perry Rhodan albums his grandmother bought for him (and that he eventually started buying himself from his allowance).
When he finally launched into space on April 18, 2004, he brought his very first booklet along with him. It was number ten in the red series, "Ruimteoorlog in de Wegasector" (Space War in the Wega Sector).