Thursday, December 14, 2023

Intimations of mortality, and remembering David Drake

 

Another giggler from Stephan Pastis.  Click the image to be taken to a larger view at the "Pearls Before Swine" Web page.



The death of author David Drake this week brought sadness to those of us who knew him, and made this cartoon all the more poignant.  His output was prodigious, but - as intimated by Mr. Pastis above - we'll never know how many more books perished with him.  Toni Weisskopf, publisher of Baen Books, had this to say about him:


Dave Drake was my friend, and my colleague, for more than three decades. He passed away peacefully this weekend, on Sunday, in fact. If he were here, I’d be tempted to tell him that he took that whole “day of rest” thing a little too far…. He was appreciative of gallows humor; we published two volumes of his humorous stories at Baen starting with All the Way to the Gallows.  Of course, that wasn’t what he was best known for. The modern subgenre of military science fiction accreted around the core of Drake’s Hammer’s Slammers stories, those that Jim Baen first published in Galaxy magazine, and then at Ace, with an introduction by Jerry Pournelle. Jim continued to publish Dave everywhere he went: first Ace, then Tor, then Baen. The two of them made a great team. 

I enjoyed everything Dave wrote, from his chatty reports on foreign travels, to his thoughtful Christmas cards. Still, I had my favorites among his literary works. The standalone novel Starliner was one of them, pure adventure science fiction and as light and carefree as Dave ever got. Redliners, another; the quintessential volume of military SF, and Dave in a very different mode. If you want to read one book to get a feel for his work, this is it. I loved the RCN series, buddy stories loosely inspired by Jim Baen’s favorite Napoleonic naval novels by Patrick O’Brien, written after Redliners, and thus after some demons had been, if not laid to rest, at least come to terms with. His Old Nathan fantasy stories, so evocative of the place he’d come to live, and inspired by his friend Manly Wade Wellman’s Silver John stories. The Lord of the Isles series with the great brother and sister team of Cashel and Ilna. His two Belisarius-inspired series with both S.M. Stirling and Eric Flint (and later Tony Daniel). The Lacey SF stories. The Vettius Roman fantasy stories. From his start writing horror and dark fantasy short stories, to the last far-future Arthurian novels of The Spark, The Storm and The Serpent, he remained a fascinating storyteller.  

He was an incredibly talented writer, and game for anything. He considered himself a craftsman, and consistently downplayed his talents and contributions, but they were many and his works will last—they already have. But not the least of his contributions to the field was his generosity to his fellow writers—and editors, like me—through collaborations, short stories in anthologies, and time spent sharing his knowledge of the field. And he always delivered. 

Dave was a collector and fan of pulp magazines, and he helped keep the pulps alive not only with his own small press with his friend Karl Edward Wagner, Carcosa, but also through his advocacy of such stories with Jim Baen. So, too, Rudyard Kipling, which resulted in two Kipling-centric volumes. And he translated Latin for fun (for examples of which, see his website: https://david-drake.com/) . 

He was a man of honor, and sometimes that made him prickly. But he was also decent and kind down to his bones, and you will see many, many examples of this in the testimonies pouring forth on social media. But I am very glad that his good friend Mark Van Name made sure that he understood he was appreciated before he died when he put together the festschrift Onward, Drake!  He appeared many times on the Baen Free Radio Hour podcast, as an interviewee, and even reading poetry, and we’ll do a roundtable retrospective of his career in January. 

More can and will undoubtedly be written about Dave, but I’ll close this short appreciation of him and his life with words he often used to end telephone conversations: Go do good things! He did.


May he rest in peace.

Peter


4 comments:

Rob said...

A favorite author passing on can be felt in the world for awhile. I have not read anything by David Drake, but when John D. MacDonald passed so did his character Travis McGee... we'll never know what color went along with McGee's passing or if things worked out with his newly found daughter.

Jim said...

Drake was a fine writer and will be missed.

Hamsterman said...

I will miss him. I had stopped reading David Drake in the 80s as his book Fortress was abject garbage. (Yes, the book featuring Antarctican Lunar Space Nazis, Turkish Storm Troopers, and UFO aliens.) Fortunately I later ran across an interview where that came up, and IIRC it had something to do with a former publisher demanding a book he thought they cancelled when they cancelled his contract. There was a 'free' book of his available from Baen, I liked it, and started reading him again. There was a lot to catch up with, such as The Tank Hoard (A Hamster Slammers novel)

Anonymous said...

I only recently discovered David Drake when I finally started reading his "Hammer's Slammers" book series. He and I shared membership in the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment, he during Vietnam and my in the mid-1980s. As an old cavalry trooper Mr. Drake is now having a good time with his fellow troopers in Fiddler's Green -

Halfway down the trail to Hell,
In a shady meadow green
Are the Souls of all dead Troopers camped,
Near a good old-time canteen.
And this eternal resting place
Is known as Fiddlers’ Green.

Marching past, straight through to Hell
The Infantry are seen.
Accompanied by the Engineers,
Artillery and Marines,
For none but the shades of Cavalrymen
Dismount at Fiddlers’ Green.

Though some go curving down the trail
To seek a warmer scene.
No Trooper ever gets to Hell
Ere he’s emptied his canteen.
And so rides back to drink again
With friends at Fiddlers’ Green.

And so when man and horse go down
Beneath a saber keen,
Or in a roaring charge of fierce melee
You stop a bullet clean,
And the hostiles come to get your scalp,
Just empty your canteen,
And put your pistol to your head
And go to Fiddlers’ Green.

Rest in peace fellow trooper!