Unsung Science Fiction Master Thomas Disch Dies at 68

Disch in 1986.Photo: Getty Images
Aside from his speculative fiction credentials (he appeared three times on David Pringle's authoritative list), Disch was perhaps best known to the public for his children's book, The Brave Little Toaster, and for his evocative descriptions of Manhattan in the 1986 text-based computer game, Amnesia. But he really wanted to be known as a poet, as he told us in an interview just ten days ago: "I write poetry because I think it is the hardest thing I can do very well. And so I simply enjoy the doing of it, as an equestrian enjoys spending time on a good horse. Poetry is my good horse." Disch, however, had stopped submitting his poems to literary journals, opting to self-publish them on his LiveJournal, where he knew he had an audience.
In his final book, The Word of God, Disch declared himself a deity and used this running commentary as a device to publish many of his poems and stories. If he could not have literary respectability, then perhaps godhood was the next best thing. -Ed Champion
Related: Remembrances from William Gibson, Jeff VanderMeer, Scott Edelman, Locus, Cory Doctorow, and Ellen Datlow.
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