William Tenn's Influence on American Popular
Culture
An Appreciation, by Laurie Mann
One of our Guests of Honor, Phil Klass, also known as the
satiric science fiction writer William Tenn, has been known to, well,
exaggerate. Just a tad. But he didn't write the title of this piece.
Honestly. Phil's reach into popular culture extends a little further
than you might think.
First, a little background. Phil was born in London in 1920.
As he describes his parents, "They had a marriage-long fight because my
father was a socialist and my mother was an imperialist." The Klass
family emigrated to the U.S. during the '20s. Phil grew up in New York
City and read science fiction ("intellectual pornography," as he called
it in those days), but had no idea that fandom existed. After military
service during World War II, he took to writing fiction during the
lengthy commute to his day job at Bell Labs in New Jersey.
Phil wrote voraciously in many genres: science fiction,
mystery and romance. He had different pen names for each genre. When
his fiction started to sell, it was his science fiction that sold first
and most often. Soon, Phil Klass was much better known as the science
fiction writer, William Tenn. He sold over 60 stories in about 20
years. Theodore Sturgeon was his agent (and that of other up-and-coming
writers like Damon Knight and James Blish). Sturgeon introduced Phil to
fandom in the late '40s. At first, people thought William Tenn was a
new pen name for Lewis Padgett. But, soon, Phil was making the
convention circuit in person, as he relates in his essay elsewhere.
Tenn's short fiction has recently been collected by
NESFA Press and
published as Immodest Proposals and Here Comes
Civilization. Unlike much science fiction from the '50s, the Tenn
stories are quite fresh. Most of his stories are societal and business
satires, demonstrating that the more things change, the more they stay
the same.

Phil is probably fortunate to have written most of his
professional fiction under a pseudonym. There is another Phil Klass out
there who writes about things out-of-this world. Philip J. Klass is an
academic, about the same age as our Phil Klass, who writes to debunk
UFO sightings. As a result, some people confuse the science fiction
writer with the anti-UFOlogist. The TV talk show host David Susskind
once wanted the two Phils to debate UFOs on his show, with William Tenn
taking the "pro" position to Philip J.Klass's "con." Our Phil declined.
To this day, checks or invitations to speak are sometimes sent to the
"wrong" Phil Klass.
Phil is also part of a literary dynasty of sorts. Phil's wife,
Fruma, has published SF poetry and received an honorable mention in the
Writers of the Future contest. His younger brother, Mort Klass, was an
anthropologist who wrote anthropological textbooks (Ordered
Universes: Approaches to the Anthropology of Religion) and the
occasional work of SF (Earthman's Burden). Mort's daughter,
Judy, has written science fiction short stories and a Star Trek novel.
Another daughter, Perri, has written very successful non-fiction about
the life of a physician. Their brother, David, has written screenplays
for movies like Kiss the Girls. Phil's sister-in-law, Sheila
Solomon Klass, writes juvenile non-fiction. His sister, Fran Klass, is
not a writer, but is active in the arts as a painter.
Phil isn't just a writer. He has edited several anthologies,
notably Children of Wonder in 1953. He was one of the first
editors to anthologize now-classic stories like "That Only a Mother" by
Judith Merrill and "Born of Man and Woman" by Richard Matheson. Phil
showed himself to be an editor of excellent taste.
During the '50s and early '60s, Phil and his wife Fruma lived
in Greenwich Village. They got to know the writers living in the city
at the time, folks like Robert Silverberg and Harlan Ellison. He has
many amusing stories about the foibles of writers who lived in New York
City in those days.
He helped many young writers. Daniel Keyes, who wrote the
wonderful "Flowers for Algernon," was a friend of Phil's. Daniel told
Phil that an editor wanted him to change the ending of "Flowers" to a
happy ending. Phil is reported to have said, "If you change one word of
that story, I'll go break the editor's kneecaps." Keyes did not change
the ending. The story was extremely well-received, won a Hugo and a
Nebula and received a literate translation to the big screen.
During the '60s, '70s and '80s, Phil was a professor of
English at Penn State. Dozens of his students went on to be writers and
thousands more continued to be readers. Many of his former students,
including Kevin Riley, Eva Whitley and Bill Jensen, are active in
fandom to this day. During the late '70s, while living in State
College, Phil and Fruma welcomed their daughter into the family. Adina
has attended Penn College and ran baby-sitting for years at
Pittsburgh's local science fiction convention Confluence (a lovely,
small convention which Phil always attends in late July!).
It was while at Penn State that Phil may have made his most
well-known contribution to popular culture.
Rambo.
No, he did not wander through the Pennsylvania wilderness with
a sweatband, guns and ammo, mumbling incoherently and shooting at
anything that moved. But one of Phil's students was David Morrell.
David wrote a number of novels over the years, including one called
First Blood. First Blood featured a dark protagonist
named Rambo who became a vigilante, later made famous by Sylvester
Stallone. Morrell wrote in a later edition of First Blood:
"...if not for the CBS Evening News, if not for Rimbaud, my wife, and
the name of an apple, if not for Philip Klass and my determination to
be a fiction writer, a recent edition of the Oxford English
Dictionary wouldn't have cited this novel as the source for the
creation of a word."
Phil's teaching and writing will continue to influence
generations of readers and writers. Talk to Phil at Noreascon 4
there may be a little Rambo in you too.