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R. A. Lafferty

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R. A. Lafferty
Lafferty in his library in 1998
Lafferty in his library in 1998
Born
Raphael Aloysius Lafferty

(1914-11-07)November 7, 1914
DiedMarch 18, 2002(2002-03-18) (aged 87)
OccupationNovelist, short story author
GenreScience fiction, Fantasy
Notable worksPast Master, Space Chantey, Fourth Mansions, Nine Hundred Grandmothers, Okla Hannali

Raphael Aloysius "R. A." Lafferty (November 7, 1914 – March 18, 2002) was an American science fiction, fantasy and historical fiction writer best known for his imaginative and eccentric short stories and novels from the 1960s and 1970s.[1][2][3]

Life and work

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Lafferty was born on November 7, 1914, in Neola, Iowa[3] to devoutly Catholic parents, Hugh David Lafferty, a broker dealing in oil leases and royalties, and Julia Mary (née Burke), a teacher. Both were first-generation Irish Americans.[4] He was born the youngest of five siblings. His first name, Raphael, derived from the day on which he was expected to be born (the Feast of St. Raphael). When he was four, his family moved to Perry, Oklahoma.[3]

He graduated from Cascia Hall,[5] and came of age in the early years of the Great Depression. He studied in the night school division at the University of Tulsa in 1932–33, mostly studying math and German, but left before graduating.[6] In 1935, he began to work for Clark Electrical Supply Company in Tulsa and, from 1939 to 1942, attended the International Correspondence School. One of his hobbies was studying languages.[6] Per The New York Times, "He taught himself Greek in order to read the New Testament in the original."[3]

He enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1942. After training in Texas, North Carolina, Florida, and California, he was sent to the South Pacific Area, serving in Australia, New Guinea, Morotai and the Philippines. When he left the Army in 1946, he had become a 1st Sergeant serving as a staff sergeant and had received an Asiatic–Pacific Campaign Medal.[7] He returned to his sales position at Clark and turned to writing in the late 1950s.[2] He never married and lived most of his life in Tulsa with his sister, Anna Lafferty.[3]

Although Lafferty did not begin writing until his mid-40s, he wrote dozens of novels and more than two hundred short stories, most of them at least nominally science fiction.[2] His first published story was "The Wagons" in the New Mexico Quarterly Review in 1959. His first published science fiction story was "Day of the Glacier", in The Original Science Fiction Stories in 1960, and his debut novel was Past Master in 1968.[3] In the same year, he also published The Reefs of Earth and Space Chantey, a science fiction retelling of Homer's Odyssey, which was then followed by Fourth Mansions (1969), a work inspired by Teresa of Ávila.[8]

Around 1980, his output declined due to a stroke. He stopped writing regularly in 1984.[9] In 1994, he suffered another, more severe, stroke.

Lafferty's work was represented by Virginia Kidd Literary Agency,[10] which held a cache of his unpublished manuscripts.[9] This included over a dozen novels, such as Iron Tongue of Midnight, as well as about eighty short stories and a handful of essays.[11]

Death and legacy

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He died on March 18, 2002, aged 87 in a nursing home in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma. Lafferty's funeral took place at Christ the King Catholic Church in Tulsa, where he regularly attended daily Mass. He is buried at St. Rose Catholic Cemetery in Perry.[5]

His collected papers, drafts of novels and short stories, artifacts, and ephemera were donated to the University of Tulsa's McFarlin Library, Department of Special Collections and University Archives.[12] A smaller collection, donated by Lafferty in 1979, is also housed in the University of Iowa Libraries' Special Collections department.[13]

In March 2011, it was announced in Locus that the copyrights to 29 Lafferty novels and 225 short stories were up for sale.[14][15][16] The literary estate was soon thereafter purchased by the magazine's nonprofit foundation, under the auspices of board member Neil Gaiman.[17]

Holocaust denial

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In July 2025, it was revealed that the Department of Special Collections and University Archives at McFarlin Library houses materials related to Lafferty’s Holocaust denial, such as a letter in which Lafferty categorically denies the Holocaust.[18][19] It also archives his collection of Holocaust denial materials and handwritten notes.[20][21] Special Collections is undertaking an evaluation of the labeling of these materials.[citation needed]

Writing style

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In his 2006 short story collection Fragile Things, Neil Gaiman includes a short story called "Sunbird" written in the style of Lafferty. In the introduction, he says this about Lafferty:

There was a writer from Tulsa, Oklahoma (he died in 2002), who was, for a little while in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the best short story writer in the world. His name was R. A. Lafferty, and his stories were unclassifiable and odd and inimitable -- you knew you were reading a Lafferty story within a sentence. When I was young I wrote to him, and he wrote back.
"Sunbird" was my attempt to write a Lafferty story, and it taught me a number of things, mostly how much harder they are than they look....[22]

Gaiman and Lafferty had corresponded for several years during Gaiman's adolescence; he remembered Lafferty's letters as "filled with typical cock-eyed Lafferty humour and observations, wise and funny and sober all at once."[23]

Per The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction:

He has fairly been described as a writer of tall tales, as a cartoonist, as an author whose tone was fundamentally oral; his conservative Catholicism has been seen as permeating every word he wrote (or has been ignored); he has been seen as a ransacker of old Mythologies, and as a flippant generator of new ones; he clearly delighted in a vision of the world as being irradiated by conspiracies both godly and devilish, but at times paid scant attention to the niceties of plotting; he has been understood by some as essentially light-hearted and by others as a solitary, stringent moralist; he was technically inventive, but lunged constantly into a slapdash sublime only skittishly evocative, and only occasionally, of anything like the traditional Sense of Wonder; his skill in the deploying of various rhetorical narrative voices was manifest, but these voices were sometimes choked in baroque flamboyance. ... He and Gene Wolfe have more than a shared faith in common.[8]

He has also been compared to the English writer G. K. Chesterton: "[Once a] French publisher nervously asked whether Lafferty minded being compared to G. K. Chesterton (another Catholic author), and there was a terrifying silence that went on and on. Was the great man hideously offended? Eventually, very slowly, he said: 'You're on the right track, kid,' and wandered away."[24]

Themes

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Lafferty's quirky prose[3] drew from traditional storytelling styles, largely from the Irish and Native American, and his shaggy-dog characters and tall tales are unique in science fiction. Little of Lafferty's writing is considered typical of the genre. His stories are closer to tall tales than traditional science fiction and are deeply influenced by his Catholic beliefs; Fourth Mansions, for example, draws on The Interior Mansions of Teresa of Ávila.

His writings, both topically and stylistically, are not easy to categorize. Plot is frequently secondary to other elements of Lafferty's writing. While this style has resulted in a loyal cult following, it causes some readers to give up reading his work. Not all of Lafferty's work was science fiction or fantasy. His novel Okla Hannali (1972), published by University of Oklahoma Press, tells the story of the Choctaw in Mississippi, and after the Trail of Tears, in Oklahoma, through an account of the larger-than-life character Hannali and his large family. This novel was thought of highly by the novelist Dee Brown, author of Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (1970), who on the back cover of the edition published by the University of Oklahoma Press, writes "The history of the Choctaw Indians has been told before and is still being told, but it has never been told in the way Lafferty tells it ... Hannali is a buffalo bull of a man who should become one of the enduring characters in the literature of the American Indian." He also wrote, "It is art applied to history so that the legend of the Choctaws, their great and small men, their splendid humor, and their tragedies are filled with life and breath."

Like the work of Chesterton and Belloc, Lafferty's writing occasionally shows evidence of antisemitism. For instance, his novella The Three Armageddons of Enniscorthy Sweeny (1977) is a history of the 20th century that erases the Jewish Holocaust.[21]

Recognition

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Lafferty received Hugo Award nominations for Past Master, "Continued on Next Rock", "Sky", and "Eurema's Dam", the last of which won the Best Short Story Hugo in 1973 (shared with Frederik Pohl and Cyril M. Kornbluth's "The Meeting").[25]

He received Nebula Award nominations for "In Our Block", "Slow Tuesday Night", Past Master, Fourth Mansions, "Continued on Next Rock", "Entire And Perfect Chrysolite", and The Devil is Dead. He never received a Nebula award.[9]

His collection Lafferty in Orbit was nominated for a World Fantasy Award, and in 1990, Lafferty received a World Fantasy Lifetime Achievement Award.[26] His 1992 collection Iron Tears was also a finalist for the Philip K. Dick Award.[9] In 2002, he received the Cordwainer Smith Foundation's Rediscovery award.[27]

The Oklahoma Department of Libraries granted him the Arrell Gibson Lifetime Achievement Award in 1995.[28]

Fourth Mansions was also named by David Pringle as one of his selections for Modern Fantasy: The 100 Best Novels.

Bibliography

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Novels

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  • Past Master (Ace Books, 1968)
  • The Reefs of Earth (Berkley Medallion, 1968)
  • Space Chantey (Ace Books, 1968)
  • Fourth Mansions (Ace Books, 1969)
  • Arrive at Easterwine: The Autobiography of a Ktistec Machine (Scribner's, 1971)
  • The Devil Is Dead (Avon, 1971). Second (chronologically) in "The Devil Is Dead" trilogy.
  • The Fall of Rome (1971). Later reprinted as Alaric: The Day the World Ended (United Mythologies Press, 1993).
  • The Flame Is Green (Walker & Co., 1971). First in the unfinished Coscuin Chronicles.
  • Okla Hannali (Doubleday, 1972)
  • Not to Mention Camels (Bobbs-Merrill, 1976)
  • Apocalypses (Pinnacle Books, 1977). Composed of two novels: Where Have You Been, Sandaliotis? and The Three Armageddons of Enniscorthy Sweeney.
  • Archipelago (Manuscript Press, 1979). First (chronologically) in "The Devil Is Dead" trilogy.
  • Aurelia (Starblaze, 1982)
  • Annals of Klepsis (Ace Books, 1983)
  • Half a Sky (Corroboree, 1984). Second in the unfinished Coscuin Chronicles.
  • Serpent's Egg (Morrigan Publications, 1987)
  • East of Laughter (Morrigan Publications, 1988)
  • Sindbad: The Thirteenth Voyage (Broken Mirrors Press, 1989)
  • The Elliptical Grave (United Mythologies Press, 1989). Also includes the story: "The Man Who Lost His Magic".
  • Dotty (United Mythologies Press, 1990)
  • Tales of Chicago (United Mythologies Press, 1992). First part of More Than Melchisedech, third (chronologically) in "The Devil Is Dead" trilogy.
  • Tales of Midnight (United Mythologies Press, 1992). Second part of More Than Melchisedech.
  • Argo (United Mythologies Press, 1992). Third part of More Than Melchisedech.

Short story collections

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Anthologies

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  • The Collected Short Fiction (Centipede Press, 2014–2025)
    • The Man Who Made Models – The Collected Short Fiction Volume 1 (2014)
    • The Man With the Aura – The Collected Short Fiction Volume 2 (2015)
    • The Man Underneath – The Collected Short Fiction Volume 3 (2015)
    • The Man With The Speckled Eyes – The Collected Short Fiction Volume 4 (2017)
    • The Man Who Walked Through Cracks – The Collected Short Fiction Volume 5 (2018)
    • The Man Who Never Was – The Collected Short Fiction Volume 6 (2021)
    • Mad Man – The Collected Short Fiction Volume 7 (2023)
    • The Man Who Lost His Magic – The Collected Short Fiction Volume 8 (2025)
  • More Than Melchisedech (2015). Compiles Tales of Chicago, Tales of Midnight and Argo. Third (chronologically) in "The Devil Is Dead" trilogy.
  • Three Great Novels: Space Chantey, Fourth Mansions, Past Master (Gollancz, 2018)

Chapbooks

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  • Horns on Their Heads (Pendragon Press, 1976)
  • Funnyfingers & Cabrito (Pendragon Press, 1976)
  • Four Stories (Drumm Booklet #7, 1983)
  • Laughing Kelly and Other Verses (Drumm Booklet #11, 1983)
  • Heart of Stone, Dear and Other Stories (Drumm Booklet #12, 1983)
  • Snake in His Bosom and Other Stories (Drumm Booklet #13, 1983)
  • The Man Who Made Models and Other Stories (Drumm Booklet #18, 1984)
  • Slippery and Other Stories (Drumm Booklet #19, 1985)
  • My Heart Leaps Up, in five installments (Drumm Booklets, 1986–90). First book of the "In a Green Tree" autobiographical series.
  • Strange Skies (United Mythologies Press, 1988)
  • Promontory Goats (United Mythologies Press, 1988)
  • The Back Door of History (United Mythologies Press, 1988)
  • The Early Lafferty (United Mythologies Press, 1988)
  • How Many Miles to Babylon? (United Mythologies Press, 1989)
  • The Early Lafferty II (United Mythologies Press, 1990)

Non-fiction

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  • It's Down the Slippery Cellar Stairs (Drumm Booklet #14, 1984). Essay collection; later revised and expanded (Borgo Press, 1995).
  • True Believers (United Mythologies Press, 1989). Essays, introductions and reviews.
  • Cranky Old Man from Tulsa (United Mythologies Press, 1990). Two interviews.

Selected short stories

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  • "Through Other Eyes" (Future Science Fiction, February 1960)
  • "All the People" (Galaxy Science Fiction, April 1961)
  • "The Weirdest World" (Galaxy, June 1961)
  • "Aloys" (Galaxy, August 1961)
  • "Rainbird" (Galaxy, December 1961)
  • "Dream" (Galaxy, June 1962)
  • "Sodom and Gomorrah, Texas" (Galaxy, December 1962)
  • "What the Name of That Town?" (Galaxy, October 1964)
  • "Slow Tuesday Night" (Galaxy, April 1965)
  • "Among the Hairy Earthmen" (Galaxy, August 1966)
  • "Land of the Great Horses" in Dangerous Visions (Doubleday, 1967)
  • "Thus We Frustrate Charlemagne" (Galaxy, February 1967)
  • "How They Gave It Back" (Galaxy, February 1968)
  • "McGruder's Marvels" (Galaxy, July 1968)
  • "Eurema's Dam" in New Dimensions II (Doubleday, 1972)
  • "The World as Will and Wallpaper" in Future City (Trident Press, 1973)[29]

Awards and honors

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Further reading

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  • R. A. Lafferty (1990). Cranky Old Man from Tulsa: Interviews with R. A. Lafferty. Weston, Ontario, Canada: United Mythologies Press. ISBN 9780921322160. OCLC 26768241. OL 1283704M. 092132216X.[30]
  • Andrew Ferguson (January 2012), "Unpublished Lafferty: 1", NYRSF, no. 281

References

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  1. ^ Gene Wolfe wrote in an introduction to Episodes of the Argo that "[Lafferty may be] the most original writer in the history of literature"; Michael Swanwick has written that "if there were no Lafferty, we would lack the imagination to invent him" (quoted on the back cover of the original edition of Lafferty in Orbit); Neil Gaiman said that "[Lafferty's] stories are without precedent"; and Harlan Ellison wrote that "Lafferty defies categorization; his work is unlike anyone else's".
  2. ^ a b c Petersen, Daniel Otto Jack (2020). ‘You Are the Old Entrapped Dreams of the Coyote’s Brains Oozing Liquid Through the Broken Eye Socket’: Ecomonstrous poetics and weird bioregionalism in the fiction of R. A. Lafferty (with a comparative reading of Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian) (PhD thesis). University of Glasgow.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Rafael A. Lafferty, 87, Science Fiction Writer". The New York Times. March 29, 2002. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  4. ^ "R. A. Lafferty | Research Starters | EBSCO Research". EBSCO. Retrieved November 5, 2025.
  5. ^ a b "Sci-fi author R.A. Lafferty rites set", Tulsa World, March 21, 2002. Accessed March 31, 2010.
  6. ^ a b Dangerous visions. Internet Archive. New York, N.Y. : Berkley Medallion Book. 1972. p. 481. ISBN 978-0-425-02274-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  7. ^ Awards, perscom.army.mil. Accessed October 1, 2022.
  8. ^ a b "Lafferty, R.A.". The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. 2023. Retrieved January 10, 2024.
  9. ^ a b c d "R.A. Lafferty (1914–2002), Locus, May 2002, p.9, 68.
  10. ^ "Virginia Kidd (1921–2003)" Archived 2007-09-30 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ "Paul Di Filippo reviews R.A. Lafferty". March 18, 2016.
  12. ^ "Collection: R.A. Lafferty papers | The University of Tulsa Archival Catalog". utulsa.as.atlas-sys.com. Retrieved November 5, 2025.
  13. ^ "Lafferty, R.A (Raphael Aloysius)". ArchivesSpace at the University of Iowa. Retrieved November 11, 2023.
  14. ^ "SF Signal: SF Tidbits for 3/3/11". Archived from the original on March 7, 2011. Retrieved March 10, 2011.
  15. ^ Lafferty estate for sale Archived June 3, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, sfsite.com. Accessed October 1, 2022.
  16. ^ Profile, locusmag.com. Accessed October 1, 2022.
  17. ^ "Lafferty Lost and Found | This Land Press - Made by You and Me". Archived from the original on November 9, 2014. Retrieved October 1, 2022.
  18. ^ "Correspondence, 1990 Jan-May | The University of Tulsa Archival Catalog". utulsa.as.atlas-sys.com. Retrieved October 10, 2025.
  19. ^ "Antisemitism". The Reefs of Earth. Retrieved October 10, 2025.
  20. ^ "Institute for Historical Review, Undated | The University of Tulsa Archival Catalog". utulsa.as.atlas-sys.com. Retrieved October 10, 2025.
  21. ^ a b "Antisemitism". The Reefs of Earth. Retrieved October 10, 2025.
  22. ^ Introduction to Fragile Things: Short Fictions and Wonders by Neil Gaiman, William Morrow Publisher (2006), pg. xxvii
  23. ^ "Lafferty", Neil Gaiman, Locus, May 2002, pg. 68.
  24. ^ From an SFX magazine column by David Langford; issue #92, June 2002.
  25. ^ [1] Archived 2013-01-20 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ "Winners". World Fantasy Convention. Retrieved August 6, 2025.
  27. ^ "R. A. Lafferty, winner of the 2002 Cordwainer Smith Rediscovery Award".
  28. ^ "OK Dept. Of Libraries – working to preserve history, expand knowledge, and enrich lives".
  29. ^ "Title: The World as Will and Wallpaper". www.isfdb.org. Retrieved November 7, 2021.
  30. ^ "Cranky Old Man from Tulsa: Interviews with R. A. Lafferty". Open Library. September 30, 2007. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved December 28, 2024.
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