Explore Ellison Wonderland

The Lost Aztec Temple of Mars

Office Exterior & Entry Billiards Room Kitchen & Dining The Hidden Corners of Wonderland Living Room
Office Billiards Room Kitchen & Dining Exterior & Entry The Hidden Corners of Wonderland Living Room

about Harlan

Who was Harlan Ellison, you ask?

You might as well ask: Who discovered gravity? Who patented the first motion picture camera? Who was the first human to run a four-minute mile? (Spoiler: Roger Bannister, 1954.) Who is that figure standing behind you in the shadows, and why are both of you dressed like that?

Who was Harlan Ellison, you ask? Who was HARLAN ELLISON?!

Wait. You have a point. Who the hell was Harlan Ellison and why is there a website about him?

Harlan was: a writer of stories of magic realism, speculative fiction, fantasy, and urban noir; essays; reviews; comic book and television scripts totaling over 1,700 works produced by one of the twentieth-century’s most celebrated writers of the fantastic, a man who won more awards, and more kinds of awards, than any other living writer of his time.

Harlan was: a rogue and a renegade and a trouble-maker who at 19 infiltrated a street gang in Red Hook, New York to gather experience and material, and ended up spending time in the Manhattan House of Detention, also known as the Tombs, the most violent and infamous prison in New York …

a relentless advocate for women’s rights and civil rights who marched with Martin Luther King at Selma and was on the Enemies List for Presidents Nixon and Reagan… a man who was as much at home in the Hills of Beverly as he was in an alley facing off against trouble. His words were his weapons of choice, and he never entered the world unarmed.

Harlan was: brilliant and funny and unafraid of courting controversy in the name of free speech, a free press, and the right for upcoming writers, dreamers and artists to tell their stories the way they needed to tell them. He toured with the Rolling Stones to write about them, gave new writers their first starts, snuck up on

and disarmed a stalker with a rifle behind his house looking to assassinate him, held amazing dinners for groups of friends that went on for hours, simply hours of laughter and amazing stories, and was always, always there for his friends when they got in trouble, because he never ran from a fight or a friend.

Harlan was: one of a kind.

And so is this site.

Have fun.

fiction

nonFiction

Susan Ellison

Susan Ellison, photo by Mark Hanauer

As much as this website is about Harlan Ellison, his achievements and accomplishments, if he were here right now, he would say that the greatest achievement of his life is listed nowhere among them.

That achievement was meeting, falling in love with, and marrying Susan Toth.

Susan was the bright light at the center of his being; the perfect love he had sought and failed to find for decades.  They were absolutely in love with each other; when one was away, the other was very literally in pain.  They doted on each other, made cute noises and poked and laughed and dedicated themselves to the other person.

Speaking for myself, I have never seen another love like the one they had, and certainly have never experienced it myself.  That would be glorious but I think that window has closed.

And this website would be empty and meaningless if it did not acknowledge that love, and that relationship.

Herewith the obituary for Susan written by Kathryn Drennan.

JMS

Harlan & Susan, photo by Mark Hanauer

Susan Ellison Obituary

June 24, 1960 – August 3, 2020 Susan Toth Ellison passed away unexpectedly in her sleep from cardiopulmonary disease in the home she lived in for over three decades with her husband, author Harlan Ellison, and then for two more years after his death in 2018. Born in Hereford, England, Susan and her sister were raised in Hereford by their father Tibor Toth. Susan, according to her sister, was a bookworm from a very early age, and she had a life long love of the literature of the fantastic. She enrolled at Hereford Sixth Form College with the intent of earning a degree in Mathematics, a fact she would later relay to friends with a great deal of amusement, but soon switched her major to Psychology, and transferred to Manchester Polytechnic. In the summer of 1985, while still in college, she met her husband-to-be at a science fiction & fantasy convention in Scotland.

Though Harlan was a legendary figure in his field, Susan was unfazed by his fame. When he said something to her she regarded as rude, she threw a box of books at him. Harlan, who loved to tell the story, said he knew right then that he was in love. She left England to join him in Los Angeles and they married in September of 1986. Fiercely devoted to one another, they were rarely apart until the time of his death. In 1998 Susan proudly became an American citizen, but just as proudly retained dual citizenship with her native United Kingdom. Among Susan’s many interests and talents, she loved the art of make-up, both theatrical and cosmetic, of which she had an almost encyclopedic knowledge. She could repair a damaged collectible or piece of sculpture to better than new, or stain and lacquer a piece of unfinished wood furniture to showroom quality then lay down a colorful, patterned tile surface for it to sit on creating what looked like an art installation.

She could often be found at genre media and fan events of all types, especially for favorites like “Supernatural”, “Firefly”, or “Harry Potter.” In 1987 she wrote the script “Seeing Purple” for the animated television show “Dinosaucers.” From 1988 to 1996 she wrote the media column “Through the Lens” for “Aboriginal Science Fiction.” In 2014 she edited and wrote an introduction for the book “8 in 80 by Ellison”, a collection of her husband’s short stories. For twenty years she ran the Harlan Ellison Record Collection, writing, editing, and publishing its newsletter, arranging auctions, and processing sales. She accompanied Harlan to all of his convention appearances and speaking engagements, usually making the travel arrangements, selling his books to the fans, and making friends of virtually everyone she met everywhere she went. Susan will be greatly missed by her sister and brother-in-law and by her multitude of friends from all over the world.

—Kathryn Drennan

Let’s Pretend

This 4,700-word excerpt presents much of the introduction to the second volume in White Wolf’s EDGEWORKS series, which continues collecting Harlan Ellison’s backlist, featuring Spider Kiss and Stalking the Nightmare.

Harlan Ellison’s Greatest Hits

$16.99

Again,
Dangerous Visions

$16.99