A Few Words With Houghton Mifflin Harcourt’s John Joseph Adams

In the long-running tension between pure entertainment and meaningful science fiction and fantasy, anthologist John Joseph Adams says, ‘We can have both. It just takes more work.’

John Joseph Adams. Image: Beth Gwinn
John Joseph Adams. Image: Beth Gwinn

By Porter Anderson, Editor-in-Chief | @Porter_Anderson

‘Science-Fictional Furniture’ vs. Serious Issues

JJA BooksThe creation of a new imprint in science-fiction and fantasy curated by John Joseph Adams was announced by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in November.

And at that time, the list was seeded with three backlist titles by author the Hugh Howey: Beacon 23,  and Shift and Dust from the Wool trilogy. The rights to Wool, the volume that opens that trilogy, are held by Simon & Schuster in the print-only deal negotiated at the height of the material’s popularity by Howey and his agent Kristin Nelson.

Adams now has made his first acquisition of original work, two books in a new dystopian series by the author Carrie Vaughn. Bannerless is described as a novel “in which an investigator must discover the truth behind a mysterious death in a world where small communities struggle to maintain a ravaged civilization decades after environmental and economic collapse.”

Vaughn’s Hugo-nominated story “Amaryllis” was published by Adams in his first issue of the magazine Lightspeed, and a story edition of “Bannerless” was featured in another anthology, The End Has Come. That latter anthology is part of The Apocalypse Triptych collections Adams produced with Howey, the first two installments being The End Is Nigh and The End Is Now.

Long one of the best known anthologists in the field, Houghton’s creation of the new imprint under Adams’ direction was welcomed in the autumn by the world science-fiction community. For Houghton, his Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy series is a new tells us that while he appreciates material created primarily for entertainment value, his own interests run to more deeply meaningful work.

‘Not Spoon-Fed to You at All’

In a conversation with Publishing Perspectives, Adams talks about the business context in which publishing people have to try to balance the commercial imperative of entertainment—as the plethora of content in the marketplace widens—and yet need to try for worthwhile commentary and meaningful story.

“The large majority of what’s published,” Adams says, “is the more serious science-fiction instead of the stuff that’s just entertainment, that material that uses science-fictional furniture simply to…have fun. There’s nothing wrong with that, but it’s a different kind of thing.

51AP4aY0jKL._SX331_BO1,204,203,200_“I like to think that people would embrace that kind of thing,” the deeper material.

In answer to a reference to Alex Garland’s Ex Machina, he compares it to Jurassic Park. “Ex Machina wasn’t in as many theaters,” he says, “which means that the success it has had has been really encouraging. And there are things like Gravity and Interstellar…so ambitious.

There’s more: Read the full story at Publishing Perspectives


By Porter Ander­son

Originally published at www.PublishingPerspectives.com

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