The Doors of His Face, the Lamps of His Mouth

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"The Doors of His Face, the Lamps of His Mouth"
Short story by Roger Zelazny
Country USA
LanguageEnglish
Genre(s)Science fiction
Publication
Published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction
Publication typePeriodical
PublisherMercury Publications
Media typeMagazine
Publication dateMarch 1965

"The Doors of His Face, the Lamps of His Mouth" is a science fiction novelette by Roger Zelazny. Originally published in the March 1965 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, it won the 1966 Nebula Award for Best Novelette[1] and was nominated for the 1966 Hugo Award for Best Short Fiction.[2]

Writing in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, John Clute found that Zelazny's story "intoxicatingly dashes together myth and literary assonances—in this case Herman Melville's Moby-Dick—and sex".[3] Gardner Dozois opined that "Doors of His Face" was inspired by "a loving nostalgia for the era of the pulp adventure story that was then widely supposed to be ending".[4]

In the introduction to the novelette in Nebula Award Stories 1965, editor Damon Knight noted that not only did the story receive more votes than the other nominees in its category, but that it received more votes than all of the others combined.[5]

The story has been seen as engaging in New Wave stylistics via its onomastics, metaphors and similes.[6] The title is based on verses from the Book of Job in the King James Version of the Bible, chapter 41 verses 14 and 19, which are part of the description of the Leviathan: "Who can open the doors of his face?" and "Out of his mouth go burning lamps".[7]

Plot summary[edit]

The story is set on Venus at a time when mankind has achieved routine travel to the various planets of the solar system. Unlike the actual planet, Zelazny's Venus is Earth-like, offering breathable air, water-filled oceans and native fauna, one of which is the fictional Ichthyform Leviosaurus Levianthus, a 300-foot-long denizen of the Venusian oceans commonly called "Ikky". It has never been caught, despite numerous attempts to do so.

The story's two main protagonists are Jean Luharich and Carlton Davits. Luharich is a successful businesswoman and media celebrity who is financing, and commanding, an expedition to capture an Ikky. The ship used is known as Tensquare, a nuclear powered platform designed by a rich entrepreneur who went broke looking for Ikky. Davits is a work-for-hire seaman who has been on the crew of several earlier attempts, and in fact had once been in Luharich's position: a playboy sportsman who hired Tensquare to catch an Ikky, until he was injured in a disastrous try whose failure he blames on himself. Davits and Luharich were previously involved in a brief romantic relationship which ended years before the story begins. Both are fiercely competitive and excellent swimmers. Davits hires on with the condition that he stays sober.

Davits has been hired on as a "baitman"—the crewmember who is tasked with diving to the end of a submerged cable so as to attach and activate an electronic lure. Because the lure is deployed only when an Ikky has been detected in close proximity to the ship, the baitman can find himself dangerously close to the Ikky. This happens to Davits. He manages to safely return to the ship, where he assists Luharich in a successful capture, for which she has to overcome the same primal fears that caused Davits to fail in his attempt, when he saw the face of the Leviathan.

Zelazny's conception of Venus[edit]

John Clute described Zelazny's Venus as "fantastical, densely described" and "almost entirely 'unscientific'".[3] Gardner Dozois believed that Zelazny certainly knew that the Venus of "Doors of His Face" was not the actual Venus. Instead, Dozois saw Zelazny's Venus as "an homage, a deliberate act of retro nostalgia" for the "lushly romantic pulp version ... that had been popularized in tales from Planet Stories and Thrilling Wonder Stories decades before".[4]

Zelazny himself explained his conception of Venus as one intentionally written before such a story was made no longer possibly by scientific discovery. "By late 1961 we already had fly-by photos which indicated what the surface of Mars and Venus were really like. But the knowledge was not yet so disseminated to the public, and so one could still get away with a story of the older variety... That was it. I could never do another story of that sort again. They [The Doors of His Face, the Lamps of His Mouth and A Rose for Ecclesiastes] were both my tribute to a phase in the genre’s history which was closed forever."[8]

Publication history[edit]

In addition to its original appearance in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, "The Doors of His Face ..." appeared in two best-of-the-year anthologiesThe Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction (15th Series, 1966) and Nebula Award Stories 1965 (1966).

Since then, it has been anthologized at least twelve times, including translations into French, German and Italian. The story also appears in eight collections devoted to Zelazny's work, including translations into Dutch and Lithuanian. In 1991, it was published as a chapbook by Pulphouse Publishing.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "1966 Nebula Awards". Locus. Archived from the original on 2011-06-05. Retrieved 2011-12-06.
  2. ^ "1966 Hugo Awards". World Science Fiction Society. Archived from the original on 2011-05-07. Retrieved 2010-04-19.
  3. ^ a b Clute, John (May 14, 2015). "Roger Zelazny". sf-encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2015-10-08.
  4. ^ a b Gardner Dozois, ed. (1998). The Good Old Stuff: Adventure SF in the Grand Tradition. New York: St. Martin's Griffin. p. 376. ISBN 0-312-19275-4.
  5. ^ Damon Knight, ed. (1966). Nebula Award Stories 1965. Garden City (New York): Doubleday. p. 1.
  6. ^ Taylor, John W. (1990). "From Pulpstyle to Innerspace: The Stylistics of American New-Wave SF". Style. 24 (4): 611–627. ISSN 0039-4238. JSTOR 42946165.
  7. ^ "Job Chapter 41, KJV". Bible Hub.
  8. ^ Krulik, Theodore. "A Few Words from Roger Zelazny, Part Five: Space Travel, Cybernetics, and the SF Mystery". tor.com. TOR. Retrieved 20 March 2023.

External links[edit]