Jack L. Chalker's Last Transformation

I don’t have a cite other than his own website (which isn’t where I learned the news; I got it from an sf mailing list I subscribe to), but it seems Jack L. Chalker has died.

He wasn’t a great writer, but his books were always very imaginative and I enjoyed many of them.

The cause of death seems to be congestive heart failure.

I enjoyed his books, too. I’ll miss him. :frowning:

Ditto that. He was indeed overly preoccupied with physical transformations ( often involving some sort of weird sexual context ) and after awhile his stuff became a bit repetitive. But I was thoroughly entertained by his Well World and Warden Diamond series and liked parts of the Dancing Gods and Quintara Marathon series. Also …And the Devil Will Drag You Under. among his singletons.

A sad loss.

  • Tamerlane

May you have a peaceful journey across the Sea of Dreams, Jack.

Damn. I kept hoping he’d do another River Of The Dancing Gods sequel. :frowning: I’ll miss him.

The original Well of Souls saga is one of my favorite series.
RIP.

Chalker dead? Wow.

I have every book of his that I know about, including The Devil’s Voyage and An Informal Biography of Scrooge McDuck. Not *all[/i of his books are about transformations, and he was getting much better lately (I’m finishing up Kaspar’s Box right now, which just came out in paperback last August). He’s definitely matured as a writer. He was at his best when he got away from SF and Fantasy in the middle of an SF or Fantasy book, oddly enough, and veered into history – he could throw in an odd tidbit of history that I’d never come acros, and which would be worth looking into.

I saw him at two NoreasCons – in 1989, where he read from some of his stuff, and just last September. He looked a lot heavier, and he had to get around on one of those motorized scooters – I don’t know what was wrong with him, but I never saw him walk. He was there at the panel honoring Jack Williamson, and he looked worse than some of the writers there – many of whom were older.

I too loved Well of Souls when I read it in high school. I moved on other authors and didn’t too much else of Chalker’s, but still enjoy that series.

I was surprised to see "Click here to donate to the Chalker Family Emergency Fund " on the Chalker web site. I don’t know much about Sci-Fi publishing and know that not everyone can be Arthur C. Clarke or Isaac Asimov, but would have thought that someone with 63 novels to his name would be reasonably well off.

Can you not get wealthy writing sci-fi/fantasy or does the publisher take it all?

Much of Chalker’s output was OOP, Rillian. He was financially very successful during the '80’s, when all his stuff was on shelves and selling, but that time had passed. Of course, he’d been sick for a while – I think he started getting ill last summer and I believe he went into the hospital in October. Of course, during this period his wife’s ability to work was sporadic as well, so it’s not unsurprising that his family ran out of money. (48% of personal bankruptcies are a result of health crises.)

I rediscovered Chalker at Christmas of 2003. I was visiting my parents and stumbled on the Four Lords of the Diamond series I’d read as a kid. I’ve read about ~20 of his books in the last year or so, and I think they’re well worth the time. It’s true that Chalker was not always the most engaging writer, but the worlds he created were engrossing and he always thought seriously of the political and philosophical ramifications of whatever fanstastic environment he established.

R.I.P.

–Cliffy

Can you get wealthy writing science fiction? Come on, Jack Chalker was never more than a solid mid-list author. That’s not a comment on his writing ability, but on his ability to sell books. I’ll take your word that he’s written 63 books over the past 29 years. Let’s say that he made an average of $20,000 on each of them, counting both the advance and the royalties. $20,000 each would be $1,260,000 total. That may sound like a lot, but over 29 years that’s less than $44,000 per year. Not a great income for someone with a wife and two kids to support.

Chalker has been in bad health for a while. I recall hearing his wife Eva Whitley Chalker talking in a conversation at a local con about a year and a half ago. She pretty much said that she didn’t expect Jack to live much longer.

Don’t have to take my word. See his bibliography.

Midnight at the Well of Souls was in print for 23 years.

I agree that “wealthy” probably wasn’t possible, I still would have thought that a man who wrote 60 books would not need donations from his fans to pay for medical care.

I bought some books from him at the last WorldCon in SoCal. He was a gentleman, and we are less for his passing.

May the Well of Souls treat you kindly, Jack.