Tom Swift Turns 100
Tom Swift is turning 100—and he still doesn’t look a day over 18
- By Danny Heitman
- Smithsonian.com, July 01, 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Victor Appleton, the original Swift author, and Victor Appleton II, his successor in the second Swift series, would surely find such praise gratifying—if they actually existed. But they were pseudonyms for a stable of writers who churned out the Swift stories over the years, most of them for the now-defunct Stratemeyer Literary Syndicate, a kind of factory for children’s serials founded by Edward Stratemeyer in 1905.
“It is the purpose of these spirited tales to convey in a realistic way the wonderful advances in land and sea locomotion and to interest the boy of the present in the hope that he may be a factor in aiding the marvelous development that is coming in the future,” readers of the dust jacket on the first Tom Swift book were told.
One of the hallmarks of the early Swift books is the way they reflect the times in which they were written. The first series, for example, revisits a world in which the Wright brothers’ inaugural flight is still fresh in memory, but it also includes a character, casually described as a “darky,” who works as Tom’s servant.
“We should note the period in which the writing was done and the audience for whom the writing was intended,” Dizer wrote in explaining such offensive characters.
The second series, launched in 1954, embraced the era’s fascination with outer space and tackled Cold War espionage themes, with fictional Brungarians occasionally standing in for the Soviets. In Tom Swift and His Rocket Ship, the young inventor beat real-life space explorers into orbit by seven years. The Eisenhower-era Tom Swift books also welcomed nuclear energy with unblinking optimism; one story line connected sabotage with “some crank who is opposed to atomic progress and wants us all back in the Stone Age.”
Simon & Schuster, which purchased the Stratemeyer Syndicate in the 1980s, introduced the latest Tom Swift series (“Tom Swift, Young Inventor”) in 2006, and the most recent book (Tom Swift: Under the Radar) appeared in 2007. The stories seem generally more domesticated than their predecessors, told in the first-person voice of teen confessional.
Although there are no immediate plans for new Tom Swift books, Simon & Schuster has given the latest titles the most modern of treatments, releasing them as e-books—an innovation Tom Swift would surely love.
Danny Heitman, a columnist for the Baton Rouge Advocate, is the author of A Summer of Birds: John James Audubon at Oakley House.
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Comments (2)
My life-long love of reading about science and technology started with these books. My father found a complete set at a yard sale and brought them home for me when I was about ten-years old. I wonder how many young people of my generation were inspired by these books to delve deeper into science and technology. I read a couple of these to my children (who are adults now) and they enjoyed the stories even though the settings were somewhat (in their minds) archaic. Thank you for the article. Maybe it will encourage some other parents (or grandparents) to dust off some of these books and read them to the newest generation of children.
Posted by John Sorrells on July 10,2010 | 11:53 AM
It should be noted that there is a celebration planned for this in San Diego:
http://www.tomswiftenterprises.com/
Parts of the celebration are already in progress.
Posted by Mike on July 1,2010 | 05:11 PM