In this comprehensive study of The Stars My Destination, D. Harlan
Wilson makes a case for the continued significance of Alfred Bester's SF
masterwork, exploring its distinctive style, influences,
intertextuality, affect, and innovation as well as its extensive
metafictional properties. In Stars, Bester established himself as a
son of the pulp-SF and high-modernist writers that preceded him and a
forefather to the New Wave and cyberpunk movements that followed his
lead. Wilson's study depicts Bester as an SF insider as much as an
outlier, writing in the spirit of the genre but breaking with the
fixation on hard science in favor of psychological interiority, literary
experimentation, and adult themes. The book combines close-readings of
the novel with broader concerns about contemporary media, technoculture,
and the current state of SF itself. In Wilson's view, SF is a moribund
artform, and Stars foresaw the inevitable science fictionalization of
our benighted world. With scholarly lucidity and precision, Wilson shows
us that Stars pointed the way to what we have (un)become.