"Shatter the Wall" by Sydney J. Van Scyoc is a science fiction novel written in the early 1960s. The book explores themes of identity, love, and the consequences of societal obsession with media and celebrity, set against a backdrop where real human interactions have largely been replaced by artificial experiences through a technology known as the Wall. The narrative focuses on a mother and her daughter, who are both deeply affected by the presence of the Wall and its characters, particularly the actor Bass McDowall. The story revolves around Amanda, a mother who confronts her daughter Kathryn, the youngest person in a city devoid of children, about the dangers of obsessing over the artificial lives portrayed on the Wall. Kathryn idolizes the fictional characters, primarily Bass, and rejects the idea of marrying anyone else. As the story progresses, Amanda's desperation leads her to drastic actions against the characters she sees as problematic to humanity's survival. After committing murder in a misguided attempt to save the human race, Amanda confronts the uncomfortable reality that the characters she sought to erase are mere illusions, and that her actions cannot alter the underlying societal issues. Ultimately, the novel serves as a cautionary tale about the dangers of escapism and the importance of human connection in a world increasingly defined by screens and simulations. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Shatter the Wall
By Sydney J. Van Scyoc
"Shatter the Wall" by Sydney J. Van Scyoc is a science fiction novel written in the early 1960s. The book explores themes of identity, love, and the c...
Sydney J. Van Scyoc was an American science fiction writer. Her first published story was "Shatter the Wall" in Galaxy in 1962. She continued to write short stories throughout the 1960s and in 1971, published her first novel, Saltflower. Other novels followed until 1992, when she abandoned writing to make and sell jewelry. Gordon Van Gelder, editor of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction published her first story in more than 20 years in the December 2004 issue. He stated in an introduction to the story that: "in June 1992, after years of writing fiction, she became obsessed with jewelry making and spent a decade selling earrings and bracelets in the San Francisco Bay area. Last year she retired from that trade and now spends most of her time gardening and conferring with her cats...and, yes, writing again." Van Gelder would publish one more story in the December 2005 issue of his magazine and at that time stated in the introduction: "Joyce Van Scyoc lives in the San Francisco Bay Area and spends all summer gardening until the October rains drive her inside."