David Gerrold
David Gerrold (born Jerrold David Friedman; January 24, 1944) is an American science fiction author and screenwriter.[1][2] He achieved early prominence by selling the script for the Star Trek episode "The Trouble with Tribbles" at age 22, which introduced the iconic furry creatures and remains one of the series' most popular installments.[1][3] Gerrold has written over 50 books, including novels such as When HARLIE Was One, exploring artificial intelligence, and the ongoing War Against the Chtorr series, depicting humanity's conflict with invasive alien biology.[1][4] His novella The Martian Child, based on his experiences adopting an HIV-positive son, won the Hugo, Nebula, and Locus Awards, marking a rare "triple crown" in science fiction.[4][1] In television, he contributed to Land of the Lost by creating the reptilian Sleestak species and served as a story editor.[5] Gerrold holds a BA in theater arts and has been active in science fiction fandom since youth, later engaging in public discourse on industry matters, including opposition to the Sad Puppies campaign during the 2015 Hugo Awards controversy, where he criticized efforts to alter nomination slates as undermining the awards' integrity.[1][6] His career spans scriptwriting for shows like Babylon 5 and Sliders, nonfiction on Star Trek production, and advocacy for progressive causes within genre communities, often via social media.[4][5]Early Life
Childhood and Family
David Gerrold was born Jerrold David Friedman on January 24, 1944, in Chicago, Illinois.[2] His father, Lewis Friedman, worked as a photographer, while his mother was Johanna Friedman (née Fleischer).[2] The family relocated to California's San Fernando Valley during his early childhood, an area in Southern California where he was raised amid a suburban environment conducive to his developing interests.[2][1] From a young age, Gerrold immersed himself in science fiction literature, viewing it as an escapist medium that offered compelling narratives of exploration and ingenuity.[2] His initial foray into the genre came through Robert A. Heinlein's juvenile novels, including titles such as Rocket Ship Galileo, which sparked a lifelong affinity for speculative fiction's problem-solving ethos.[2][7] He also engaged actively in the science fiction fan community during this period, fostering early connections within the subculture.[2]Education and Initial Interests
David Gerrold attended Van Nuys High School before graduating from Ulysses S. Grant High School as part of its inaugural class in the early 1960s.[2][8] Following high school, Gerrold pursued higher education in California, initially enrolling at the University of Southern California to study film in the mid-1960s.[9] Financial constraints prompted a transfer to San Fernando Valley State College (later California State University, Northridge), where he continued in the theater arts program and earned a B.A.[2][9] His coursework in film and theater cultivated an early fascination with narrative structure and visual storytelling, laying groundwork for creative pursuits.[2] During this period, exposure to the original Star Trek series, which premiered on September 8, 1966, ignited specific ambitions in science fiction scripting; as a student without prior professional credits, Gerrold began experimenting with speculative story ideas inspired by the show's format.[9] This encounter marked a pivot from general theater interests toward targeted persistence in genre writing, despite initial barriers like lack of experience.[2]Writing Career
Breakthrough with Star Trek
David Gerrold, then 23 years old, sold his first professional screenplay, initially titled "The Fuzzies," to Star Trek: The Original Series in February 1967.[10] The script introduced the tribbles—prolific, furry, non-aggressive creatures that reproduce rapidly upon contact with food—as a comedic threat to the USS Enterprise, blending humor with light political intrigue involving Klingons and a strategic grain shipment on a space station.[10] Inspired partly by Gerrold's experiences with pet mice and other animals, the story shifted from a more serious ecological premise to emphasize comedy during development, with producer Gene L. Coon encouraging the humorous tone and contributing to revisions that tightened the plot and added scripted jokes.[10] Filming occurred in summer 1967 amid creator Gene Roddenberry's temporary absence from the production, though Roddenberry later expressed disapproval of the episode's levity, viewing it as insufficiently serious for the series despite permitting occasional lighter fare.[10] The final episode, retitled "The Trouble with Tribbles," aired on December 29, 1967, and garnered strong Nielsen ratings along with substantial fan correspondence, prompting NBC to schedule a rare repeat broadcast despite initial network reservations about science fiction humor.[11] The tribbles themselves emerged as a lasting cultural icon, symbolizing whimsical peril in science fiction, while the episode secured the 1968 Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation.[12] Gerrold extended the tribble concept in 1973 with "More Tribbles, More Troubles," a sequel script for Star Trek: The Animated Series commissioned after Dorothy C. Fontana approached him to reprise the elements.[13] This episode, depicting the Enterprise encountering a massive tribble-infested Klingon freighter and a hybrid "glommer" creature, maintained the original's comedic spirit while exploring themes of unchecked reproduction on a larger scale, airing as the fifth installment of the animated series' first season.[13]Novel Series and Standalone Works
Gerrold's debut novel, When HARLIE Was One, published on July 1, 1972, examines the emergence of sentience in an experimental AI system named HARLIE, delving into philosophical inquiries on consciousness, love, religion, and the boundaries of human-machine interaction.[14][15][16] The work earned a Nebula Award nomination for Best Novel in 1972 and a Hugo Award nomination for Best Novel in 1973.[15][17] The War Against the Chtorr series, launched with A Matter for Men in 1983, portrays Earth's defense against a colonizing alien ecosystem that introduces disruptive biology and species, emphasizing themes of ecological disruption, adaptive warfare, and human societal evolution amid existential threat.[18][19] The sequence progressed with A Day for Damnation in 1984, A Rage for Revenge in 1989, A Season for Slaughter in 1992, and A Method for Madness in 2015, marked by multiyear gaps attributed to the narrative's complexity and Gerrold's extensive preparatory notes dating to 1974.[18][20][21] The Star Wolf series originated with Starhunt (also published as Yesterday's Children) in 1972 and centers on the crew of the starship Star Wolf navigating interstellar skirmishes, focusing on tactical shipboard operations, crew loyalty, and confrontations with advanced adversaries like the Morthans.[22][23] Later entries include Voyage of the Star Wolf in 1990, The Middle of Nowhere in 1995, and Blood and Fire in 2004, expanding the military science fiction framework with escalating conflicts.[24] Jumping Off the Planet, released in 2000 as the opener to the Starsiders Trilogy (also known as the Dingilliad), follows teenager Charles "Chigger" Dingillian and his fractured family on a lunar journey that uncovers broader solar system intrigues, incorporating young adult perspectives on autonomy, kinship strife, and extraterrestrial expansion.[25][26] The trilogy concludes with Bouncing Off the Moon in 2001 and Leaping to the Stars in 2002.[25]Short Fiction and Nonfiction Contributions
Gerrold's short fiction primarily appeared in science fiction magazines and anthologies during the late 1960s and early 1970s, often exploring themes of technology, human behavior, and speculative futures. His debut collection, With a Finger in My I, published by Ballantine Books in 1972, gathered nine stories written under his birth name Jerrold David Friedman, including the title tale "With a Finger in My I," "Battle-Hymn of the Republic, Inc.," and "How We Saved the Human Race."[27] These works showcased his early style, blending humor, satire, and computer-related motifs that foreshadowed later novels like When HARLIE Was One. Subsequent collections included The Hardway Up (1972), compiling additional pieces such as "The Starhiker," and Up to the Sky in Ships (2015), which featured later stories like "The Gobling."[28] Gerrold contributed short stories to various anthologies, including "Believers" in the Babylon 5 universe (1993) and entries in shared-world projects, emphasizing interpersonal conflicts amid futuristic settings.[28] His shorter prose earned nominations and recognition within the genre, though it remained secondary to his longer-form and screen work. In nonfiction, Gerrold authored The World of Star Trek in 1973, a Ballantine Books reference examining the original series' production, fan culture, and cultural impact through interviews and behind-the-scenes analysis conducted during his involvement with the show.[29] The book detailed challenges like network interference and creative decisions, positioning it as an early fan-accessible history. He later produced Worlds of Wonder: How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy in 1987 (revised 2001 by Writer's Digest Books), a practical guide offering step-by-step advice on world-building, character development, and narrative techniques drawn from his professional experience.[30] Additional nonfiction efforts encompassed essays in Fatal Distractions (1994), addressing writing craft and personal reflections on genre conventions.[31]Television and Media Involvement
Star Trek Projects
Gerrold contributed scripts to Star Trek: The Animated Series, which aired from 1973 to 1974. He wrote "More Tribbles, More Troubles," the fifth episode of the first season, broadcast on October 6, 1973, as a direct sequel to his Original Series story featuring the proliferation of the furry creatures aboard a besieged starship.[13] He also penned "Bem," the first episode of the second season, aired on September 14, 1974, involving an alien entity testing the Enterprise crew's perceptions of reality.[32] Gerrold provided voice work for minor characters in the series, including an ensign and an EM entity.[33] In the late 1970s, Gerrold participated in the development of Star Trek: Phase II, the intended live-action continuation of the Original Series, serving in consultative and writing capacities during pre-production.[34] He outlined the unproduced episode "Mind-Sifter," depicting Captain Kirk subjected to psychological torture via a device echoing elements from "Whom Gods Destroy," but the project was abandoned in 1978 when Paramount pivoted to theatrical films.[35] Gerrold offered early consultations for Star Trek: The Next Generation in the mid-1980s, contributing memos on thematic elements like future human encounters, as documented in a October 1986 internal document.[36] He joined the writing staff in 1987 but departed near the end of the first season in 1988 amid creative clashes with Gene Roddenberry, who enforced a strict "no interpersonal conflict" guideline that Gerrold viewed as undermining narrative realism.[37] A key dispute involved his rejected script "Blood and Fire," a two-part story incorporating an AIDS metaphor through a vampiric space plague and introducing an openly gay Starfleet officer, which Roddenberry deemed incompatible with the series' optimistic tone.[38] [39] The script remained unproduced officially but was later expanded into a 2004 novel and adapted for a 2008 fan production.[40]Land of the Lost and Other Productions
Gerrold co-developed the Saturday morning children's science fiction series Land of the Lost with producers Sid and Marty Krofft, which premiered on NBC on September 7, 1974, and ran for two seasons totaling 43 episodes until its conclusion in 1977.[41] As head writer and a producer, he created foundational elements including the antagonistic Sleestak species—telepathic, reptilian humanoids dwelling in ruined crystal pyramids—and the Pakuni, a primitive primate tribe allied with the protagonists.[5][41] He also devised the Pakuni language, a constructed vocabulary of roughly 200 words used by the ape-like characters to communicate basic concepts.[41] The program's premise centered on a father and his two children rafting into a hidden dimension via a time portal, where they encountered coelacanths, tyrannosaurs, and other prehistoric creatures amid unstable physics governed by crystalline matrices that enabled phenomena like matter duplication and dimensional travel.[42] Gerrold wrote or co-wrote 13 episodes, including the pilot "Cha-Ka!" (aired September 7, 1974), which introduced the core characters and the Pakuni's rescue of the human family after their crash-landing.[41] His scripts emphasized logical problem-solving and scientific principles, such as using sound frequencies to manipulate the environment, while incorporating educational undertones on ecology and adaptation without overt moralizing.[43] Beyond Land of the Lost, Gerrold contributed to several anthology and science fiction series in the 1980s and 1990s. He penned the segment "A Day in Beaumont" for the revival of The Twilight Zone, which aired as part of season 1, episode 24 on April 11, 1986, depicting a Vietnam War veteran confronting wartime trauma through supernatural intervention.[4] Similarly, he wrote scripts for Tales from the Darkside, including horror-tinged narratives that aligned with the show's focus on moral twists and the uncanny.[4] In the 1990s, Gerrold provided episodes for Babylon 5, contributing to its serialized space opera format with stories exploring interstellar diplomacy and alien cultures.[4] Gerrold pursued several unproduced television pilots during the 1970s and 1980s, drawing from his speculative fiction expertise to pitch original concepts blending hard science with dramatic tension, though network priorities often favored lighter fare over his more rigorous premises.[44]Later Screenwriting Efforts
In the late 1980s, Gerrold submitted the script "Blood and Fire" to Star Trek: The Next Generation, envisioning an episode addressing blood contamination horrors akin to AIDS fears, featuring a vampire-like species and a subplot involving a gay crew member with a male partner.[45] The story was rejected amid concerns over its explicit handling of homosexuality and disease stigma, which producers deemed untimely for broadcast television standards of the era.[46] Gerrold later expanded the concept into the 2004 novel Blood and Fire as the fourth book in his Star Wolf series, adapting the unproduced screenplay into prose fiction.[1] During the 1990s, Gerrold pitched an episode outline titled "Laser-Mirror-Starweb" to Babylon 5, exploring speculative themes but ultimately unproduced after review by showrunner J. Michael Straczynski, who opted for other narratives.[47] This submission reflected ongoing attempts to secure speculative television work amid a competitive landscape favoring established pitches over external spec scripts. Few additional professional screenwriting credits emerged in mainstream sci-fi series, with Gerrold's efforts increasingly met with rejections tied to thematic sensitivities or production priorities. By the 2000s, Gerrold revisited "Blood and Fire" for the independent fan production Star Trek: New Voyages (later rebranded Star Trek: Phase II), directing a two-part adaptation released in 2008 that transposed the story to the original series era with Kirk, Spock, and McCoy, incorporating guest star Denise Crosby.[37] This 98-minute fan episode marked one of his last directorial and scripting contributions to Trek-related media, highlighting a pivot toward non-commercial outlets as Hollywood screenwriting opportunities dwindled for his style of boundary-pushing narratives.[46] Such projects underscored industry shifts toward risk-averse content, prompting Gerrold's greater emphasis on novels and nonfiction over unproduced television pilots.Political Views and Activism
LGBTQ+ Advocacy
David Gerrold, openly gay since his early writing career, incorporated homosexual themes into his science fiction as early as 1973 with The Man Who Folded Himself, in which the time-traveling protagonist forms a sexual and romantic relationship with alternate versions of himself, exploring identity and desire without apology.[48][49] This novel predated widespread mainstream acceptance of such portrayals in genre fiction, reflecting Gerrold's personal experiences amid a cultural landscape where gay characters were often depicted as monstrous or absent.[46] Gerrold advocated for increased LGBTQ+ representation in science fiction through his writings and public statements, emphasizing the need to move beyond rarity or villainy for gay figures in the genre.[46] In the 1980s, during his involvement with Star Trek: The Next Generation, he pitched and included gay crew members in scripts, citing producer Gene Roddenberry's prior agreement—reiterated in a staff meeting—that the franchise should eventually feature openly homosexual characters to align with its progressive ethos.[46][50] Responding to the AIDS epidemic's peak in the late 1980s, Gerrold wrote the unproduced Star Trek: The Next Generation script "Blood and Fire" in 1988, an allegory depicting a deadly blood-borne pathogen and its stigma, with two gay security officers whose relationship highlighted themes of ignorance, homophobia, and mandatory blood testing fears mirroring real-world HIV/AIDS controversies.[46][51] Gerrold later shared the script at conventions to promote discussion on these issues, underscoring his efforts to use speculative fiction for education and destigmatization.[52]Science Fiction Fandom Disputes
David Gerrold served as Guest of Honor and co-Toastmaster at the 2015 Hugo Awards ceremony held during Sasquan, the 73rd World Science Fiction Convention in Spokane, Washington, alongside Tananarive Due.[53] The event occurred amid the Sad Puppies campaign, initiated by author Brad Torgersen in 2013 and expanded by Larry Correia, which sought to nominate science fiction works perceived as overlooked due to an alleged dominance of left-leaning, ideologically focused selections in prior years.[54] Proponents of the campaign argued that Hugo nominations had become insular, favoring "message fiction" emphasizing progressive themes over storytelling merit, and used slate recommendations to demonstrate broader fandom preferences.[55] Gerrold and Due, during the ceremony on August 22, 2015, characterized the influx of Puppy-backed nominees as an "aberration" driven by organized campaigning rather than organic consensus, with five categories ultimately awarded "No Award" after Puppy slate entries dominated nominations but faced backlash from attending voters.[56] Gerrold publicly critiqued the Sad Puppies approach as ideologically motivated slate voting that subverted the awards' merit-based intent, aligning with broader fandom defenses against what he viewed as an attempt to politicize the process.[57] In response to the controversy's escalation, Gerrold distributed custom "asterisk" awards—shaped like asterisks—to Puppy participants, symbolizing the invalidated nature of their slate-driven nominations in his estimation.[6] The disputes extended to personal attacks, including a June 2015 incident where Sad Puppy author Lou Antonelli wrote to the Spokane Police Department claiming Gerrold posed a "public danger" based on his online statements about gun rights advocates; Antonelli later apologized publicly, and Gerrold emphasized the convention's anti-harassment policy in his response.[58][57] Puppy advocates countered that such reactions exemplified hypersensitivity to challenges against established nomination patterns, which they claimed rewarded ideology over entertainment value.[54] In October 2025, following a Wired magazine article revisiting the Hugo controversies, Gerrold reiterated his criticisms in a Facebook post, labeling Sad Puppies participants as "Pathetic Pooches" with no genuine intent to engage in fandom but rather to "destroy the credibility of the awards."[6] He specifically named figures like Vox Day, Larry Correia, and Brad Torgersen, asserting their absence from the 2015 convention undermined their claims and that the audience overwhelmingly rejected their slate.[6] Gerrold's stance defended progressive elements in science fiction as inherent to the genre's tradition of social commentary, dismissing Puppy accusations of overemphasis on ideology as misguided.[59] Opponents maintained that the campaigns successfully exposed and prompted reforms, such as the 2016 adoption of the E Pluribus Hugo voting system to dilute slate influence, validating their critique of pre-2015 bloc tendencies.[54] These exchanges highlighted persistent divides in science fiction fandom over whether awards should prioritize entertainment, diversity of thought, or thematic progressivism.Personal Life and Later Years
Family and Relationships
Gerrold adopted his son, Sean Friedman, from a foster group home in the 1980s, becoming one of the early openly gay single parents to do so in California.[2] [60] He raised Sean as a single father, never having married, and later became a grandfather to two grandchildren.[8] Gerrold has publicly described the challenges and joys of parenting as an unmarried gay man, emphasizing the deliberate choice to build a family independently amid limited legal and social precedents for such adoptions at the time.[2] No long-term romantic partnerships have been publicly disclosed in biographical accounts of his personal life.[60]Health Challenges and Relocation
In December 2013, Gerrold appealed to the science fiction community for financial support to cover his son's emergency surgery for a double hernia, which posed a risk of paralysis if not addressed promptly by a specialist; the procedure required raising approximately $10,000 amid uncertainties with insurance coverage.[61] He proposed incentives such as sharing the initial portion of A Method for Madness, the fifth installment in his long-unfinished War Against the Chtorr series, to encourage donations via PayPal, with plans for a potential GoFundMe campaign.[61] In October 2023, Gerrold relocated from Los Angeles to Vermont with his family, marking a significant shift from urban Southern California to a more rural setting.[62] Amid these personal transitions, Gerrold participated in a February 2024 Q&A for The Astounding Analog Companion, where he reflected on his early inspirations from mid-20th-century science fiction authors like Robert A. Heinlein and Arthur C. Clarke, his longstanding connection to Analog magazine dating back to his high school years, and his ongoing efforts to complete the Chtorr series alongside other projects.[19]Reception and Criticisms
Achievements and Influence
Gerrold's script for the Star Trek episode "The Trouble with Tribbles," aired on December 29, 1967, introduced the rapidly reproducing, purring creatures known as tribbles, which have endured as an iconic element of science fiction pop culture, spawning merchandise, animated sequels, and crossovers in later Star Trek productions such as Deep Space Nine's "Trials and Tribble-ations" in 1996.[33] The episode's blend of humor, tension, and speculative elements influenced subsequent comedic sci-fi storytelling, with tribbles referenced in broader media including films and advertisements.[63] His 1995 novelette "The Martian Child: A Novella on the Theme of Assimilation," based on his experiences adopting a foster son, secured the science fiction "triple crown" by winning the Hugo Award for Best Novelette, the Nebula Award for Best Novelette, and the Locus Award for Best Novelette.[64] [4] Earlier works earned further recognition, including a 1972 Nebula nomination for Best Novel for The Man Who Folded Himself and a 1973 Hugo nomination for Best Novel for When HARLIE Was One.[65] Across his career, Gerrold has amassed 44 award wins and nominations in categories tracked by the Science Fiction Awards Database, including Locus and other genre honors.[65] Gerrold's prolific output encompasses dozens of novels, such as the five-volume War Against the Cthorr series beginning with A Matter for Men in 1983, alongside hundreds of short stories published in anthologies and magazines since the 1960s.[31] He has sustained a visible presence in science fiction fandom through regular convention appearances, serving as Guest of Honor at the 73rd World Science Fiction Convention (Sasquan) in 2015 and participating in events like Star Trek conventions into the 2020s.[66] [67] In nonfiction, Gerrold's Worlds of Wonder: How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy (2001) provides practical guidance on crafting speculative narratives, covering plot construction, character development, and genre conventions, and has been utilized by aspiring writers in workshops and self-study.[68] His lectures and panels on writing craft, drawn from decades of professional experience, have contributed to educational efforts in science fiction literature.[69]Unfinished Projects and Professional Critiques
The War Against the Chtorr series, planned as a seven-volume science fiction narrative beginning with A Matter for Men in 1983, has progressed slowly, with only four installments published: A Day for Damnation (1984), A Rage for Revenge (1989), and A Season for Slaughter (1992).[70] This results in gaps exceeding five years between some volumes and no further releases in over three decades, despite repeated announcements for the fifth book, A Method for Madness, including a 2015 claim of imminent completion.[71] Such protracted timelines have raised questions about the author's commitment to concluding ambitious projects amid shifting publishing landscapes.[72] Critiques of Gerrold's prose in the series highlight perceived weaknesses in character development and dialogue, described by readers as stilted and unnatural, potentially undermining narrative immersion despite strengths in speculative ecology and action sequences.[73] Fan discussions have echoed concerns over plotting inconsistencies and overreliance on thematic exposition, interpreting these as signs of prioritizing ideological messaging—such as critiques of human societal flaws—over tight storytelling craftsmanship.[74] Gerrold's involvement in the fan-produced Star Trek: Phase II series included scripting and directing efforts like "Blood and Fire," but yielded unfinished projects such as "Origins: The Protracted Man," released in incomplete form in 2021 after production stalled.[75] Interpersonal conflicts emerged, including artistic disputes with production over episodes like "Mind-Sifter," contributing to tensions that highlighted challenges in collaborative screenwriting environments.[37] In broader science fiction circles, Gerrold has faced accusations of elevating message-driven content above literary merit, particularly in his opposition to the Sad Puppies campaign, which sought to counter perceived Hugo Awards biases favoring progressive themes over entertainment value.[6] His vocal defense of established award processes during the 2015 controversy, including administering "No Award" outcomes for slate-nominated works, aligned him with critics of the Puppies' push against institutional preferences, drawing charges of entrenching ideological gatekeeping rather than fostering open competition.[54]Bibliography
Novels and Series
When HARLIE Was One, Gerrold's debut novel published in October 1972, examines the development and philosophical implications of an advanced artificial intelligence system.[76] The Star Wolf trilogy, a series of military science fiction novels, includes Starhunt (1972), Voyage of the Star Wolf (1990), and The Middle of Nowhere (1995).[31] The War Against the Chtorr series, planned as a seven-volume military science fiction epic but remaining incomplete after four installments, comprises A Matter for Men (1983), A Day for Damnation (1984), A Rage for Revenge (1989), and A Season for Slaughter (1993).[77][18] Gerrold also authored the Starsiders trilogy (also known as the Dingilliad), consisting of Jumping Off the Planet (2000), Bouncing Off the Moon (2001), and Leaping to the Stars (2002), focused on young protagonists navigating interplanetary challenges.[78]Short Stories and Anthologies
Gerrold's short fiction spans decades, beginning with serialized components of his early AI-themed narrative published in Galaxy magazine, including "Oracle for a White Rabbit" (1969) and "The God Machine" (1970), which were later incorporated into the fix-up novel When HARLIE Was One.[76] These pieces explored emergent machine intelligence through episodic vignettes. Subsequent works appeared in prominent outlets such as The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, featuring stories like "The Equally Strange Reappearance of David Gerrold" (2007), "Night Train to Paris" (2013), "Entanglements" (2015), and paired tales "The Further Adventures of Mr. Costello" and "The Dunsmuir Horror" (both 2016).[79] Novelettes such as "The Martian Child" (1994) drew from personal experiences with adoption, while "Dancer in the Dark" (2004) addressed speculative themes of identity and performance.[80] [81] Gerrold contributed to themed collections, including "Rex" (1993) in Dinosaur Fantastic, envisioning alternate prehistoric scenarios.[82] Later stories like "Bubble and Squeak" appeared in Asimov's Science Fiction (2018), blending humor with relational dynamics in futuristic settings.[79] His output includes self-curated collections such as Read My Shorts (2013) and Little Horrors (2014), compiling varied speculative pieces.[78] In parallel, Gerrold edited multiple anthologies of original short science fiction in the 1970s, emphasizing new voices and sense-of-wonder elements without rigid themes. These volumes featured contributions from established and emerging authors, reflecting his role in nurturing genre talent post his Star Trek success.- Protostars (1971, co-edited with Stephen Goldin), Ballantine Books, containing stories like Edward Bryant's "The 10:00 Report Is Not the News."[83]
- Generation: An Anthology of Speculative Fiction (1972), Dell, with works from writers including Larry Niven and Frank Herbert.[31]
- Science Fiction Emphasis 1 (1974).[31]
- Alternities (1974).[31]
- Ascents of Wonder (1977), Popular Library, highlighting awe-inspiring narratives from authors like Poul Anderson.[84]