Everything about Feghoot totally explained
A
Feghoot is a humorous short story or vignette ending in an atrocious
pun.
The term originated with a long running series of short
science fiction pieces that appeared under the collective title "Through Time and Space with Ferdinand Feghoot", published in various magazines over several decades. They were written by
Reginald Bretnor under the
anagrammatic
pseudonym of Grendel Briarton. The usual formulae the stories followed were for the title character to solve a problem bedeviling some manner of being or extricate himself from a dangerous situation. The events could take place all over the galaxy and in various historical periods on Earth and elsewhere. In his adventures, Feghoot worked for the Society for the Aesthetic Re-Arrangement of History and traveled via a device that had no name but was typographically represented as the ")(". The pieces were usually only a few paragraphs long, and always ended with a deliberately terrible pun that was often based on a well-known title or catch-phrase.
"Through Time and Space with Ferdinand Feghoot" was originally published in the magazine
Fantasy and Science Fiction from 1956 to 1973. (In 1973, the magazine ran a contest soliciting readers' Feghoots as entries.) The series also appeared in
Fantasy and Science Fiction's sister magazine
Venture Science Fiction Magazine, and later in
Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine,
Amazing Stories, and other publications. The individual pieces were identified by Roman numerals rather than titles. The stories have been collected in several editions, each an expanded version of the previous, the most recent being
The Collected Feghoot from Pulphouse Press.
Many of the ideas and puns for Bretnor's stories were contributed by others, including
F. M. Busby and
E. Nelson Bridwell. Other authors have published Feghoots written on their own, including
Isaac Asimov and
John Brunner. There have been numerous
fan-produced stories as well.
Strictly speaking, a Feghoot has to star Ferdinand Feghoot. In 1962,
Amazing Stories published "Through Time and Space with Benedict Breadfruit" by Grandall Barretton (
Randall Garrett), which all ended in a pun on the name of a famous SF writer. One example of a Feghoot is the "Forty million Frenchmen" gag ("For DeMille, young fur-henchmen...") on page 559 of Thomas Pynchon's
Gravity's Rainbow.
Feghoots are a subset of the
shaggy dog story, which is usually much longer.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Feghoot'.
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