That Hell-Bound Train

"That Hell-Bound Train" is a fantasy short story by American writer Robert Bloch. It was originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction in September 1958.

"That Hell-Bound Train"
AuthorRobert Bloch
LanguageEnglish
Genre(s)Fantasy
Published inThe Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction
Publication typemagazine
PublisherMercury Publications
Media typePrint (Softcover)
Publication dateSeptember 1958

Plot summary

Martin is a young hobo with a fondness for trains. One night, as he is considering whether to abandon crime, a large unmarked black train pulls up beside him. The train conductor offers Martin anything he wants, in return for which he will "ride that Hell-Bound Train" when he dies. Martin requests the power to stop time, which he plans to use at the happiest time of his life. The conductor accedes to this request; however, over the years that follow, Martin discovers that he cannot choose which moment is his happiest. In the end, he dies, never having stopped time, and indeed boards the train. However, he likes the sinful look of the passengers and chooses to stop time then and there. The train never reaches the depot and Martin, now the brakeman, finally finds happiness.

Reception

"That Hell-Bound Train" won the Hugo Award for Best Short Story in 1959.[1] Comic Book Resources has described it as "a classic deal-with-the-devil tale with a nice twist at the end".[2]

The story was shaped by William Tenn, who at the time had an editorial position at Fantasy and Science Fiction salvaging stories that had been selected by Anthony Boucher (prior to Boucher's retirement) as "not quite good enough to be published, but still too good to have been rejected". In 2001, Tenn explained that the original version of "That Hell-Bound Train" had been "an absolutely fine piece of work that just didn't have a usable ending"; consequently, he devised a new ending "and persuaded [Bloch] to write it".[3]

In other media

A comic book version of the story began publication on May 15, 2011. The adaptation was written by Joe R. Lansdale and John Lansdale, with art by Dave Wachter. Running for three issues, it was published by IDW Comics.

The song "Hellbound Train (Downbound Train)" by Chuck Berry is about a similar train.

A dramatized radio version was broadcast on Mindwebs, narrated by Michael Hanson.[4]

See also

References

  1. SF Awards Database
  2. Lansdales and Wachter jump aboard That Hellbound Train, by Bridget Alverson, at Comic Book Resources; published March 25, 2011; retrieved January 6, 2017
  3. "Immodest Proposals: The Complete Science Fiction of William Tenn (volume 1)", published 2001 by NESFA Press; p 199
  4. http://www.radioechoes.com/?page=series&genre=SciFi&series=Mind%20Webs
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