Difference between revisions of "Mari Wolf"

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As of 1950, Wolf was a member of the [[Outlander Society]] and the [[N3F]].   
 
As of 1950, Wolf was a member of the [[Outlander Society]] and the [[N3F]].   
  
Several of Wolf's SF stories appeared in ''[[If]]'', including the short [[novel]] ''Homo Inferior'' (November, 1953). She was first to use the abbreviation ''[[droid]]'' for a robot; it appeared in her 1952 story, "Robots of the World! Arise!" She also wrote mysteries, including ''The Golden Frame'' (1961).
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Several of Wolf's SF stories appeared in ''[[If]]'', including the short [[novel]] ''Homo Inferior'' (November, 1953). She was first to use the abbreviation ''[[droid]]'' for a robot; it appeared in her 1952 story, "Robots of the World! Arise!"
  
 
In a brief [[autobiography]] in the [https://archive.org/details/Imagination_v03n02_1952-03_LennyS-cape1736/mode/1up March 1952] ''[[Imagination (prozine)]]'', she wrote that she’d wanted to be a writer since she was 5 years old. She recounted that she was introduced to SF [[conventions]] by Graham's "The Club House," met him at her first, the [[Norwescon (OR)]] in [[Portland, OR]], in September 1951, and married him the next month. However, the marriage ended in 1955.  
 
In a brief [[autobiography]] in the [https://archive.org/details/Imagination_v03n02_1952-03_LennyS-cape1736/mode/1up March 1952] ''[[Imagination (prozine)]]'', she wrote that she’d wanted to be a writer since she was 5 years old. She recounted that she was introduced to SF [[conventions]] by Graham's "The Club House," met him at her first, the [[Norwescon (OR)]] in [[Portland, OR]], in September 1951, and married him the next month. However, the marriage ended in 1955.  
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Mari [[gafiated]] and left the sf field soon afterward. She published a mystery novel, ''The Golden Frame'', in 1961, and seems to have disappeared.
  
 
She had a lifelong interest in mathematics and rocket science.  She attended UCLA where she studied mathematics, and then worked in the aerospace industry in Southern [[California]], as a "calculating-machine operator" at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in the 1950s.
 
She had a lifelong interest in mathematics and rocket science.  She attended UCLA where she studied mathematics, and then worked in the aerospace industry in Southern [[California]], as a "calculating-machine operator" at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in the 1950s.
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* {{SFE|name=wolf_mari}}.
 
* {{SFE|name=wolf_mari}}.
 
* [https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/author/35350 Works at Project Gutenberg. ]
 
* [https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/author/35350 Works at Project Gutenberg. ]
* ''Mari Wolf Resurrected: The Complete Short Stories of Mari Wolf'', [[Resurrected Press]] (2011).
 
 
* Reprint of Wolf’s story “Prejudice” (with [[art]] by [[Julian May]]) and a reminiscence about her column by [[Ted White]] in [[Earl Kemp]]’s [https://efanzines.com/EK/eI05/eI5s.pdf e.I #5].
 
* Reprint of Wolf’s story “Prejudice” (with [[art]] by [[Julian May]]) and a reminiscence about her column by [[Ted White]] in [[Earl Kemp]]’s [https://efanzines.com/EK/eI05/eI5s.pdf e.I #5].
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* [https://fanac.org/fanzines/Vega/Vega5-04.html “Intelligence Test”] by Mari Wolf, ''[[Vega]]'' 5 (December 1952, p. 4).
  
  

Revision as of 19:09, 20 March 2023

(August 27, 1927 – )

Mari Wolf, ca. 1952.

Mari Wolf (briefly, Graham), a Los Angeles SF fan and author, ran a fan column, "Fandora's Box" (also the name of her Hollywood apartment), for the prozine Imagination from April 1951 to April 1956. Wolf wrote about SF and SF fandom, reviewed and ranked fanzines, and interviewed authors.

She doled out egoboo with such heedless abandon that the character styled as the Giantess in The Enchanted Duplicator was modeled after her. (Her column was similar to "The Club House," a column by Rog Phillips — aka Roger Graham, Wolf’s husband — which appeared from 1948 to 1953 in Amazing and later in other SF magazines edited by Ray Palmer.)

As of 1950, Wolf was a member of the Outlander Society and the N3F.

Several of Wolf's SF stories appeared in If, including the short novel Homo Inferior (November, 1953). She was first to use the abbreviation droid for a robot; it appeared in her 1952 story, "Robots of the World! Arise!"

In a brief autobiography in the March 1952 Imagination, she wrote that she’d wanted to be a writer since she was 5 years old. She recounted that she was introduced to SF conventions by Graham's "The Club House," met him at her first, the Norwescon in Portland, OR, in September 1951, and married him the next month. However, the marriage ended in 1955.

Mari gafiated and left the sf field soon afterward. She published a mystery novel, The Golden Frame, in 1961, and seems to have disappeared.

She had a lifelong interest in mathematics and rocket science. She attended UCLA where she studied mathematics, and then worked in the aerospace industry in Southern California, as a "calculating-machine operator" at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in the 1950s.



Person 1927????
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