Difference between revisions of "George Sjöberg"

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(Created page with "(???? – ) '''George Sjöberg''', a Stockholm fan, was active in the 1960s. He was an early member of the Skandinavisk förening för science fiction (The Scand...")
 
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(1930 September 11, 2004)
 
 
'''George Sjöberg''', a [[Stockholm]] [[fan]], was active in the 1960s. He was an early member of the [[Skandinavisk förening för science fiction]] (The Scandinavian SF Society) and the first [[editor]] of its [[clubzine]] ''[[SF Forum]].''
 
  
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'''George Tage Valentin Sjöberg''' was one of the earliest very active fans in [[Sweden]], forming already in 1954 a mail-order sf book service. In 1955 he started his first fanzine, Star SF Fanzine, which saw five issues with the last published in 1957; Sjöberg immediately replaced it with a new title, Fhan SF Fanzine, which had a total of four issues through 1958. In fanzines, he sometimes used his middle names as a pseudonym, signing himself "Tage Valentin. In late 1959, he was one of the founders of SFSF, the [["Scandinavian SF Society"]] in Stockholm, still Sweden's largest active sf club. Sjöberg became its first president and was also the first editor of its fanzine, [[Science Fiction Forum]]. His fanzines were notable primarily for their attractive layout and impeccable reproduction; Sjöberg was a talented artist and a fine writer. Problematically, Sjöberg also had an obsessive personality, which brought him into conflict with other fans: as chairman of the SFSF, he first tried banning smoking at meetings, later, when in 1962 it was disclosed that he was also active in neo-nazi politics, an emergency club meeting stripped him of his chairmanship and expelled him from the club. From 1963 on, Sjöberg had no further contacts with Swedish fandom. During his last decades, he lived in Uppsala but continued to read sf and had an impressive book collection, including probably the only copy of the asbestos-bound limited first edition of Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, which was for a long time the most expensive antiquarian sf title to be found.
  
 
{{person|born=????}} [[Category:fan]] [[Category:europe]]
 
{{person|born=????}} [[Category:fan]] [[Category:europe]]

Revision as of 00:48, 22 May 2023

(1930 – September 11, 2004)

George Tage Valentin Sjöberg was one of the earliest very active fans in Sweden, forming already in 1954 a mail-order sf book service. In 1955 he started his first fanzine, Star SF Fanzine, which saw five issues with the last published in 1957; Sjöberg immediately replaced it with a new title, Fhan SF Fanzine, which had a total of four issues through 1958. In fanzines, he sometimes used his middle names as a pseudonym, signing himself "Tage Valentin. In late 1959, he was one of the founders of SFSF, the "Scandinavian SF Society" in Stockholm, still Sweden's largest active sf club. Sjöberg became its first president and was also the first editor of its fanzine, Science Fiction Forum. His fanzines were notable primarily for their attractive layout and impeccable reproduction; Sjöberg was a talented artist and a fine writer. Problematically, Sjöberg also had an obsessive personality, which brought him into conflict with other fans: as chairman of the SFSF, he first tried banning smoking at meetings, later, when in 1962 it was disclosed that he was also active in neo-nazi politics, an emergency club meeting stripped him of his chairmanship and expelled him from the club. From 1963 on, Sjöberg had no further contacts with Swedish fandom. During his last decades, he lived in Uppsala but continued to read sf and had an impressive book collection, including probably the only copy of the asbestos-bound limited first edition of Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, which was for a long time the most expensive antiquarian sf title to be found.


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