Difference between revisions of "D. R. Smith"
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D.R. is perhaps the most typical fan I have ever encountered. Formerly the prize was divided between [[Arthur Clarke]] and Maurice Hanson, but D.R. is even more fannish than those two, which is saying something... He wears spectacles and a preoccupied look. Affects unconventional clothes. His hair, a rich mouse in colour, dangles limply over his forehead, and the general contour of his face is longish-oval. Runs to about 5ft 10ins in height, and moderately well-built, possibly 150lbs. | D.R. is perhaps the most typical fan I have ever encountered. Formerly the prize was divided between [[Arthur Clarke]] and Maurice Hanson, but D.R. is even more fannish than those two, which is saying something... He wears spectacles and a preoccupied look. Affects unconventional clothes. His hair, a rich mouse in colour, dangles limply over his forehead, and the general contour of his face is longish-oval. Runs to about 5ft 10ins in height, and moderately well-built, possibly 150lbs. | ||
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... Don speaks in quick jerks, almost like a road drill, and also has an odd laugh which is a curious cross between a gurgle and a guffaw. Like most people in the Midlands, he has no appreciable accent. | ... Don speaks in quick jerks, almost like a road drill, and also has an odd laugh which is a curious cross between a gurgle and a guffaw. Like most people in the Midlands, he has no appreciable accent. | ||
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... The little house is full of books. Books are everywhere and the few bookshelves are crammed. D.R. certainly varies his reading. His collection covers practically everything readable – fictional, classical, technical and pornographic. There were even some [[SF]] books there. He told me he had a collection and a typewriter, but I never got around to seeing them. | ... The little house is full of books. Books are everywhere and the few bookshelves are crammed. D.R. certainly varies his reading. His collection covers practically everything readable – fictional, classical, technical and pornographic. There were even some [[SF]] books there. He told me he had a collection and a typewriter, but I never got around to seeing them. | ||
Revision as of 09:46, 5 May 2024
(1917 - September 24, 1999)
Donald Raymond Smith was a UK fan from Nuneaton active from the 1930s until the 1960s. He was famously reclusive and never attended a convention or visited other fans to the point where some thought he didn't exist and was simply a penname for somebody else. He was known as the Sage of Nuneaton and invariably bylined D. R. Smith.
In 1935 he learned of the existence of Nuneaton chapter of the Science Fiction League. He contacted the group and received a reply from Maurice K. Hanson. They would become lifelong friends. In March 1936 the Nuneaton group produced the first issue of Novae Terrae. There would be 29 issues in total and Smith would appear in all but two, his contributions often acerbic. Writing in 1944, John F. Burke said of Smith:
He has annoyed more people than I would care to annoy. John Russell Fearn threatened a libel action. Sam Youd, being one of Smith's most ardent disciples for many years, fell out with him because he showed no signs of sharing Sam's political view; Sam is like that. Doug Webster, I think, found the views of Smith too much to endure, probably because Don exhibited no social consciousness.
The Nuneaton group broke up in August 1937 leaving Smith as the only remaining fan in the town.
He worked as a draughtsman designing machine tools, a reserved occupation during the Second World War so he wasn't called up. Eric Needham visited him in 1942 as reported in Fantast #14:
D.R. is perhaps the most typical fan I have ever encountered. Formerly the prize was divided between Arthur Clarke and Maurice Hanson, but D.R. is even more fannish than those two, which is saying something... He wears spectacles and a preoccupied look. Affects unconventional clothes. His hair, a rich mouse in colour, dangles limply over his forehead, and the general contour of his face is longish-oval. Runs to about 5ft 10ins in height, and moderately well-built, possibly 150lbs. ... Don speaks in quick jerks, almost like a road drill, and also has an odd laugh which is a curious cross between a gurgle and a guffaw. Like most people in the Midlands, he has no appreciable accent. ... The little house is full of books. Books are everywhere and the few bookshelves are crammed. D.R. certainly varies his reading. His collection covers practically everything readable – fictional, classical, technical and pornographic. There were even some SF books there. He told me he had a collection and a typewriter, but I never got around to seeing them.
Smith joined the British Fantasy Society in 1942 and became its secretary, editing more than two dozen issues of its bulletin. He continued to contribute to other fanzines through the 1950s, appearing in the letter column of Hyphen and with contributions to New Futurian. He was a member of the BSFA and had a letter in Vector #38 in January 1966.
He had an older brother called Leslie who may also have been a fan. That at least is the impression given by Eric Needham when he visited D. R. in 1942. Leslie lived with D. R, his sister and mother in Nuneaton. At this remove it's impossible to tell whether this is the same Leslie Smith who attended the Second British Convention.
- Rob Hansen's profile of Smith was written for Peter Weston's Relapse but never appeared there. It is published as a standalone supplement on the Relapse page of the efanzines.com website.
Person | 1917—1999 |
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