Difference between revisions of "James Parkhill Rathbone"

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He was a scientific instrument salesman and described himself as 'extremely interested in mysticism and occultism, aspiring [[poet]] and writer, enthusiastic disciple of [[Algernon Blackwood]]'. He had a letter published in ''[[Amazing Stories]]'' in June 1937 and a [[fanzine]], ''[[Macabre]]'', appeared in August 1939.
 
He was a scientific instrument salesman and described himself as 'extremely interested in mysticism and occultism, aspiring [[poet]] and writer, enthusiastic disciple of [[Algernon Blackwood]]'. He had a letter published in ''[[Amazing Stories]]'' in June 1937 and a [[fanzine]], ''[[Macabre]]'', appeared in August 1939.
  
Rathbone was a pacifist, and sought Conscientious Objector status in December 1939 but this was denied and he ended up in the Royal Army Medical Corps stationed just outside [[London]]. He later moved to Worcester and joined the BFS in 1945.
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Rathbone was a pacifist, and sought Conscientious Objector status in December 1939 but this was denied and he ended up in the Royal Army Medical Corps stationed just outside [[London]]. He later moved to Worcester where ''[[Futurian War Digest]]'' #35 reported he was:
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... finding plenty of occupation as an active member of the Communist Party. At present he is organising a Unity Theatre in Worcester, even to writing their first play.
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He joined the BFS in 1945 and three other Worcester fans joined at roughly the same time, suggesting there was a local group.
  
 
An essay 'The Real Thing' appeared in ''[[Vector]]'' #19 (1963) and he was associate editor of
 
An essay 'The Real Thing' appeared in ''[[Vector]]'' #19 (1963) and he was associate editor of

Latest revision as of 06:26, 18 June 2024

(October 11, 1919 - 1999)

James Parkhill Rathbone, also known as James Parkhill-Rathbone, was a fan and author originally from Edinburgh, Scotland first active in the 1930s. He was a member of the British Fantasy Society (BFS).

He was a scientific instrument salesman and described himself as 'extremely interested in mysticism and occultism, aspiring poet and writer, enthusiastic disciple of Algernon Blackwood'. He had a letter published in Amazing Stories in June 1937 and a fanzine, Macabre, appeared in August 1939.

Rathbone was a pacifist, and sought Conscientious Objector status in December 1939 but this was denied and he ended up in the Royal Army Medical Corps stationed just outside London. He later moved to Worcester where Futurian War Digest #35 reported he was:

... finding plenty of occupation as an active member of the Communist Party. At present he is organising a Unity Theatre in Worcester, even to writing their first play.

He joined the BFS in 1945 and three other Worcester fans joined at roughly the same time, suggesting there was a local group.

An essay 'The Real Thing' appeared in Vector #19 (1963) and he was associate editor of Science Fantasy for issues #70-80, contributing a guest editorial to #77 in 1965. He attended Loncon II in 1965 and in 1966 be produced the Idler, a tabloid format miscellany printed on newsprint that wasn't a fannish or science fiction publication but did include work by Josephine Saxton. Checkpoint #28 (1972) reported him inviting fans to meet at his London home. He contributed two articles to Peter Roberts's Egg in the 1970s.

He died in Camden in London around February 1999.

A note on his name: this is given in both hyphenated and non-hyphenated forms and the 'Parkhill' is sometimes absent entirely. ISFDB favours the hyphenated version but what appears to be a death notice doesn't and in Macabre he styled himself James P. Rathbone.

Links:[edit]

Fanzines and Apazines:


Person 19191999
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