Difference between revisions of "Fandom House"

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(Redirected page to James V. Taurasi#Fandom House)
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Founded in June, 1937 by [[James V. Taurasi]], Fandom House was his [[publishing house]]. Fandom House seems to have been more real than most [[fannish]] [[publishing houses]]. Like the others, it published [[fanzines]], though [[Taurasi]] affected that they were of a kind with the [[prozines]].
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#REDIRECT [[James V. Taurasi#Fandom House]] [[Category:redirect]]
 
 
It was not always named Fandom House. It began as [[Cosmic Publications]] (which see) and by 1945 had gone through the names '''Allied Publications''', '''Fantasy News Publishing Company''', '''Fantasy Times Publishing Company''', and '''Flushing-Taurasi Publishing Company''' before going back to [[Cosmic Publications]] which he kept until 1948 when he settled on '''Fandom House'''.
 
 
 
The switch to Fandom House was triggered by the attempted merger of the monthly ''[[Fantasy Times]]'' with [[Will Sykora]]'s ''[[Fantasy News (Taurasi)]]'' with ''Fantasy News'' being weekly and ''[[Fantasy Times]]'' being a monthly recap.  This fell through, but Taurasi kept Fandom House.
 
 
 
Since ''[[Fantasy Times (Taurasi)]]'' was the ''[[Locus]]'' of its day, it seems clear that Fandom House, while still essentially a [[fannish]] [[publishing house]], was easily the largest of them.
 
 
 
Fandom House publications included:
 
* ''[[Cosmic Tales Quarterly]]''
 
* ''[[Fantasy Times]]''
 
* ''[[Helios]]''
 
* ''[[D'Journal]]''
 
* ''[[Cosmic Tales]]''
 
* ''[[Science Fiction Fan]]''
 
* ''[[The Tinplate Magazine]]''
 
* ''[[Science Fiction Times Magazine]]''
 
 
 
[[Fancy 2]] reports (under [[Legal Matters]]) that "[[Taurasi]] was threatened in '56 by Random House, which alleged that [[JVT]]'s use of the name "Fandom House" in publishing [[Fantasy Times (Taurasi)]] constituted unfair competition. Tho somewhat flattered, Jas decided not to fight it, having learned that simply bringing the case to court would rock him $300." Not only did he use the name (which he probably could have gotten away with), but for a time he used a logo which looked suspiciously like Random House's.
 
 
 
{{publisher}}
 
[[Category:US]]
 

Latest revision as of 17:20, 9 December 2020