Difference between revisions of "Larry Farsaci"

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(1921 - January 9, 2013)
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(February 11, 1921 - January 9, 2013)
  
Born '''Litterio B. Farsaci''' in [[Rochester, NY]] where he was a child prodigy with an interest in astronomy, attracted newspaper articles, and gave lectures at The University of Rochester at the age of nine.  He gradually anglicized his name to '''Larry Farsace''', by which he was known to [[fandom]]. He starting reading SF in 1932 and discovered [[fandom]] in 1935.  He  published the [[apazine]] ''[[Falling Petals]]'' for both [[FAPA]] and [[SAPS]] and was a charter member of the National Fantasy Fan Federation ([[N3F]]) in 1941. He was also a member of [[SFL]] and [[New Fandom]].
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'''Larry Farsaci''' (later, '''Farsace''', born '''Litterio B. Farsaci''' in [[Rochester, NY]]) was a child prodigy with an interest in astronomy, attracted newspaper articles, and gave lectures at The University of Rochester at the age of 9.  He gradually anglicized his name to '''Larry Farsace''', by which he was known to [[fandom]]. He starting reading [[SF]] in 1932 and discovered [[fandom]] in 1935.   
  
In the 1940s he was reputedly fandom's top [[prozine]] collector (he acquired the collection of the [[Decker Dillies]], for instance) and developed tremendous collection of prozines and a very good [[fanzine]] collection.  He issued small [[bibliographies]] for early [[conventions]] and then used his collection to publish ten issues of the fanzine ''[[Golden Atom]]'' from 1939 to 1943. [[Moskowitz]] regarded it as "arguably the most valuable repository of new research and reference on SF" of the period. He published additional special issues on 1955 and 1959, the latter of which is reputed to have production costs on the order of $1,500.  He also published ''[[Stars]]'' and ''[[Strange Fantasy]]''.
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He [[published]] the [[apazine]] ''[[Falling Petals]]'' for both [[FAPA]] and [[SAPS]] and was a charter member of the National Fantasy Fan Federation ([[N3F]]) in 1941. He was also a member of [[SFL]] and [[New Fandom]]. He was a [[fanartist]].  
  
In 2012, he was elected to the [[First Fandom Hall of Fame]].
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In the 1940s, he was reputedly fandom's top [[prozine]] [[collector]] (he acquired the collection of the [[Decker Dillies]], for instance) and developed a tremendous collection of prozines and a very good [[fanzine]] collection.  He issued small [[bibliographies]] for early [[conventions]] and then used his collection to [[publish]] ten issues of the fanzine ''[[Golden Atom]]'' from 1939 to 1943. [[Moskowitz]] regarded it as "arguably the most valuable repository of new research and reference on SF" of the period. He published additional special issues on 1955 and 1959, the latter of which is reputed to have production costs on the order of $1,500.  He also published ''[[Stars]]'' and ''[[Strange Fantasy]]''.
  
He was the subject of an [[N3F]] Founding Member article by Jon D. Swartz in the April, 2017 (Volume 76, Number 4) issue of ''[[The National Fantasy Fan]]''.
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* [[N3F]] Founding Member article in the April, 2017 (Volume 76, Number 4) issue of ''[[The National Fantasy Fan]]''.
 
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* Early short [[biography]] in {{WhosWho1940|page=5}}.
For an early short biography, see {{WhosWho1940|page=5}}.
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* [https://file770.com/larry-farsace-1921-2013/ Obituary] in ''[[File 770]]''.
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* [https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?185784 Bibliography at ISFDB. ]
  
 
{{fanzines}}
 
{{fanzines}}
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* ''[[Fleeting Moments]]'' [1944]
 
* ''[[Fleeting Moments]]'' [1944]
 
* ''[[Golden Atom]]'' [1939-43]
 
* ''[[Golden Atom]]'' [1939-43]
* ''[[The Rochester-American Patriot]]'' [1942] (for [[[FAPA]])
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* ''[[The Rochester-American Patriot]]'' [1942] (for [[FAPA]])
 
* ''[[Scenes of Fantasy]]'' [1938-39] (poetry)
 
* ''[[Scenes of Fantasy]]'' [1938-39] (poetry)
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* ''[[Science Fiction Fandom Quarterly]]'' [1940]
 
* ''[[Star-Bound]]'' [1944] (poetry; for [[FAPA]])
 
* ''[[Star-Bound]]'' [1944] (poetry; for [[FAPA]])
 
* ''[[Strange Fantasy]]'' [1940]
 
* ''[[Strange Fantasy]]'' [1940]
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{{recognition}}
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* 2012 — [[First Fandom Hall of Fame]].
  
 
{{person | born=1921 | died=2013}}
 
{{person | born=1921 | died=2013}}
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[[Category:first_fandom]]
 
[[Category:first_fandom]]
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:US]]
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[[Category:artist]]

Latest revision as of 17:12, 28 November 2022

(February 11, 1921 - January 9, 2013)

Larry Farsaci (later, Farsace, born Litterio B. Farsaci in Rochester, NY) was a child prodigy with an interest in astronomy, attracted newspaper articles, and gave lectures at The University of Rochester at the age of 9. He gradually anglicized his name to Larry Farsace, by which he was known to fandom. He starting reading SF in 1932 and discovered fandom in 1935.

He published the apazine Falling Petals for both FAPA and SAPS and was a charter member of the National Fantasy Fan Federation (N3F) in 1941. He was also a member of SFL and New Fandom. He was a fanartist.

In the 1940s, he was reputedly fandom's top prozine collector (he acquired the collection of the Decker Dillies, for instance) and developed a tremendous collection of prozines and a very good fanzine collection. He issued small bibliographies for early conventions and then used his collection to publish ten issues of the fanzine Golden Atom from 1939 to 1943. Moskowitz regarded it as "arguably the most valuable repository of new research and reference on SF" of the period. He published additional special issues on 1955 and 1959, the latter of which is reputed to have production costs on the order of $1,500. He also published Stars and Strange Fantasy.

Fanzines and Apazines:

Awards, Honors and GoHships:


Person 19212013
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