Difference between revisions of "The Futurians (Knight)"
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{{DISPLAYTITLE:The Futurians}} | {{DISPLAYTITLE:The Futurians}} | ||
− | ''The Futurians'' by [[Damon Knight]] was published in | + | ''The Futurians'' by [[Damon Knight]] was published in 1977 by John Day, New York. |
In this "tell all" book Knight wrote of the [[Futurian Society of New York]], begun in 1938 (as the Futurian Science Literary Society), which Knight joined in 1941 as a teenager. The [[club]] broke up in 1945 when [[Donald A. Wollheim]], one of the founders, sued seven of the members for libel. | In this "tell all" book Knight wrote of the [[Futurian Society of New York]], begun in 1938 (as the Futurian Science Literary Society), which Knight joined in 1941 as a teenager. The [[club]] broke up in 1945 when [[Donald A. Wollheim]], one of the founders, sued seven of the members for libel. | ||
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The Futurians were probably the most influential [[club]] in the history of [[fandom]]. | The Futurians were probably the most influential [[club]] in the history of [[fandom]]. | ||
− | {{publication}} | + | {{publication | year=1977}} |
[[Category:book]] | [[Category:book]] | ||
[[Category:US]] | [[Category:US]] |
Latest revision as of 14:09, 16 February 2020
The Futurians by Damon Knight was published in 1977 by John Day, New York.
In this "tell all" book Knight wrote of the Futurian Society of New York, begun in 1938 (as the Futurian Science Literary Society), which Knight joined in 1941 as a teenager. The club broke up in 1945 when Donald A. Wollheim, one of the founders, sued seven of the members for libel.
In addition to Wollheim and Knight, The Futurians had as members Isaac Asimov, Elsie Balter, Doris Baumgardt (Leslie Perri), James Blish, Robert W. Lowndes, John B. Michel (Hugh Raymond), Frederik Pohl, Richard Wilson, Cyril Kornbluth, Judith Merril, Harry Dockweiler (Dirk Wylie), David A. Kyle, Virginia Kidd, Larry T. Shaw, Jack Robins (Jack Rubinson), and several others, all of whom would go on to make contributions to SF.
Knight estimated that "ten novelists, a publisher, two literary agents, four anthologists, and five editors" (with some overlapping of roles) came out of this group of Futurians. In addition, seven marriages and five divorces took place within the group.
The Futurians were probably the most influential club in the history of fandom.
Publication | 1977 |
This is a publication page. Please extend it by adding information about when and by whom it was published, how many issues it has had, (including adding a partial or complete checklist), its contents (including perhaps a ToC listing), its size and repro method, regular columnists, its impact on fandom, or by adding scans or links to scans. See Standards for Publications. |