Difference between revisions of "W. Paul Cook"

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(1880 -- 1948)
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(1880 – January 22, 1948)
  
W. Paul Cook was a writer, printer and publisher who lived and wrote mostly in Vermont and Massachusetts.
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'''W. Paul Cook''' was a writer, printer and publisher who lived and wrote mostly in [[Vermont]] and [[Massachusetts]]. He wrote under his own name and in the 1930s, non-genre fiction under the [[pseudonym]] '''Willis T. Crossman''', and was a leading figure in the hobbyist tradition of [[amateur journalism]]. In 1927 he [[published]] ''[[The Recluse]]'', a [[one-shot]] amateur magazine that has a [[What Was the First Fanzine?|claim toward being a paleofanzine]], at least.  
  
He wrote under his own name and the pseudonym Willis T. Crossman and was a leading figure in the hobbyist tradition of amateur journalism.
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Some of the material intended for a second issue of ''The Recluse'' appeared in ''[[The Ghost]]'' [https://zinewiki.com/wiki/The_Ghost (5 issues, 1943–1947)], a [[mundane]]-leaning [[zine]] which included [https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?2072396 an article] on [[Farnsworth Wright]] and [https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?438205 several pieces] on [[weird fiction]]. [[Harry Warner, Jr.]] called it an “ideal fanzine, or something very close to it”.<ref>''[[Centauri]]'' [https://www.fanac.org/fanzines/Centauri/Centauri04.pdf#page=7 4, July 1945, page 7]</ref> [[Helen Wesson]] wrote:
  
He knew [[Lovecraft]] and wrote ''[[H. P. Lovecraft, A Portrait]]'', published in 1968.
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… the biggest and best Fantasy mag pubbed, W. Paul Cook's GHOST, has this stipulation: "The GHOST is an amateur publication issued for love of the hobby known as Amateur Journalism. It cannot be bought from the publisher; and it is his wish that it never, at any time, under any circumstances, be sold."<ref>''[[The (Unspeakable) Thing]]'' [https://diyhistory.lib.uiowa.edu/transcribe/5264/168235 1, Spring 1946, p. 30]</ref>
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Cook was a friend of [[H. P. Lovecraft]], a couple of whose early works he published in his 1918–1922 amateur magazine ''The Vagrant''. He wrote "In Memoriam: Howard Phillips Lovecraft: Recollections, Appreciations, Estimates" (1941 [[chapbook]] from Walter J. Coates's Driftwind Press where Cook worked as a printer), which was republished as "An Appreciation of H. P. Lovecraft" in [[Arkham House]]’s ''Beyond the Wall of Sleep'' (1943) and as ''H. P. Lovecraft, A Portrait'' ([[Mirage Press]], 1968).
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The selection ''Willis T. Crossman's Vermont: Stories by W. Paul Cook'' edited by Sean Donnelly and Leland M. Hawes, Jr was published as print-on-demand by University Of Tampa Press in 2005. Donnelly went on to edit ''W. Paul Cook: The Wandering Life of a Yankee Printer'' (Hippocampus Press, 2007) where a brief [[biography]] is supplemented "With Selected Writings by And About Him", memoirs by contemporaries, bibliography etc.
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* {{ISFDB|104121}}
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20050122014206/http://www.timesargus.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=%2F20050109%2FNEWS%2F501090302%2F1013A A hobby and a discovery: Two amateur journalists resurrect the colorful tales of Vermont writer W. Paul Cook], ''Times Argus'' January 2005 (Web Archive or [http://chrisperridas.blogspot.com/2007/12/lovecrafts-friend-w-paul-cook.html backup at Lovecraftian blog] from Chris Perrida); with overview of Cook's life and examples of his writing
  
 
{{person | born=1880 | died=1948}}
 
{{person | born=1880 | died=1948}}
 
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Latest revision as of 06:18, 17 January 2024

(1880 – January 22, 1948)

W. Paul Cook was a writer, printer and publisher who lived and wrote mostly in Vermont and Massachusetts. He wrote under his own name and in the 1930s, non-genre fiction under the pseudonym Willis T. Crossman, and was a leading figure in the hobbyist tradition of amateur journalism. In 1927 he published The Recluse, a one-shot amateur magazine that has a claim toward being a paleofanzine, at least.

Some of the material intended for a second issue of The Recluse appeared in The Ghost (5 issues, 1943–1947), a mundane-leaning zine which included an article on Farnsworth Wright and several pieces on weird fiction. Harry Warner, Jr. called it an “ideal fanzine, or something very close to it”.[1] Helen Wesson wrote:

… the biggest and best Fantasy mag pubbed, W. Paul Cook's GHOST, has this stipulation: "The GHOST is an amateur publication issued for love of the hobby known as Amateur Journalism. It cannot be bought from the publisher; and it is his wish that it never, at any time, under any circumstances, be sold."[2]

Cook was a friend of H. P. Lovecraft, a couple of whose early works he published in his 1918–1922 amateur magazine The Vagrant. He wrote "In Memoriam: Howard Phillips Lovecraft: Recollections, Appreciations, Estimates" (1941 chapbook from Walter J. Coates's Driftwind Press where Cook worked as a printer), which was republished as "An Appreciation of H. P. Lovecraft" in Arkham House’s Beyond the Wall of Sleep (1943) and as H. P. Lovecraft, A Portrait (Mirage Press, 1968).

The selection Willis T. Crossman's Vermont: Stories by W. Paul Cook edited by Sean Donnelly and Leland M. Hawes, Jr was published as print-on-demand by University Of Tampa Press in 2005. Donnelly went on to edit W. Paul Cook: The Wandering Life of a Yankee Printer (Hippocampus Press, 2007) where a brief biography is supplemented "With Selected Writings by And About Him", memoirs by contemporaries, bibliography etc.


Person 18801948
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