Difference between revisions of "Nova Press"
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− | [[ | + | '''Nova Press''' was a [[fanzine]] [[publishing house]] of [[Al Ashley]], [[EEEvans]], [[Jack Wiedenbeck]], and [[Earl Perry]], in 1942, who soon joined [[ASP]]. |
[[Fanzines]] published: | [[Fanzines]] published: | ||
− | * [[Jack Speer]] | + | * [[Jack Speer]] — ''[[Black & White]]'' |
+ | * [[Al Ashley]] and [[E. E. Evans]] — ''[[Nova (Ashley)]]'' | ||
− | {{ | + | {{fancy1|text= |
+ | A designation given by [[Campbell]] to stories written on old themes which breathed new life into them. [[JWC]] dropped it even quicker than he did "[[mutant]]", with a final defiant gesture or two. Nova Press was a publishing house of [[Al Ashley|Ashley]], [[EEEvans]], [[Wiedenbeck]], and Perry, in 1942, who soon joined [[ASP]]. | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | {{Fanhistory|year=1942}} | ||
[[Category:US]] | [[Category:US]] | ||
+ | [[Category:fancy1]] |
Revision as of 15:46, 4 March 2021
Nova Press was a fanzine publishing house of Al Ashley, EEEvans, Jack Wiedenbeck, and Earl Perry, in 1942, who soon joined ASP.
Fanzines published:
- Jack Speer — Black & White
- Al Ashley and E. E. Evans — Nova
From Fancyclopedia 1, ca. 1944 |
A designation given by Campbell to stories written on old themes which breathed new life into them. JWC dropped it even quicker than he did "mutant", with a final defiant gesture or two. Nova Press was a publishing house of Ashley, EEEvans, Wiedenbeck, and Perry, in 1942, who soon joined ASP. |
Fanhistory | 1942 |
This is a fanhistory page. Please add more detail. |