Difference between revisions of "Miles J. Breuer"

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Breuer was a contributor to [[The Fantasy Fan]].
 
Breuer was a contributor to [[The Fantasy Fan]].
  
* [http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/author/33669 Works by Breuer at Project Gutenberg]
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* {{link | website=http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/author/33669 | text=Works by Breuer at Project Gutenberg}}
* [http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?254 Bibliography at the ISFDB]
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* {{link | website=http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?254 | text=Bibliography at the ISFDB}}
  
 
{{person | born=1889 |died=1945}}
 
{{person | born=1889 |died=1945}}

Revision as of 22:14, 23 July 2020

(January 3, 1889 – October 14, 1945)

Miles John Breuer was a science fiction writer and doctor. He was part of the first generation of writers to appear regularly in the pulp prozines, publishing his first English-language story, "The Man with the Strange Head," in the January 1927 issue of Amazing Stories.

He collaborated with Jack Williamson and Clare Winger Harris.

The son of Czech immigrants, born in Chicago, Breuer wrote his first published story in Czech; "The Man Without an Appetite" appeared in the monthly Bratrsky Vestnik about 1916.

His best known work is likely "The Gostak and the Doshes" (Amazing, March 1930), and it was probably that story that made “The gostak distims the doshes” into a fannish catchphrase, rather than its 1903 coinage in an Andrew Ingraham lecture or its quotation in 1923 in the book The Meaning of Meaning by C. K. Ogden and I. A. Richards.

Breuer was a contributor to The Fantasy Fan.


Person 18891945
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