Difference between revisions of "Ben Abas"
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spent four long years, separated from each other, in Japanese POW camps in the Dutch East Indies. Abas told me how strange it was to hear a woman's voice again after all that time. | spent four long years, separated from each other, in Japanese POW camps in the Dutch East Indies. Abas told me how strange it was to hear a woman's voice again after all that time. | ||
− | He [[gafiated]] about 1956. The Lambiek Compiclopedia website says he moved to Australia in 1955 and died there. | + | He also attended the [[London SF Con]] of 1952 but he [[gafiated]] about 1956. The Lambiek Compiclopedia website says he moved to Australia in 1955 and died there. |
'''Links''' | '''Links''' |
Latest revision as of 04:14, 25 September 2024
(???? – ????)
Ben Abas was a Dutch fan and sf artist active in the early 1950s. His father published the Dutch sf magazine Fantasie en Wetenschap which saw four issues between December 1948 and March 1949 and Abas provided artwork. He attended Festivention in London in 1951 with his wife, Barbara Abas, and brother. Walt Willis reported seeing Abas meet Alan Hunter in The White Horse before the convention properly started:
On the outer fringes of [Hunter's] beard was Ben Abas from Holland. Both were strenuously praising each other's artwork, and though Ben was at somewhat of a disadvantage because Alan had only one sketch with him against his own 20, he did such a good job on that one sketch that it blushed visibly.
At the convention itself Abas:
... brought a sheaf of notes to the microphone and apologized for reading from them, but he couldn't speak English very well. He talked about a Dutch prozine.
Michael Corper who spoke Dutch talked with Abas at the convention as he reported in Fantasy Times #131. Abas told him that he and his wife
spent four long years, separated from each other, in Japanese POW camps in the Dutch East Indies. Abas told me how strange it was to hear a woman's voice again after all that time.
He also attended the London SF Con of 1952 but he gafiated about 1956. The Lambiek Compiclopedia website says he moved to Australia in 1955 and died there.
Links
- Ben Abas at Lambiek Compiclopedia
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