Difference between revisions of "Inside and Science Fiction Advertiser"
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52 ||October 1957 ||64 || | 52 ||October 1957 ||64 || | ||
53 ||September 1958 ||64 || | 53 ||September 1958 ||64 || | ||
− | 1 ||October 1962 ||34 ||[[Jon White]] becomes editor with [[Ron Smith]] as assistant editor; issue numbering restarted | + | 1 ||October 1962 ||34 ||[[Jon White]] becomes editor with [[Ron Smith]] as assistant editor; Still titled ''Inside'', but issue numbering restarted at 1 |
− | 2 ||June 1963 ||56 ||Final [[Jon White]] issue | + | 2 ||June 1963 ||56 ||Final [[Jon White]] issue |
+ | || Summer 1964 || 42 || Now titled ''Inside-Riverside Quarterly'' (See ''[[Riverside Quarterly]]'' for subsequent issues | ||
</tab> | </tab> | ||
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{{publication}} | {{publication}} | ||
[[Category:fanzine]] | [[Category:fanzine]] | ||
[[Category:US]] | [[Category:US]] |
Revision as of 17:40, 30 December 2019
It's complicated.
To begin with, Inside was published by Ron Smith and Cindy Smith. In 1954 it was merged with another fanzine, Science Fiction Advertiser and the merged fanzine was called Inside and Science Fiction Advertiser. Smith took over SFA's subscriptions which greatly expanded Inside's readership. In 1957, it became Inside Science Fiction and ceased publication in 1958.
Inside and Science Fiction Advertiser won the 1956 Best Fanzine Hugo (and was nominated again in 1957.)
In 1962 the reins were turned over to a neofan Jon White and Leland Sapiro, who published two issues (in 1962 and 63) and then re-titled yet again with the Summer 1964 issue, this time as Inside-Riverside Quarterly (named after Jon White's prestigious Riverside Drive address), using a stockpile of material that Smith had left him.
Jon White published only two issues and, subsequently, it was under the sole editorship of Sapiro. See the entry for Riverside Quarterly for the rest of the story.
The first issue is mimeographed, approximately 5x7", undated, 50 pages plus covers, cover by Claude Hall and Fernie Nevarez. Contents include fiction ("Return from the Stars" and "Look Up" by William L. Freeman, "The Ides of March" by Claude Hall, "The House That Jack Built" by Cedric Clute Jr., and "Horror" by Jullian Webb) and features (Editorial, Letters, Spotlighting the Author, Discussions, a Voting Blank, and two poems: "The Science Fictioneer's Creed" by Gautama Buddha and "Man Seed" by Miles McAlpin). Illustrations by Hall, Nevarez, and Greg Beisel. Clute went on to be the impresario behind the Magic Cellar, a night club in San Francisco frequented by fans and professionals during the 1970s.
Issue | Date | Pages | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1.1 | 50 | editor is Ron Smith | |
1.2 | 50 | ||
3 | September 1953 | 32 | |
4 | January 1954 | 32 | |
5 | May 1954 | 32 | |
6 | November 1954 | 36 | |
7 | January 1955 | 40 | |
8 | March 1955 | 40 | |
9 | May 1955 | 48 | |
10 | July 1955 | 48 | |
11 | September 1955 | 62 | |
12 | November 1955 | 44 | |
13 | January 1956 | 48 | |
14 | March 1956 | 44 | |
15/49 | May 1956 | 40 | SFA merged in |
16/50 | September 1956 | 74 | |
17/51 | March 1957 | 40 | |
52 | October 1957 | 64 | |
53 | September 1958 | 64 | |
1 | October 1962 | 34 | Jon White becomes editor with Ron Smith as assistant editor; Still titled Inside, but issue numbering restarted at 1 |
2 | June 1963 | 56 | Final Jon White issue |
Summer 1964 | 42 | Now titled Inside-Riverside Quarterly (See Riverside Quarterly for subsequent issues |
Publication | ???? |
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. |