Difference between revisions of "Mark Reinsberg"
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* ''[[Midwest News & Views]]'' [[newszine]] | * ''[[Midwest News & Views]]'' [[newszine]] | ||
* ''[[Midwest Marky]]'' (for [[FAPA]]) | * ''[[Midwest Marky]]'' (for [[FAPA]]) | ||
− | * ''[[Ad Astra ( | + | * ''[[Ad Astra (Reinsberg)|Ad Astra]]'' (with Meyer) |
{{person | born=1923 | died=1981}} | {{person | born=1923 | died=1981}} |
Revision as of 01:54, 3 March 2020
(August 6th 1923 -- August 25th 1981)
Reinsberg was an SF fan, author, and book reviewer during the 1930s-1950s. He also did some SF art. He discovered sf in 1936. A year or so later (while still in high school) he had connected with Jack Darrow, Richard Meyer, and William L. Hamling and met Ray Palmer and had actually been co-author of a story in Amazing.
With fellow Chicagoans Erle Korshak and Jack Darrow, he attended the first Worldcon (Nycon) in 1939 and bid for and won the right to hold the second Worldcon, Chicon I in 1940 in Chicago. Reinberg was chairman, Korshak secretary, and Bob Tucker treasurer (since he was over 21....). He missed the first day of the convention due to illness (reported in some places as due to nervousness.)
He was a member of the Committee of Seven which ran Chicon II in 1952
He was elected to the First Fandom Hall of Fame (posthumously) in 1997.
His photos appear on pages 93 and 94 of Harry Warner's All Our Yesterdays (Advent, 1969).
For an early short biography, see Who's Who in Fandom 1940, page 11.
- AAaAaAaAAa...
- Midwest News & Views newszine
- Midwest Marky (for FAPA)
- Ad Astra (with Meyer)
Person | 1923—1981 |
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