Trudy Kuslan
(circa 1924 –)
Gertrude “Trudy” Kuslan (later Lampert, also known as tKuslan) was an early fan who lived in West Haven, Connecticut. She and her brother, Louis Kuslan, shared a publishing house, LuGerKus; a fanzine, Cosmic Tales; and the FAPAzines FAPA Review and Nucleus.
She was briefly romantically involved with Earl Singleton, of pseuicide fame, who dedicated the first issue of Nepenthe, his poetry fanzine, to her. Although she became aware that his announced suicide was a hoax, she helped cover it up, putting on an emotional outburst at Boskone I.
Trudy was very active during the 1930s–40s, and attended conventions as late as 1956. The siblings were on the membership rolls of the first several Worldcons. She and her brother, Lou, were charter members of The National Fantasy Fan Federation (N3F) in 1941. Trudy was a member of FAPA during the early 1940s, and sporadically contributed to it until 1974.
In the mundane world, Trudy was a schoolteacher in Connecticut, married Laurence Ladislau Lampert (July 21, 1926 – February 14, 1998), a Romanian-American survivor of the Holocaust, in the early 1950s and traveled out of the US many times.
- Photo in Harry Warner's history of fandom in the 1940s, All Our Yesterdays.
- A tribute to her and Louis in the December 2016 issue (Volume 75, Number 12) of The National Fantasy Fan.
- Cosmic Tales
- FAPA Review (One-shot)
- Nucleus
Person | 1924— |
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