Rats on Fire
Revision as of 19:09, 30 April 2023 by Leah Zeldes Smith (talk | contribs) (Created page with "A fanzine pubbed by Denice and Brian Earl Brown from Detroit in the 1980s. <tab head = top> Ish|| Date|| Pages|| Notes 1|||||| 39 || 19...")
A fanzine pubbed by Denice and Brian Earl Brown from Detroit in the 1980s.
Ish | Date | Pages | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | |||
39 | 1985 | 10 | From Mike Glyer's review in Holier Than Thou 21 (Winter-Spring 1985, p. 14): With a full ten months left on my 1985 calendar, there is plenty of opportunity for fandom to yield up a worse fanzine than RATS ON FIRE #39, but it will be an accomplishment not casually achieved. The editors both have years of fanzine experience, have ambitiously experimented with various print mediums, formats and editorial styles, and have discarded every single thing that threatened to improve either the legibility, readability, or entertainment value of RATS ON FIRE. What could possibly dislodge them from the bottom of the heap? Even the most wretched high school kid’s crudzine survives with its integrity intact on the excuse that he doesn't know any better. The Browns not only know better, they have done better. Except in 39 issues of RATS ON FIRE. With the zine's consistently execrable reproduction, tabloid newspaper clippings, and failed fannish humor, RATS ON FIRE looks like something Dick Geis used to clean the crud out of his mimeo. Of course the analogy breaks down at this point, because what Dick Geis would have thrown away the Browns have mailed away. |
Publication | ????—???? |
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