Difference between revisions of "Fouler"

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An early 1970s [[fanzine]] [[published]] in the [[UK]] by [[Greg Pickersgill]] (with assistance from [[Leroy Kettle]]).
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An early 1970s [[fanzine]] [[published]] in the [[UK]] by [[Greg Pickersgill]] with assistance from [[Leroy Kettle]] ("even though he was listed as 'editor' he did little other than [[lettercolumn]] responses"). Apart from the editors, contributors included [[Ian Maule]], [[Ian Williams]], [[Peter Roberts]], [[Rob Holdstock]], [[Richard I. Barycz]] and [[John Nielsen Hall]].
  
It had a reputation for iconoclasm, the free use of swear-words, and a general attitude of disrespect; these were met with dismay by some older [[fans]], but it proved very popular with many fans of the same generation of its [[editors]], a good number of whom went on to become leading fans of the 1970s (as indeed did Kettle and Pickersgill). Pickersgill's fanzine review [[column]], "Heap", earned him an immediate reputation as a savagely honest fan [[critic]].
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It had a reputation for iconoclasm, the free use of swear-words, and a general attitude of disrespect; these were met with dismay by some older [[fans]], but it proved very popular with many fans of its [[editors]]' generation, a good number of whom went on to become leading fans of the 1970s (as indeed did Kettle and Pickersgill) – see [[Ratfandom]]. Pickersgill's fanzine review [[column]], "Heap", earned him an immediate reputation as a savagely honest fan [[critic]].
 
 
Apart from the editors, contributors included [[Ian Maule]], [[Ian Williams]], [[Peter Roberts]], [[Rob Holdstock]], [[Richard I. Barycz]] and [[John Nielsen Hall]].
 
  
 
[[John D. Berry]] described it in ''[[Focal Point (McInerney)|Focal Point]]'' v3n1 as  
 
[[John D. Berry]] described it in ''[[Focal Point (McInerney)|Focal Point]]'' v3n1 as  
 
  ...a sloppy, angry, whimsical fanzine that has drawn more response from its 50-person mlg list than almost any other fanzine. FOULER is the closest to a [[focal point]] that [[British]] [[fandom]] has, yet it's an adolescent focal point, filled with excesses for the sake of excess.  
 
  ...a sloppy, angry, whimsical fanzine that has drawn more response from its 50-person mlg list than almost any other fanzine. FOULER is the closest to a [[focal point]] that [[British]] [[fandom]] has, yet it's an adolescent focal point, filled with excesses for the sake of excess.  
  
[[Dave Langford]] later wrote of it:  
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[[Dave Langford]] later wrote:
Like so many seminal things, [it] combined potency and potential with considerable messiness [...] Greg and [[co-editor]] Roy Kettle provided a rallying point -- they showed it could be done and that fandom did not have to be the cloying, backpatting, pseudo-nice thing which emerges from British zines of the late '60s (say).
 
  
It entered suspension after summer 1971 when Pickersgill moved from [[Wales]] to [[London]], with one final issue over a year later.
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Like so many seminal things, [''Fouler''] combined potency and potential with considerable messiness [...] Greg and [[co-editor]] Roy Kettle provided a rallying point -- they showed it could be done and that fandom did not have to be the cloying, backpatting, pseudo-nice thing which emerges from British zines of the late '60s (say).
 +
 
 +
It entered suspension in summer 1971 when Pickersgill moved from [[Wales]] to [[London]], with one final issue over a year later.
  
 
<tab head=top>
 
<tab head=top>
 
  Issue || Date || Pages || Notes  
 
  Issue || Date || Pages || Notes  
2 ||September 1970 ||14 ||There was no issue #1  
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2 || September 1970 || 14 || There was no issue #1: "we thought this was an enormously clever brilliant new idea that would shock and surprise the dullwitted fandom of the day".
 
3 ||October 1970 ||34 ||  
 
3 ||October 1970 ||34 ||  
 
4 ||December 1970 ||34 ||  
 
4 ||December 1970 ||34 ||  
 
5 ||March 1971 ||34 ||  
 
5 ||March 1971 ||34 ||  
 
6 ||June 1971 ||34 ||  
 
6 ||June 1971 ||34 ||  
7 ||September 1972 ||32 ||Final issue  
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7 || September&nbsp;1972 || 32 || Final issue  
 
</tab>
 
</tab>
  
[http://www.gostak.org.uk/what/gregfanzine.htm '''''{{PAGENAME}}''' online.'' ]
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[http://www.gostak.org.uk/what/gregfanzine.htm Greg Pickersgill's Fanzinography - an annotated listing] on his website. Contains biblioraphy, some memoirs and scans of title pages (empty except #2 as they also seemed to pretend they were stapled backwards)
 
 
  
 
{{publication |  start=1970 | end=1972}}
 
{{publication |  start=1970 | end=1972}}

Latest revision as of 03:51, 10 February 2024

An early 1970s fanzine published in the UK by Greg Pickersgill with assistance from Leroy Kettle ("even though he was listed as 'editor' he did little other than lettercolumn responses"). Apart from the editors, contributors included Ian Maule, Ian Williams, Peter Roberts, Rob Holdstock, Richard I. Barycz and John Nielsen Hall.

It had a reputation for iconoclasm, the free use of swear-words, and a general attitude of disrespect; these were met with dismay by some older fans, but it proved very popular with many fans of its editors' generation, a good number of whom went on to become leading fans of the 1970s (as indeed did Kettle and Pickersgill) – see Ratfandom. Pickersgill's fanzine review column, "Heap", earned him an immediate reputation as a savagely honest fan critic.

John D. Berry described it in Focal Point v3n1 as

...a sloppy, angry, whimsical fanzine that has drawn more response from its 50-person mlg list than almost any other fanzine. FOULER is the closest to a focal point that British fandom has, yet it's an adolescent focal point, filled with excesses for the sake of excess. 

Dave Langford later wrote:

Like so many seminal things, [Fouler] combined potency and potential with considerable messiness [...] Greg and co-editor Roy Kettle provided a rallying point -- they showed it could be done and that fandom did not have to be the cloying, backpatting, pseudo-nice thing which emerges from British zines of the late '60s (say).

It entered suspension in summer 1971 when Pickersgill moved from Wales to London, with one final issue over a year later.

Issue Date Pages Notes
2 September 1970 14 There was no issue #1: "we thought this was an enormously clever brilliant new idea that would shock and surprise the dullwitted fandom of the day".
3 October 1970 34
4 December 1970 34
5 March 1971 34
6 June 1971 34
7 September 1972 32 Final issue

Greg Pickersgill's Fanzinography - an annotated listing on his website. Contains biblioraphy, some memoirs and scans of title pages (empty except #2 as they also seemed to pretend they were stapled backwards)


Publication 19701972
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.