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  • #REDIRECT [[Amateur Fantasy Publications of Australia]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Amateur Fantasy Publications of Australia]]
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  • Allen Koszowski is a prolific SF/fantasy artist. ...f Fantasy & Science Fiction]]'', ''Cemetery Dance'', ''[[Whispers]]'', ''[[Fantasy Tales]]'', ''[[Weird Tales]]'', ''The Horror Show'', ''The Robert Bloch Com
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  • ===Publications:=== * ''The Complete Science Fiction Digest and Fantasy Magazine: Vol 1: Science Fiction Digest''.
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  • ...ish "a definitive digest of information on all amateur science and fantasy publications."
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  • Tachyon Publications is a small genre publisher of SF, fantasy, and literary fiction managed by [[Jacob Weisman]], founded in 1995.
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  • ...tasy]] series, with more than 15 million comics, graphic novels, and other publications in print. The popular fantasy series is the story of Cutter, Chief of the Wolfriders, and his quest to fi
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  • ...f [[Nova Publications]] and was one of the creators of the [[International Fantasy Award]]. [[Eric C. Williams]] described him as 'the most persuasive talker ...sues to be replaced by [[Ted Carnell]]. Cooper remained a director of Nova Publications, as well as providing a contact address at his shop, until the company reor
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  • ...in 1973, one of the publications around ''[[Wyrd]]'', a [[small-press]] [[fantasy]] magazine.
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  • #REDIRECT [[Amateur Fantasy Publications of Australia]]
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  • Publications included ''[[Fantascience Digest]]'', and ''[[Fantasy Fiction Pictorial]]''.
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  • ...n American writer, book editor, publisher, and contributor to many notable publications. ...which are collected works by African-American writers in the genres of SF, fantasy and horror.
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  • His SF/F publications include [[Robert Reginald]]'s ''Science Fiction and Fantasy Awards'' (4th edition, 2010).
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  • ...utors to the [[1948 Fantasy Annual]] and wrote reviews of [[Arkham House]] publications for ''[[Dream Quest]]''. He was a member of the [[Cinvention]].
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  • ...me one of the primary creators of [[Torn World]], a shared world [[science fantasy]] world that includes fiction, [[poetry]], art, and worldbuilding.
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  • A [[fanzine]] about [[fantasy]] published by [[Ken Amos]] vis [[Nightshade Publications]].
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  • The [[publishing house]] symbol for [[Unger]]'s pubs; it stands for [[Fantasy Fiction Field]]. [[Suddsy Schwartz]] pronounced this "triple ef". Fantasy Fans' Fraternity. An [[organization]] of the [[First Fandom]], this ignoran
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  • WolfSinger Publications is a micro-press company that currently is the parent for two on-line magaz ...zines, WolfSinger also publishes short novels. Preferred genres are SF and fantasy.
    400 bytes (56 words) - 09:56, 31 December 2019
  • ...artered in Passau, [[Germany]]. It was run by [[Gustav Gaisbauer]] and its publications, ''Follow'' (see below) and ''[[Magira]]'' were in German. Fl. 1968-78.
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  • ...y self-appointed) first chairman. He was a member of the [[Amateur Fantasy Publications of Australia]].
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  • ...well as an account of [[H. P. Lovecraft|H. P. Lovecraft's]] early British publications. * 2002 -- [[2002 World Fantasy Convention]]
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  • ...Fiction Club]] from the early 50s He was a member of the [[Amateur Fantasy Publications of Australia]].
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  • ...for boys, sometimes signed early books as Captain Charles Gilson and later publications as Major Charles Gilson.
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  • Mystery Adventures, a pulp magazine published by Pierre Publications, began with a February/March, 1935 issue. Subsequent publishers were Ficti Issues usually contained at least one SF or fantasy story.
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  • ...f Fantasy and Science Fiction'') is a [[prozine]] published by [[Chimaera Publications]].
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  • ...alizing in SF and fantasy illustration whose work has appeared in over 150 publications. She is listed in the newest edition of ''Science Fiction and Fantasy Artists of the Twentieth Century'' written by [[Jane Frank]].
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  • [[Donald A. Wollheim]] edited a total of 18 issues of '''''Avon Fantasy Reader''''' between 1947 and 1952. ...ar schedule because Wollheim and the publisher thought of the digest-sized publications as [[books]] rather than magazines. This was also true of their ''[[Avon S
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  • ...nsey Co. of New York, then New Publications, Inc., an affiliate of Popular Publications, New York. ...e was founded to serve as a vehicle for novel-length, classic [[SF]] and [[fantasy]] stories that had originally appeared in such Munsey magazines as ''[[Argo
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  • ...s an effort to find and put online facsimile versions of the many fan news publications that have been produced. ...red by an initial effort by [[Ned Brooks]] to scan hundreds of issues of [[Fantasy Times]] and [[Science Fiction Times]]. With that effort and the contributio
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  • ...[[Dell]], and [[Avon]]. He also drew illustrations for numerous books and publications, including
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  • ...]] [[fantasy]] and [[science fiction]]". The ISBN was supplied by [[Beccon Publications]]. It was published in 1995 with money donated by [[Sou'Wester]], the 1994
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  • ...who has contributed cover and interior art to many [[SF]] and [[fantasy]] publications since the 1970s. He was part of the Exec which ran [[Minicon 13]].
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  • ...m]], [[L. Sprague de Camp]], and [[Jack Williamson]]. His association with Fantasy Press ended in 1950.
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  • ''(Did you mean the [[Science Fantasy (UK)|British prozine]]?)'' ...'''' is the monthly [[newsletter]] of the [[Montreal]] Science Fiction and Fantasy Association ([[MonSFFA]]).
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  • Howard Elmer Wandrei was a [[SF]] and [[fantasy]] author and artist who published more than 200 stories in such magazines a He was the brother of SF/fantasy author [[Donald Wandrei]], and illustrated his book, ''Dark Odyssey''. He a
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  • ...hers. It was originally intended to be the [[Official Organ]] of [[United Fantasy Artists]].
    557 bytes (71 words) - 23:59, 2 January 2020
  • ...and [[Tim Marquitz]]. Its stated mission is "to publish character-driven fantasy stories of the highest quality based on dark genre fiction."
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  • ...both the PLUTO and EPPIE awards. Her short stories have appeared in many publications, both print and online, including ''Afterburn SF'', ''Quantum Muse'', and '
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  • ...lisher. Editor of ''[[The MUP Encyclopedia of Australian Science Fiction & Fantasy]]'' His publishing ventures have included [[Void Publications]], [[Cory and Collins]], and [[Ford Street Publishing]].
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  • * "Rat-Catcher" by [[Seanan McGuire]] (''A Fantasy Medley 2'', [[Subterranean]]) ...Shadow" by [[Thomas Olde Heuvelt]] (''Postscripts: Unfit For Eden'', [[PS Publications]])
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  • When it began in December, 1949, the editorial policy of ''A. Merritt's Fantasy Magazine'' was the same as its companion magazine, ''[[Fantastic Novels]]'' ...es issued by [[Popular Publications]] were shaky by 1949, and ''A. Merritt Fantasy Magazine'' was only the first to fall.
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  • ...’50s, belonged to the [[Buffalo Fantasy League]] and was part of [[Pegasus Publications]], according to the [[1950 Fan Directory]].
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  • ...Society''', is an [[organization]] formed in 1971 as the '''British Weird Fantasy Society'''. It is unrelated (except, perhaps, in spirit) with the earlier o The '''BWFS''' was an organization "catering for all devotees of [[fantasy]], [[horror]] and the supernatural" it had "a magazine, ''[[Dark Horizons]]
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  • ...ntastic in the Arts]]''. He wrote (with [[Farah Mendlesohn]]) ''Children's Fantasy Literature: An Introduction'' (2016). He also drew maps for fantasies by [
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  • ...e]] who was a member of the [[Tennessee Fictioneers]] and, later, [[Vulcan Publications]]. ...I]] and was on the Advisory [[Board]] of the moderately successful [[Dixie Fantasy Federation]].
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  • Publications include: * ''Year's Best Australian Science Fiction & Fantasy 1, 2004'', edited by [[Bill Congreve]] and [[Michelle Marquardt]] (2005)
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  • ..., fantasy, horror, and mash-ups of all three." It was published by [[Apex Publications]] and the editors have included [[Lynne M. Thomas]] (issues 30 in 2011 to 5
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  • ...fiction]], [[fantasy]], [[comics]], mysteries and related popular culture publications.
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  • ...reviews published in [[prozines]]. He was a judge for the [[International Fantasy Award]]. He attended the [[Second British Convention]] was published the '
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  • ...ed and published ''[[Other Worlds]]'', a digest-sized magazine of SF and [[fantasy]] stories. ...k Parade''''', a digest-sized magazine on paperback topics. Articles on SF/fantasy topics are included in almost every issue.
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  • ...eelance professional artist in 1970. She has provided artwork for diverse publications, including magazines, children's books, and book covers. * 2005 -- [[World Fantasy Convention 2005]]
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  • ...rst [[club]]). He published seven issues of ''[[The British Scientifiction Fantasy Review|Scientifiction]]'', an important early British [[fanzine]]. ...sy Review]]'') which was incorporated into the new [[prozine]] ''[[Science Fantasy (UK)]]'' when he became editor in 1950.
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  • ...Arbor]]-based [[academic]], editor, and [[bibliographer]] of [[SF]] and [[fantasy]] works, taught at Eastern Michigan University. He received the [[Pilgrim A '''Publications:'''
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  • ...itten sequels to ''Blade Runner''. He has also written comic books for DC Publications. * 2000 -- [[World Fantasy Convention 2000]]
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  • '''John Myers Myers''' was an [[American]] writer, best known for his fantasy novel ''Silverlock'' (1949), which tells the story of A. Clarence Shandon's ...The Life and Works of John Myers Myers'' was published in 1988 by [[Niekas Publications]] and reprinted in 1989 by Borgo Press; the 52-page pamphlet was edited by
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  • ...series ''The Year's Best Australian Fantasy and Horror'' for [[Ticonderoga Publications]], and was News Editor for the [[Australian Horror Writers' Association]] f
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  • ...rship number 1 of that [[club]]. He was a member of the [[Amateur Fantasy Publications of Australia]]. He reported that he sold off his collection to fund the cou
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  • Merle Insigna is a [[fan artist]] and [[Sf]]/[[fantasy]] illustrator living in New Hampshire. ...ton in '89]] [[Worldcon bid]] as well as did the cover art for [[fannish]] publications such as
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  • * ''Rhetorics of Fantasy'' by [[Farah Mendlesohn]] [Wesleyan University Press, 2008] ...t It Is We Do When We Read Science Fiction'' by [[Paul Kincaid]] ([[Beccon Publications]], 2008)
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  • '''Fandbooks''' are special publications of the [[National Fantasy Fan Federation]]. The purpose of a fandbook is to provide pointers from vet 5||''Pseudonyms of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Authors''||[[Jon D. Swartz]]||2010||14||A paltry list.
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  • ...tion, fantasy, and horror. They were originally administered by [[Chimaera Publications]], who continue to own the Awards, but have subsequently been administered ...rt from disagreement as to which is the premier award for science fiction, fantasy and horror in Australia, is that the Aurealis Awards have tended to be repo
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  • In the 1940s through the ’60s, he was editor of ''[[Fantasy Times]]''/''[[Science Fiction Times]]'', an important [[newszine]] which wa ...: [[Taurasi-Thompson Publications]], [[United Publications]], and [[Cosmic Publications]], which became Fandom House. He was one of the leaders of the [[Fanvets]]
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  • ...about the sale of ''Wonder Stories'' in 1936 to [[Ned Pines]]’ [[Standard Publications]].
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  • ...Melbourne Science Fiction Club]]. He was a member of the [[Amateur Fantasy Publications of Australia]]. Reviewer for the ''[[Australian Science Fiction Review]]'' ...n]], “Displaced Person,” was published in ''[[Science Fantasy (UK)|Science Fantasy]]'' in April 1961.
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  • ...igned partway through his term), Art Director, and edited ''[[The National Fantasy Fan]]'' in 1984-87. He published the [[fanzine]] ''[[No Sex]]''. ...political science. While there, he was the art director of two USF student publications, the ''Foghorn'' and ''San Francisco Quarterly''. After college, he worked
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  • [[Book]] publications include: * ''The Worlds of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror 1'', edited by Robert N. Stephenson (2016)
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  • ...He was part of [[Salford Fandom]], and the [[Northern Science Fiction and Fantasy Group]] (which he [[chaired]]). ...adler]], he published the ''[[Ken Bulmer]] [[Bibliography]]'' for [[Beccon Publications]]. He was an early worker on ''[[SF2 Concatenation]]''.
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  • ...Inc. ''F&SF'' was founded to cover the full range of [[sf]], including [[fantasy]], and to do so at a higher literary level than was common at the time. It The ''Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction'' reprint anthology series is a long-standing, irregula
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  • ...& -iana. AH does not, of course, do the actual printing and binding of its publications.
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  • ...tasy Convention]], [[World Fantasy Convention 2003]], and the [[2014 World Fantasy Convention]]. ...comes from the [[Cordwainer Smith]] "Lords of the Instrumentality" series. Publications have included ''[[Being Gardner Dozois]]'' by [[Michael Swanwick]], which w
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  • He published ''[[Fantasy Fictioneer]]'' as part of [[Vulcan Publications]]. He also published the [[fanzines]] ''[[Science Fiction Esquire]]'' and
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  • ...ed the [[fanzine]] ''[[Cosmic Tales]]'' in the late 1930s. After [[Cosmic Publications]], their [[publishing house]] was [[LuGerKus]]. They published the [[apazi Both were charter members of The [[National Fantasy Fan Federation]] in 1941, and Louis ran unsuccessfully for its [[Board]]. H
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  • ...ined by volunteers, it had, as of July 2022, some 236,357 authors, 740,327 publications and 34,875 publishers recorded.<ref name="ISFDBstats">[https://www.isfdb.or
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  • '''Publications''' * The ''[[Cosmos Science Fiction and Fantasy Magazine]]''.
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  • ...lute''', a [[Canadian]] [[author]] and critic specializing in [[SF]] and [[fantasy]] literature, has lived mostly in [[England]] since 1969. He has been descr ...''[[The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction]]'' and of ''[[The Encyclopedia of Fantasy]]'', as well as author of ''Science Fiction: The Illustrated Encyclopedia''
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  • ...of the [[circle]] of publications around ''[[Wyrd]]'', a [[small-press]] [[fantasy]] magazine. For the second, Rich coined the term ''[[speculative poetry]]''
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  • ...natics]]. His name is variously spelled Philip and Phillip in contemporary publications and as he doesn't seem to have published anything himself it's not possible According to a report of the same event in ''[[Science Fantasy News]]'' #8, 'Arthur swears it was a mis-print...'.
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  • *[[Westercon 1|First Annual West Coast Scienti-Fantasy Conference]], 1948. =Publications=
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  • Her other publications include ''Exploring the Matrix: Visions of the Cyber Present'', a collectio ...rg]], she co-edited ''Best Science Fiction'' of 2001, 2002, and the ''Best Fantasy'' of 2001 and 2002.
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  • Lisa Tuttle (born in Houston, Texas) is a [[SF]], [[fantasy]], and horror author. She received a B.A. degree in English from Syracuse U ...sm. She has also edited several anthologies and reviewed books for various publications. She has been living in the United Kingdom since 1981.
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  • ...y science and fan doings rather than news on the pros. Numerous individual publications, single issue and single-copy "pass arounds" were being done, but of course
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  • ...nto "a definitive digest of information on all amateur science and fantasy publications."
    1 KB (170 words) - 02:01, 10 April 2020
  • ...[fanzines]] of that period. He contributed art to [[fanzines]] such as ''[[Fantasy Fiction Pictorial]]'', ''[[Fantascience Digest]]'' and ''[[Comet Stories of ...n the 1940s, doing artwork for the [[SF magazines]] published by [[Popular Publications]]. He soon was also contributing to ''[[Weird Tales]].'' At the time, his a
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  • ...vities which engage and support the interests of [[science fiction]] and [[fantasy]] [[fans]]. ...shed monthly, the quarterly [[clubzine]] is ''[[Warp]]''. The names of the publications are a deliberate tip of the hat to the origins of MonSFFA when it was calle
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  • ...n]], writer, illustrator, editor, publisher, and appraiser of [[SF]] and [[fantasy]] art and book [[collections]]. ...many [[organizations]], including the [[Association of Science Fiction and Fantasy Artists]] ([[ASFA]]). He was a member of [[Writers' Bloc]].
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  • ...ourne Science Fiction Club]] in 1952 and a member of the [[Amateur Fantasy Publications of Australia]].
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  • ...] throughout his life. His [[fannish]] [[publishing house]] was '''Pegasus Publications'''. ...[Buffalo]] 2, N.Y. [[Book]] dealer, 24, read [[stf]] 12 yrs. Pres. Buffalo Fantasy League. [[Collects]] books. Yes to N3F working .
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  • ...ald A. Wollheim]]'s professional editing career. [[Wollheim]] wrote Albing Publications of New York, asking if they were interested in a [[SF magazine]] titled ''S ...contents of each issue into two parts, one for [[SF]] and the other for [[fantasy]]. Non-[[Futurians]] whose work was used included [[David H. Keller]] and [
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  • ...founder of the [[BSAW]] and one of the founders of the [[Michigan Science Fantasy Society]]. He was a member of the [[CFG]] and attended some of the earliest His [[publishing house]] was '''Outhouse Publications''', and he [[edited]] and [[published]] ''[[Ice (Shapiro)]]'', ''[[Hallucin
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  • ...from the printing shop. The [[Philadelphia]]ns put forth their effort, ''[[Fantasy Fiction Telegram]]''. ''[[The Atom]]'' and the early ''[[Helios]]'', both p ...ok in another [[ISA]] New Yorker to form [[Michel-Wollheim|Michel-Wollheim Publications]]. From their printing press came [[the Phantagraph]], mainly, by this time
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  • ...apers, convention program books, on book covers, and in various mainstream publications such as ''The New York Times'' and ''USA Today Weekend''. He has also been ...everal of John's photographs were featured in [[Souvenir Book]] of [[World Fantasy Convention 2013]].
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  • ...in [[Hertfordshire]] and was a member of the [[Herts. Science Fiction and Fantasy Group]]. He organized [[Blackpool Fan Con]] and helped run [[Briscon]]. The [[Astral Leauge]]'s publications carried references to the Bearer Of All Knowledge (BOAK) as a jab at him.
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  • ...e the 1940s, and a longtime [[pro]]. He co-founded the [[San Diego Science-Fantasy Society]]. He belonged to [[Little Men]] and was part of the staff of its [ ...un'' (with [[George Clayton Johnson]]), but he wrote literally hundreds of publications in various genres.
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  • ''Eidolon: The Journal of Australian Science Fiction and Fantasy'' was a [[prozine]] from [[Perth]], Western [[Australia]]. Its publisher, [[small press]] '''Eidolon Publications''', also published:
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  • ...SFG''') is an [[association]] of [[Canberra]]-based [[science fiction]], [[fantasy]] and [[horror]] writers. Publications include:
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  • ...found in ''The Drawings of Jeffrey Jones'' (1982). There have been several publications of his color work. * 1976 -- [[London Annual Fantasy & Media Festival]]
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  • ...e Fiction Society]] (PSFS) (and thus one of the [[Phillies]]) and of the [[Fantasy Amateur Press Association]] ([[FAPA]]) in the 1930s. He attended the [[Fir ...'' and ''[[Fantasy Fiction Telegram]]''. He was the last member of [[Comet Publications]] and invented [[Cosmic Monopoly]]. He attended the [[1938 Philadelphia Co
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  • Although [[clubs]] can also have OO's &mdash; ''[[The National Fantasy Fan]]'' is the OO of the [[N3F]], e.g. (the OO of a [[club]] is sometimes c ...a]], the OO generally lists (1) the titles, editors and number of pages of publications in the individual [[apa mailing]] being sent out with it, (2) a membership
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  • ...ght Zone]]'' under a male pseudonym in 1988, followed quickly by a pair of publications under her own name in ''[[Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine]]'' in 19
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  • ...'[[The Science Fiction Fan]]''. Taurasi, for his part, had established ''[[Fantasy News (Taurasi)]]'', which forged ahead of the other weekly, [[Dick Wilson|W
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  • ...947 and 1951. It originated as the [[clubzine]] of the [[Portland Science-Fantasy Society]] with Day as [[editor]], and then he took it over after Portland w ...club magazine" was wanted. It was considered unwise to try to maintain two publications and there were objections to radically changing The FANSCIENT's editorial p
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  • * '''''The [[Chesley Awards]] for Science Fiction and Fantasy Art: A Retrospective''''' by [[John Grant]], [[Elizabeth L. Humphrey]] and * ''Scores: Reviews 1993–2003'' by [[John Clute]] ([[Beccon Publications]], 2003)
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  • ...l communication, [[David Levine]] 2019-05-07 at the [[New York City Sci-Fi/Fantasy Meetup Group]] and [[Lynn E. Cohen Koehler]] 2019-12-12 [[City Tech Science ===Science Fiction and Fantasy Society at Queens College===
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  • '''Weird fantasy''', also known as '''weird fiction''', is a sub-genre of [[speculative fict ...Thrill Book]]'' (1919). The first prozine to be devoted entirely to weird fantasy was ''[[Weird Tales]]'', which began in 1923. It has been with us, off and
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  • Cohen started his long association with Avon Publications in 1947, working as an editor for their comics division from 1947–1956. D Cohen edited several Avon magazines, including Avon Science Fiction & Fantasy Reader, through most of the 1950s, eventually became an Avon Books vice-pre
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  • ...where she has been building a collection of papers of science fiction and fantasy authors since 2004. ...ma]] and [[Michael Damian Thomas]] (editors), ''Glitter & Mayhem'' ([[Apex Publications]], 2013).
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  • ...ted a short story, "Who Slays Satan," to ''Geep!, The Book of the National Fantasy Fan Federation'' (1987), edited by [[Rose Secrest]]. ...ght, conducted by [[Jon D. Swartz]] and [[Heath Row]], in ''[[The National Fantasy Fan]]'' for December, 2010 (Vol. 10, Nos. 3-4). He was the subject of an in
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  • ...as good friends with several of them. Among his friends who wrote [[SF]]/[[fantasy]] were [[L. Ron Hubbard]], [[Leo Margulies]], [[Mort Weisinger]], [[Cornell Some of Gruber's genre stories were in the following publications:
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  • ...lished]] the [[fanzines]] ''[[Luna]]'', ''[[Luna Monthly]]'', ''[[Science, Fantasy, and Science Fiction]]'' and ''[[Ground Zero]]''. He [[edited]] the [[daily His [[publishing house]], '''Luna Publications''', which began in the 1950s, gave its name to the [[Lunarians]]. Under th
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  • ...eak]]'', and [[The Cult]] (producing ''[[Hindiwala]]''). He founded the [[Fantasy and Science Fiction Society of Columbia University]], co-founded the [[Beak ...ation in America and was based on his doctoral dissertation. ''A Bookman's Fantasy'', published by [[NESFA Press]] in 1995, is a collection of his essays, man
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  • ...iction and Fact)'', and the group spun off from the [[New York City Sci-Fi/Fantasy Meetup Group]], but it is organizationally distinct from both. ...f> but some print issues were delayed “because of an ice storm.”<ref>Penny Publications Customer Service email, 27 December 2019. </ref>
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  • '''Lafayette Ronald Hubbard''', a [[fantasy]] and [[sf writer]] first published in the 1930s and 40s, used the [[pennam ...hy [[space opera]], which its [[Scientology]]-affiliated publisher, Bridge Publications, promoted heavily at [[Chicon IV]], that year’s [[Worldcon]], complete wi
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  • Wolfe has written extensively about SF and [[fantasy]]. He has had a monthly review column in ''[[Locus]]'' since December, 1991 ...and three volumes of collected ''[[Locus]]'' reviews published by [[Beccon Publications]] - ''Soundings: Reviews 1992-1996'' (2005); ''Bearings: Reviews 1997-2001'
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  • '''Howard Browne''' was an [[SF]] editor and [[fantasy]] and mystery writer. He also wrote for several television series and films Beginning in 1942, Browne worked as managing editor for [[Ziff Davis Publications]] on ''[[Amazing Stories]]'' and ''[[Fantastic Adventures]]'', both under [
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  • ...s [[Galaxy Science Fiction]], [[Fantastic Universe]] and [[The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction]] beginning in 1952. Her short fiction ranges from satire
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  • ...Strahan appears to have inspired both [[Russell B. Farr]] of [[Ticonderoga Publications]], who was a roommate (or housemate) of his, and [[Alisa Krasnostein]] of [ * 2010 -- Special Award, Professional at the [[World Fantasy Awards]] ceremony
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  • Publications include: * ''The Year's Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2010'', edited by [[Liz Grzyb]] and [[Talie Helene]] (2011)
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  • ...er 30, 1937, drew near, there was talk of using it to form a federation of fantasy clubs, since many local groups, such as the [[Los Angeles SFA-SFL]] and the ...ginning to be recognized as the leading fan magazine. A multitude of minor publications continued to appear, and more were being projected all the time. The cheap
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  • ...| before=Up To Now: The First Staple War | after=Up To Now: The Heyday of Fantasy Magazine}} ...e first [[Terrestrial Fantascience Guild Bulletins]] were [[hektographed]] publications; the last was a large-size [[mimeo]] affair. In many respects, the TFG was
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  • ...hic style and precise technique are used to illustrate a wide range of sf, fantasy, and horror themes "with the occasional hint of humor" as he puts it. Randy ...and past regional director and of the [[Association of Science Fiction and Fantasy Artists]]. Since the early ’90s, he has attended several [[conventions]]
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  • ...d, "as did several generous fans in the States" – the unavailability of US publications due to currency restrictions was a bad problem then) except [[Ziff Davis]] ...f the vast majority of lovers of science fiction' and called for [[Science Fantasy Society|a national organisation]].
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  • ...te]]. From 2003 until 2011 he was Book Review Editor for ''[[The National Fantasy Fan]]''. He also serves (since 2002) as special features editor of First Fa ...r culture publications also number more than 500, giving him 1,000+ signed publications in his career. He has published three books on old-time radio (OTR), and s
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  • ...lcan Manuscript Bureau]], in competition to New Fandom's, before all their publications were combined into the omnibus magazine, ''[[Nova (Tucker)|Nova]]''. Beside ...in current. Tho the leading fan magazines were practically all of the "''[[Fantasy Magazine]]''" type, in the second level were many of the 1938, "fanny" kind
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  • ...for around 10 years. This is where he acquired a love of books, especially fantasy. He loved the OZ books and others like Mary Poppins & Dr. DoLittle. The fam ...as Tirith Evening-Star]]'' (MTES). He has donated his large collections of fantasy & science-fiction to the Popular Culture Library here.
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  • ...inbaum]], [[A. Merritt]], and [[H. P. Lovecraft]]. He was part of [[Vulcan Publications]]. ...[small press]] publisher, and [[art]] collector and dealer and published [[Fantasy Collector's Annual]]. His collection of [[Virgil Finlay]]'s art has never
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  • ...An Annotated Bibliography of Bibliographical Works on Science Fiction and Fantasy Fiction''. Briney also published the [[fanzine]] ''[[Contact Is Not a Verb]
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  • * [[Apex Publications]] * [[Aphelion Publications]]
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  • ...t dotted the later months of the period of the [[First Transition]], the [[Fantasy Amateur Press Association]] did not stand out. Some kind of a fraternity fo ...s published when and what they desired, and paid the expenses of their own publications, making the required number of copies, which were sent to the official mail
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  • ...sler Award is for long-time wonder-working with graphic art in [[amateur]] publications of the [[science fiction]] community. Established in 1998, sponsored by the ...He sculpted with welded steel rods. He celebrated the [[West Coast Science Fantasy Conference]] ([[Westercon]]) as his birthday. In the sf community he was be
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  • ...] [[published]] by [[William Crawford]] under his [[press name]] [[Fantasy Publications]] in Everett, [[Pennsylvania]].
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  • ...irst editor of the ''[[New Worlds]]'' prozine. He also edited ''[[Science Fantasy (UK)]]'' starting in the 1950s, and then started the long-lived ''New Writi He was a member of the [[International Fantasy Award]] judging panel. He was was on the [[committee]] of [[Festivention]]
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  • ...er [[fanzines]], [[APA]] [[mailings]]/[[distributions]], or [[convention]] publications. These parties are occasions of good cheer and sometimes good [[jokes]] (to ...rds in the kitchen while the other FAPA members published the official ''[[Fantasy Amateur]]'', and the waiting-listers put together the mailing. When it was
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  • ...Digest}}''(Did you mean a different ''[[Science Fiction Digest]]'' or ''[[Fantasy Magazine]]''?)'' ...in September 1932. After December, 1933, it continued under the name '''''Fantasy Magazine'''''.
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  • ...Archie Mercer. Archie also wrote the [[fannish]] [[novel]], ''[[Meadows of Fantasy]]''. He was on the [[committee]] of [[Yarcon]] and, with Beryl, handled publications for [[Briscon]].
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  • ...While in college, he was a co-founder of the [[Beloit Science Fiction and Fantasy Association]] in [[Wisconsin]]. A [[critic]] who reviewed [[science fiction]] for such publications as the ''Wall Street Journal'', in his [[mundane]] life, Wooster was a jour
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  • ...ublications: "Escapism" and "Anita," both in the same issue of ''[[Science Fantasy]]'' (September/October, 1964); First SF novel: ''The Furies'' (Berkley, 196 ...for "Kitemaster" in 1983 and for "Kaeti and the Hangman" in 1987; British Fantasy (Short Story) for "Kaeti and the Hangman" in 1986; BSFA (Novel) for Grainne
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  • ...ldcon]]. His other work appeared in numerous [[fanzines]] and professional publications. For almost 30 years (1977-2005), he supplied the pictures and text for ''A ...niversity of California's Riverside Libraries [[Eaton Collection]] of SF & Fantasy. [https://calisphere.org/collections/26943/ Calisphere displays nearly 6,0
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  • ...eader and [[mimeographer]]. He assisted Lee in editing ''[[Tom Digby Along Fantasy Way]]'' for [[ConFrancisco]], where [[Digby]] was an "Honored Guest", using
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  • 1960 || [[The Stf & Fantasy Songbook]] || [[Hal Shapiro]] || For [[Pittcon]] 1980 || [[The Westerfilk Collection]] || [[Jordin Kare]]/[[Off Centaur Publications]] || 2nd edition published in 1996 by [[Wail Songs]]
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  • ...Auroras are administered by the [[CSFFA]] ([[Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Association]]) Committee. The first Aurora was a single award known as the ...awards to be awarded directly by fans in the genres of science fiction and fantasy; they are given at the annual [[Boréal|Boréal Conference]].
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  • ...r of the [[Melbourne Science Fiction Club]] and founder of the [[Melbourne Fantasy Film Group]]. Proprietor of Australia's first specialist [[SF bookshop]], [ ..., joined the group in that year. He was a member of the [[Amateur Fantasy Publications of Australia]] whose [[mimeo]] was located in his garage.
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  • ...lustrating fanwriting by [[Bob Shaw]]. He also contributed a card to the [[Fantasy Showcase Tarot Deck]]. ...d two ongoing comic strips, "Elmer T. Hack" and "The Captive", to [[BSFA]] publications, sometimes with other fans as scriptwriter; a fanzine ''[[The Best of Elmer
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  • He was for many years a member of [[FAPA]]. '''Hokum House Publications''' and '''Aimless Press''' were his [[publishing houses]]. ...article in the July, 2015 (Volume 74, Number 7) issue of ''[[The National Fantasy Fan]]''.
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  • ...oofreader and copy editor, and was assistant editor on ''[[The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction]]'' from 1966–74, associate editor at the paperback pub ...proarious standing ovation. He sold ''Science Fiction Chronicle'' to [[DNA Publications]] in May 2000 and was fired by them in 2002.
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  • ...r and [[academic]] at [[Oxford]], more or less single-handedly made [[high fantasy]] popular. He was not involved in [[fandom]] nor in the [[pro]] community ...ith [[George R. R. Martin]] and [[Terry R. R. Pratchett]], define modern [[fantasy]].
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  • ...35 awards, is a lifetime member of the Association of Science Fiction and Fantasy Artists ([[ASFA]]), and has served as both Director-At-Large and President.
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  • ...''[[The Timebinder]]'' in the 1940s, and several [[one-shot]] [[fannish]] publications such as ''[[What is S-F Fandom]]'' (1944) for the [[N3F]], which he also he ...'[[Bonfire]]'' in 1942–44, and was founding [[editor]] of ''[[The National Fantasy Fan]]'' in 1945. He attended [[Midwestcon 1]] in 1950. He helped to put on
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  • [[File:Third meeting of the Minneapolis Fantasy Society.jpg|thumb|300px|'''The third meeting, on the front cover of ''[[Fan ...the group caught on and it met biweekly. It became part of the [[Mid-West Fantasy Fan Federation]].
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  • ...ions]], worked for a while for a literary agency, then returned to Popular Publications and assisted [[Ejler Jakobsson]] at ''[[Super Science Stories]]''. He left * A short bio-bibliography in the June, 2015 issue of ''[[The National Fantasy Fan]]''.
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  • ...and illustrator, as well as an amateur astrologer and sometime writer of [[fantasy]] [[fiction]] and [[poetry]]. Early in life, he changed his name to Hans (l ...s contributing hundreds of black-and-white interior illustrations to these publications. Early in his career, he also provided [[art]]work to [[fanzines]], such as
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  • ...]] in the mid-1960s after he retired. He was a member of the [[Minneapolis Fantasy Society]]. He [[edited]] the [[1948 Fantasy Annual]]. His [[fanzine]] ''[[Sky Hook]]'' published both [[fannish]] and c
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  • ...time, Hersey had "discussed plans with Clayton to launch a pseudo-science fantasy sheet." Clayton was unconvinced. 1980 ||[[Stanley Schmidt]] ||Now published by [[Davis Publications]]
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  • ...r Sales Service]], a [[literary agency]] specializing in the [[SF]], and [[fantasy]]. [[Edmond Hamilton]] and [[Otto Binder]] were their first clients and the ...unct ''[[Wonder Stories]]'' and added it to Standard series of "Thrilling" publications. Weisinger became the editor of [[Thrilling Wonder Stories]], and was soon
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  • The [[Newark Convention]], officially the First National Science Fiction (or Fantasy) Convention, and called the [[Fourth Eastern]] by its enemies, was the firs ...ed too late. [[Oklahoma]]'s was also late, but only by a hair. Besides the publications handled by the committee the [[CPASF]] handed out [[Science Fiction Interna
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  • ...and ''[[Skullduggery]]'' before joining the pulp-reprint publisher Odyssey Publications. He also worked on ''The Duende History of The Shadow Magazine''. He then g ...raised funds to place a memorial plaque dedicated to the [[Providence]] [[fantasy]] writer on the grounds of Brown University's John Hay Library on the cente
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  • ...rs)]]'', edited by [[Joe Sanders]]) that amateur publications devoted to [[fantasy]] [[fiction]] had appeared earlier such as [[W. Paul Cook]]'s ''[[The Reclu ...ight have started fandom decades earlier. History is full of such sporadic publications. We ''are'' interested in locating the start of a continuous, connected ''[
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  • In the 1940s, he and H. L. Herbert formed King-Size Publications and issued ''[[Fantastic Universe Science Fiction]]'' and other magazines. ...f This World'' in 1949, and went on to compile several several other SF, [[fantasy]], and weird anthologies. At the time of his death, he was editor of ''Mike
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  • These publications listing all the issues of a [[prozine]] or [[fanzine]], or all of the works ...n [[fandom]]. [[Tony Boucher]] in July 1944 called for a centralization of fantasy bibliographic work, to be run by a chief bibliographer "who would live surr
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  • ...ufandom]] (KTF) (1982-90), and publications editor of the [[SFS]] (Science Fantasy Society) (1948-51). He lived in the [[Epicentre]] with [[Ken Bulmer]] for e * ''[[Not Science Fantasy News]]'' [1982-82]
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  • ...[Hugo Awards]] are given for work in the field of [[science fiction]] or [[fantasy]]...") the term SF must be read broadly and includes pretty much the entire ...The development of [[fanzines]] like ''[[Locus]]'' into fully professional publications with huge circulation (compared with traditional [[fanzines]] but still sho
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  • ...ster]], [[Vincent Clarke]] and [[Ken Bulmer]] at the International Science Fantasy Con, 1951'''. ]] ...tivention''' or '''Festival Convention''' and the '''International Science Fantasy Convention''', was held in [[London]] over Whitsun, May 10–14, 1951, at t
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  • ...g time, energy, and money to non-profit pursuits in the general field of [[fantasy]] and [[fandom]]. This includes [[reader|reading]], [[collecting]], [[corre ...ty. (b) Position as [[editor]] or [[publisher]] of at least one issue of a fantasy amateur publication".
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  • He was a member of [[Fantasy Fans Fraternity]], [[OCSFL]] (its founder), the [[Phantasy Legion]], the [[ ...]'', and wrote for several others. His [[publishing house]] was [[Choctaw Publications]] (his heritage was Choctaw).
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  • ...apparently occurred in the first issue of its [[official organ]], the ''[[Fantasy Amateur]]'', in 1938. [[Robert Silverberg]] may have been the first to use ..., [[fandom]] got the idea from them. These [[mapas]] usually print their publications with hand-operated equipment, and are for the most part distinctly more int
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  • ...it seemed to be primarily [[British]], for excellence within the [[sf]]/[[fantasy]] field, and a precursor of the [[Hugo Award]]. It was created and promoted ...one may donate. At present, the Award Fund Committee are using the [[Nova Publications]] address.
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  • ...tories]]'' and ''[[Fantastic Adventures]]'', when both were [[Ziff Davis]] publications under the editorship of [[Ray Palmer]]. (Wilcox wrote once that he began w ...zing]]'' and ''[[Fantastic Adventures]]''. He was said to write [[science fantasy]] rather than [[science fiction]], but he had many readers who thought of t
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  • ...ozines]], and planning tours for other traveling [[fans]], were announced. Publications projected included a directory of fans' addresses, '''''True Fantastic Expe ...decided that fans were not the type of [[science-fiction]] [[readers]] his publications catered to and announced that fans and fandom would no longer get into his
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  • ...gins|Wiggins]], and began turning out reams of [[humor]]ous and unhumorous publications. Some of these returns of the oldsters began as early as the [[Newark Conve ...ook over his ''[[Fantasy-Scout]]'' as one of the myriad supplements to ''[[Fantasy News (Taurasi)]]''. [[Don Wollheim|Wollheim]]'s retirement has been dealt w
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  • ...H. G. Wells]], [[Jack London]], [[Algernon Blackwood]], and the very few [[fantasy]] books available at that time. To me, incidentally, the terms "fantasy" and "science fiction" have always seemed synonymous. I think it's silly, f
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  • [[Donald Tuck]]|| for ''[[A Handbook of Science Fiction and Fantasy]]'' (1954). [[2008 Hugos |2008]]||[[Denvention 3]]|| [[NESFA Press]]|| for its publications.
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  • #[https://fanac.org/fanzines/Worldcon_Pubs.html Worldcon Publications] *[[National Fantasy Fan Federation]]
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  • Born and raised in Ann Arbor, Michigan, Anne always read science fiction and fantasy, as did her mother and sister. Her father Eric L. Gay was a design engineer ...to Anne, introducing her to fannish sensibilities, fanhistory, and fannish publications, as well as a general philosophy as to why and how to run fannish conventio
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  • ...was published in 1981. He is also responsible for several limited edition publications, including ''Red Noise'' (1982), ''Flatland'' (1982), ''Love Among the Xoid * 1992 -- [[Minnesota Fantasy Award]]
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  • ...on]]s 1–4. She was a member and [[officer]] of the [[Southern Nevada Area Fantasy Fiction Union]] (SNAFFU), hosted [[The Monthly Social]] in the 1990s and be ...ectronic Games'', in 1981. She held senior editorial roles at other gaming publications throughout the 1990s, working under her maiden name.
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  • ...eld. We were contemporaries, our early stories having appeared in the same publications in the 1930s. Now he was famous, deservedly so, and I was forgotten. But it ...discovered science fiction in 1941; but probably in the late '40s in the [[Fantasy Press]] days, when I visited Philadelphia quite frequently. We've met time
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  • ...r wrote for the [[pulp magazines]] of the mid-twentieth century, writing [[fantasy]] and horror stories as well as [[science fiction]]. Genre historians have ...inted several times in genre anthologies. Keller also created a series of fantasy stories later called the “Tales of Cornwall” sequence; these were said
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  • 1954 ||''[[A Handbook of Science Fiction and Fantasy]]'' by [[Donald H. Tuck]] published 1984 ||First issue of ''[[The Australian Horror & Fantasy Magazine]]''
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  • ...orkshop]] (1970), Vonda Neel McIntyre is an explicit feminist [[SF]] and [[fantasy]] writer who, before becoming a full-time writer, was a riding instructor, Interviews with McIntyre have appeared in several publications, including ''[[Starship]]''/''[[Algol]]'' (Spring 1979), ''[[Galileo]]'' (N
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  • ...ching without them. Page names should use the accents in names, places and publications, but a redirect should be written for the ASCII form. Use "'- rather than t ==Publications==
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  • ''Etherline'' began as a newszine of [[Amateur Fantasy Publications of Australia]], incorporating news from the [[Melbourne Science Fiction Gro
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  • Fanzines sometimes contain material devoted to [[science fiction]] or [[fantasy]], but just as often do not, instead including personal essays and articles ...diazines''': Fanzines published by and for [[media fans]], typically thick publications full of [[fanfiction]] based on the editor's favorite movie or TV show. Unl
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  • ...ofessional Magazine Hugo|Best Professional Magazine]]: ''[[The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction]]'' ed. by [[Robert P. Mills]] ...whose stories appeared in an obscure British publication (''not'' ''[[Nova Publications]]'') which was nominated for best magazine.
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  • ...written by Martians. He appears to have had some activity in the [[Indiana Fantasy Association]], and a part in [[publishing]] a minor [[fanzine]], ''[[Infini ...[local]]), the statewide [[Florida Cosmos Society]], and a revived [[Dixie Fantasy Federation]], all with [[Raym Washington|Raym]] at the head.
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  • ...c Fasteners in Science Fiction]] (which he, mocking Tucker, initialed STF) Publications in the United States of America, Unlimited, and called for support from all ...commentary on the difference in the fan magazines of that day is that ''[[Fantasy Magazine]]'' scarcely mentioned the [[Staple War]]. Out in Oklahoma, [[Dan
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  • An early [[club]] was the [[Western Australian Science Fantasy Society]]. 1996 || [[Ticonderoga Publications]] began publication
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  • ...fiction [[fandom]]: besides the members of the Stranger Club and of the [[Fantasy Amateur Press Association]], I came into varying degrees of contact with su ...om in general were relatively modest. As first President of the [[National Fantasy Fan Federation]] (N3F) I helped to get its house organ, ''[[Bonfire]]'', go
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  • ...[fannish]] publications included ''[[Fan-Dango]]''. He was active in the [[Fantasy Amateur Press Association]] (and was a member of the [[Order of Dagon]]).
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  • ...erage of two a week, and reading a great number of history and electronics publications. ...ntative, and also served as corresponding [[secretary]] for the [[Northern Fantasy Fan Federation]] for its short-lived, four-year existence (1948 to 1951). H
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  • ...from [[NESFA Press]]. Joe has published many fanzines, club and convention publications. He has been in assorted [[APAs]], including [[FAPA]], [[SAPS]], [[SFPA]], ...ion [[art shows]] at various conventions, including [[Worldcons]], [[World Fantasy Conventions]], and, most frequently, at [[Boskones]].
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  • ...nish spirit, it is Nolacon of 1988. Nostalgic bits are entwined in all its publications and in its programming. Not only were fond memories of its 1951 prototype f ...ategorized interests into Mainstream, [[Fan]], Special Interests, Horror & Fantasy, Children's, Film, Video, Special Exhibits, as well as [[Hucksters' Room]],
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  • ...Garrett]] worked very closely. There are also jibes at ''[[The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction]]'' and ''[[Galaxy]]'', but they are much less insightf ...t period there were dozens of them flourishing, both the non-fiction macho publications and the pallid imitations of ''Playboy'' which also ran fiction, including
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  • * Publications: [[Bill Rickhardt]] ...the nomination be known [[fans]] or known to be associated with [[Science-fantasy]] or [[fandom]]. Any nomination challenged for this reason can be disqualif
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  • ...n Group]], [[BSFA]]). He has worked on the [[convention committee]]s or in publications of [[Eastercon]]s ([[Skycon]], [[editor]] of [[Helicon]]'s [[daily newslett ...ress]] [[Ansible Editions]], publishing both fan and pro material; the fan publications include a number of free ebooks downloadable from the [[TAFF]] website, whi
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  • ...ished ''[[Quaro]]'' for [[SAPS]]. His [[publishing house]] was [[Bodacious Publications]]. ...f Widner in the May, 2015, issue (Volume 74, Number 5) of ''[[The National Fantasy Fan]]''.
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  • ...[[IFF]]) as equal partners who did 90% of the work. [[Sully Roberds]] did publications and [[Richard Meyer]] also helped. Korshak presided over the opening day of ...s in [[Chicago]] about Labor Day 1940 under the auspices of the [[Illinois Fantasy Fictioneers]] (a [[con]]-promoting [[organization]] specially organized by
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  • In [[mundane]] life, Sam was for many years editor of the trade publications ''Quick Frozen Foods'' and ''Quick Frozen Foods International'', for which * ''[[Current Fantasy]]'' [1938]
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  • ...ch we follow in this volume, of using "pros" for people and "[[proz]]" for publications. Whether specialist booksellers should be included or not is disputed; "No,
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  • The [[art show]] was hung on the walls of this meeting room. [[Fantasy Press]] had a section unto themselves in which they displayed illustrations ..."lax", Korshak apparently got carried away enough to attempt to sell the [[Fantasy Press]] paintings, which were not for sale. Reports differ regarding what f
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  • ...e'' relaxacon — which was run each year from 1949–2019 by the [[Cincinnati Fantasy Group]] on the last full weekend in June. (The first few Midwestcons were k * [https://fanac.org/conpubs/Midwestcon/index.html Midwestcon publications and photos.]
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  • ...]'', August 1944, she contributed several others to [[William Crawford]]'s publications between 1948–53. ...0Lora%20Warner%20Crozetti%22&f=false See reprint] in ''Science Fiction and Fantasy Literature, A Checklist, 1700–1974, Volume 2'' ([[Wildside Press]], 2010)
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  • '''The National Fantasy Fan Federation''', also abbreviated as '''NFFF''', founded in 1941, is the ...wards]] and publishes a number of [[fanzines]], including ''[[The National Fantasy Fan]]'', the descendant of its original [[newsletter]], ''[[Bonfire]]''. 
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  • ...''. During that same time, she began editing and publishing her folk music publications, ''[[Caravan]]'' and ''[[Gardyloo]]'', which found a readership through Izz * ''[[Fantasy Jackass]]'' (with [[Bob Tucker]])
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  • Other publications included ''[[Peace on Sol III]]'' (published with his wife, fellow fan [[Ma He was a member of the [[International Fantasy Award]] judging panel. He was on the [[Loncon I]] [[committee]]. He present
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  • ...and sold ''[[Wonder Stories]]'', passing control of the SFL to [[Standard Publications]], which let it die of neglect. Many chapters severed all ties with the SFL ...e Science Fiction League ceased to be a sponsoring [[organization]] and "[[Fantasy]]" for "Fiction" to expand their area of appeal.
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  • ...ions, and most, if not all of these, were simply pirated. Among the sf and fantasy authors published in these magazines were [[Edmund Hamilton]], [[Henry Kutt ...ook publishers started science fiction lines, which all folded after a few publications. Many popular magazines published articles about sf and there were also the
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  • A few members banded together as [[Amateur Fantasy Publications of Australia]] (AFPA), and produced, amongst other [[fanzines]], a [[newszi ...rr]] for the Melbourne Science Fiction Club and the associated [[Melbourne Fantasy Film Group]], refers to clubrooms at 19 Somerset Place, as does the April 2
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  • ...journal among a lot of [[hectographed]] and a handful of [[mimeographed]] publications. ...sy Magazine]] until Wollheim, along with [[John B. Michel]], started the [[Fantasy Amateur Press Association]] in August 1937.
    34 KB (5,299 words) - 04:05, 2 November 2023
  • ...1, the internet [[zine]] ''[[e-Zombie]]''). Additionally, he published ''[[Fantasy and Weird Fiction]]'', 1938–1939; ''[[Yearbook of Science]]'', ''[[FANEWS ...] (both in history and the [[club]]). He was part of the original [[Vulcan Publications]]. He and his then wife, [[Jane Tucker]], organized the 1942 [[Bloomington
    21 KB (3,272 words) - 10:51, 12 April 2024
  • 2.02 [[Best Novel]]: A science fiction or fantasy novel appearing for the first time as a hard cover book, or appearing for t ...back. The terms "complete novel, or "novel", "[[science fiction]]", and "[[fantasy]]" are not further defined; it is assumed that convention committees can be
    30 KB (4,968 words) - 13:53, 20 October 2023
  • '''LASFS''', the '''Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society''', originally the [[Los Angeles]] Branch of the [[Science Fiction ==Affiliated Publications==
    45 KB (6,896 words) - 02:08, 16 November 2023
  • '''FAPA''' ("FAP-uh"), the '''Fantasy Amateur Press Association''', the oldest [[fan]] [[apa]] in the world, dist * {{fanzineindex|name=Fantasy Amateur|dir=FantasyAmateur}}.
    38 KB (6,214 words) - 17:28, 19 April 2024
  • ...[[Conrad H. Ruppert]], a fan of the 1930s noted for the excellence of his publications'''.]] This list was published in [[Julius Unger]]'s [[fanzine]] ''[[Fantasy Fiction Field]] Nycon Review'' in June 1942 See {{link | website=https://fa
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  • * SF & Fantasy Program [[Tom Whitmore]] * Fantasy Games Program [[Tim Szczesuil]]
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  • * [[Ed Meskys]] -- ''[[The Avenger]]'', ''[[A. Merrit's Fantasy Magazine (Meskys)]]'', ''[[Air Wonder Stories (Meskys)]]'', ''[[Avon Scienc ...he Spectator was published, during Coslet’s quasi-mixed-up-incumbency. Ali publications during this Jammerzeit were postmailed, thus disqualified.
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  • ...1954 with renewed interest in fandom as a community, exemplified in such publications as ''[[The Enchanted Duplicator]]'' and the rise of weekly and biweekly [[ ...too much [[correspondence]], but after [[Science Fantasy Bulletin|SCIENCE FANTASY BULLETIN]] #13 came out, I could tell a marked meta­morphosis was overtaki
    24 KB (4,009 words) - 06:59, 14 August 2023
  • * {{fanzineindex |name=TAFF publications|dir=TAFF}}. ...rkplugged by [[Ackerman]].) Early in 1953 [[Don Ford]] and the [[CFG|Cinci Fantasy Group]] started a fund to bring [[Anglofan]] [[Norm Ashfield]] to the [[Phi
    20 KB (2,700 words) - 16:46, 1 May 2024
  • ...ng" of [[Sgt. Saturn]] was hailed; and Al Warren picked his ten favorite [[Fantasy|fantasies]]. In addition, the first issue contained "Pillar of Fire", an [[ ...agazine's most regular contributors, inaugurated a new subject with his "[[Fantasy]] vs. [[Science Fiction]]," and Rapp himself wrote an excellent article on
    41 KB (6,356 words) - 06:43, 21 February 2024
  • Major projects included the [[Fantasy Showcase Tarot Deck]] and the [[History of Worldcons Exhibit]]. ...n 1984, Bruce and [[Elayne Pelz]] celebrated a decade in Tower 6. '''Tower Publications''' was Bruce’s [[publishing house]].
    22 KB (3,565 words) - 09:01, 18 December 2023
  • * {{fanzineindex|name=Saint Fantony Publications |dir=Saint_Fantony}}. ...who in answer to this call invented St. Fantony. This was to be a medieval fantasy that they thought would amuse and entertain the Americans."
    36 KB (5,924 words) - 12:48, 10 April 2024
  • ===Science Fiction/Fantasy/Horror Films of 1936:=== ...ere articles in both, as well as elsewhere, and these appear later in this publications – LHW]
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  • ...rt: make the charges fairly stiff, so that the extra work you put into the publications because of the ads is well repaid. ...displaced by Gully Foyle; and then the whole crew of Sciencefictional and Fantasy characters drinking beer at the base of the monument. [[Domingo Orejudos]]'
    59 KB (10,318 words) - 13:50, 20 October 2023