Difference between revisions of "Yearbooks"

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Line 6: Line 6:
 
  Year || Title || Compiler  
 
  Year || Title || Compiler  
 
1938 ||''[[Yearbook of 1938]]'' ||[[Bob Tucker]]  
 
1938 ||''[[Yearbook of 1938]]'' ||[[Bob Tucker]]  
1939 ||''[[1939 Yearbook of Science, Weird & Fantasy Fiction]]'' ||[[Bob Tucker]]  
+
1939 ||''[[1939 Yearbook of Science, Weird & Fantasy Fiction]]'' || [[Bob Tucker]], [[Jane Tucker]], [[Damon Knight]] and [[Harry Warner, Jr.]]
 
1940 ||''[[1940 Yearbook of Science, Fantasy & Weird Fiction]]'' ||[[Franklyn Brady]] and [[A. Ross Kuntz]]  
 
1940 ||''[[1940 Yearbook of Science, Fantasy & Weird Fiction]]'' ||[[Franklyn Brady]] and [[A. Ross Kuntz]]  
 
1941 ||''[[FFF's Yearbook of Science, Weird & Fantasy Fiction for 1941]]'' ||[[Julius Unger]]  
 
1941 ||''[[FFF's Yearbook of Science, Weird & Fantasy Fiction for 1941]]'' ||[[Julius Unger]]  

Revision as of 15:23, 27 October 2021

Yearbooks were an old tradition which, perforce, fell out of favor when the field grew so much as to make them impractical.

See also: Annual.

It's worth noting that Gardner Dozois's long-running Year's Best series had up to 100 pages of introduction which covered many of the topics of a Yearbook.

From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959
In Third Fandom and previously, annual indexes of proz and listings of fmz were published under this general name. (One of these, in 1939, even appeared on the newsstands...in Bloomington, IL, that is.) Of the Yearbook in a wider sense, the review of all activity in our field during a year, memorable examples were the two Fantasy Reviews of Joe Kennedy ("Vampire Yearbooks") for 1945 and '46, and the LASFS/Fantasy Foundation production for 1948. The practice died out after 1948, but Guy Terwilleger's Best of Fandom collections were sort of yearbooks for 1957-58, and the FANNISH, annish of newszine FANAC, was a revival of the full-coverage style.

Publishing