Difference between revisions of "Oopsla!"

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The article "The Iron Curtain Drops" written by Bob Tucker of ''Oopsla!'' issue 9, 1953, was reprinted in Terry Carr's [[Entropy (U.S.A.)|Entropy]].
 
The article "The Iron Curtain Drops" written by Bob Tucker of ''Oopsla!'' issue 9, 1953, was reprinted in Terry Carr's [[Entropy (U.S.A.)|Entropy]].
  
[[Science Fantasy News]] said of ''Oopsla!', "...has some of the best fan writers, is one of the ’zines no self-respecting fan should miss."  
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[[Science Fantasy News]] said ''Oopsla!'', "...has some of the best fan writers, is one of the ’zines no self-respecting fan should miss."  
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==

Revision as of 03:14, 2 October 2011

Oopsla! is a science fiction fanzine by Gregg Calkins.

Thirty issues of Oopsla! were published in the U.S.A., beginning in the early 1950s and ending in 1960.

Contributors included Ron Bennett (Ploy), John Berry (Pot Pourri), Robert Bloch, Vernon L. McCain (Wastebasket), with his column, "The Mark Of McCain", Bob Tucker (Le Zombie), Harry Warner, Jr. (Horizons), with his column "All Our Yesterdays", and Walt Willis (Hyphen), with his column, "The Harp That Once Or Twice".

Contributors of art work were Dan Adkins (Sata Illustrated), Ray Capella, Margaret Dominick (as 'DEA'), Ray Nelson, Bill Rotsler, and Arthur Thomson.

The article "Bah! Humbug!" written by Robert Bloch for Oopsla! issue 25, 1958, was included in the fanzine yearbook, The Best of Fandom 1958.

The article "The Iron Curtain Drops" written by Bob Tucker of Oopsla! issue 9, 1953, was reprinted in Terry Carr's Entropy.

Science Fantasy News said Oopsla!, "...has some of the best fan writers, is one of the ’zines no self-respecting fan should miss."

External Links