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  • '''Fan''' was a science fiction fanzine by Walter Daugherty. Issue 5 appeared in October 1945, and featured a fan census.
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  • [[Image:Fan-Tods_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Fan-Tods'''<br/>Issue 13 Winter 1946]] '''Fan-Tods''' is a science fiction fanzine by Norman F. Stanley.
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  • [[Image:Fan_Artisan.jpg|right|frame|'''Fan Artisan''' <br/>Issue One 1948]]‎ '''Fan Artisan''' was a science fiction fanzine edited by [[Jerri Bullock]] and Ru
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  • [[Image:Si_Fan_4_copy.jpg‎ |right|frame|'''Si-Fan''' <br/>Issue 4 1961 <br/>Cover art by Dave Prosser ]] '''Si-Fan''' was a science fiction fanzine published by Gerald "Jerry" Page and Jerry
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  • [[Image:Fan_Slants_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Fan Slants''' <br/>Issue 1 1943 <br/>Cover Art by Ronald Clyne ]] '''Fan Slants''' was a science fiction fanzine co-edited by Mel Brown and Mike Fer
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  • [[Image:Main-1_copy.jpg|200px|frame|right|'''Psycho No1 Fan''']]‎ '''Psycho No1 Fan''' is a zine by [[Seth Bogart]].
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  • [[Image:The_Fantasy_Fan.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Fantasy Fan'''<br/> October 1934]] '''The Fantasy Fan''' was a fanzine by Charles D. Hornig published in the 1930s in Elizabeth,
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  • [[Image:Fan-Fare33-cv_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Fan-Fare'''<br/> Vol. 3 No. 3 1953 <br/>Cover art by Charles Momberger ]] '''Fan-Fare''' was a science fiction and weird fiction fanzine by [[W. Paul Ganley
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  • [[Image:FanToSee2-cv_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Fan To See''' <br/>Issue 2 1953 <br/>Cover art by Joseph W. Miller]] '''Fan To See''' was a science fiction fanzine by Larry Touzinsky.
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  • '''The Science Fantasy Fan''' was a science fiction and fantasy fanzine by Arthur F. Williams publishe ''The Science Fantasy Fan'' first appeared in April 1941 in wartime UK. Fans of the fanzine soon dubb
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  • [[Image:TNFF834997_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The National Fantasy Fan'''<br/>February 1983]] ...asy Fan''' was a science fiction fanzine published by the National Fantasy Fan Federation.
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  • ...lous-Faust-Fan-zine-vol-1-no-2_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Fabulous Faust Fan-Zine'''<br/>Volume 1, No. 2 December 1948<br/>Cover art by William F. Nolan '''The Fabulous Faust Fan-Zine''' was a fanzine edited and published by Darrell C. Richardson.
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  • '''The Science Fiction Fan''' was a fanzine published by Olon F. Wiggins. ...g/fanzines/ScienceFictionFan/index.html Issue 48 of '''The Science Fiction Fan''' online]
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Page text matches

  • [[Image:Main-1_copy.jpg|200px|frame|right|'''Psycho No1 Fan''']]‎ '''Psycho No1 Fan''' is a zine by [[Seth Bogart]].
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  • ...was coined. Other terms had included "amzine" (amateur magazine),"fmzine" (fan magazine) and "fanmag". ...th the introduction of inexpensive [[mimeograph]]s, there were hundreds of fan magazines dedicated to movie stars, as well as hundreds more dedicated to i
    2 KB (250 words) - 20:39, 28 November 2015
  • ...(n.d.) was a letter[[zine]] for the Roddenberry Fan Fund, a ''Star Trek'' fan club, published by Teresa Morris in Culburra, South Australia.
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  • [[Image:The_Fantasy_Fan.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Fantasy Fan'''<br/> October 1934]] '''The Fantasy Fan''' was a fanzine by Charles D. Hornig published in the 1930s in Elizabeth,
    2 KB (357 words) - 19:53, 9 September 2012
  • [[Image:Fan-Tods_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Fan-Tods'''<br/>Issue 13 Winter 1946]] '''Fan-Tods''' is a science fiction fanzine by Norman F. Stanley.
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  • '''Sheryl Birkhead''' is a fanzine editor, writer and fan artist. ...[[The National Fantasy Fan]]. During this time she became best known as a fan artist, and her illustrations have graced the pages, and covers such as [[O
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  • [[Image:Fan_Slants_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Fan Slants''' <br/>Issue 1 1943 <br/>Cover Art by Ronald Clyne ]] '''Fan Slants''' was a science fiction fanzine co-edited by Mel Brown and Mike Fer
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  • ...ning The Pastels fan club, "Friends of the Pastels", and the Pet Shop Boys fan club; and reviews of contemporary bands such as Soft Cell and Stereolab alo
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  • '''Sue Mason''' is a British fan artist. ...an Artist for the years 1997, 1999, and 2000, and the Hugo Award for Best Fan Artist in 2003 and 2005
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  • [[Image:FanToSee2-cv_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Fan To See''' <br/>Issue 2 1953 <br/>Cover art by Joseph W. Miller]] '''Fan To See''' was a science fiction fanzine by Larry Touzinsky.
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  • [[Image:Fan_Artisan.jpg|right|frame|'''Fan Artisan''' <br/>Issue One 1948]]‎ '''Fan Artisan''' was a science fiction fanzine edited by [[Jerri Bullock]] and Ru
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  • ...also served as co-editor for at least two issues of [[The National Fantasy Fan]] in 1953 and 1954. ...ranked her second in the Best Overall Fan category, and fifth in the Best Fan Poet category.
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  • '''Margaret Dominick''' was a fan artist who always signed her work as '''DEA'''. *[[Fan To See]]
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  • '''The Science Fantasy Fan''' was a science fiction and fantasy fanzine by Arthur F. Williams publishe ''The Science Fantasy Fan'' first appeared in April 1941 in wartime UK. Fans of the fanzine soon dubb
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  • ...to her. In 1960, it won the [[Skyrack]] Readers Fan Poll for Best British Fan Publication of the year. In 1961 it placed second, beaten by Parker's most ...U.S.A., [[Parker's Peregrinations]], was voted one of the Top Ten British Fan Publications of the year. Also in 1962, and took over editorship of [[Vecto
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  • '''Trekkie Talk''' was a ''Star Trek'' newsletter published by the Austrek fan club in Melbourne, Victoria. Austrek is the second oldest ''Star Trek'' fan club in Australia, and began publishing ''Trekkie Talk'' in December 1976 T
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  • ...youngsters, started on a carbon-copied fan mag called The Science Fiction Fan. This lasted one issue and we then published several carbon-copied issues o
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  • ...The Mark Lenard International Fan Club, and the Rick Carter International Fan Club. ...Alicia Austen; humour; graffiti; record, comic book and book reviews; and fan club news.
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  • ...lse there was Janie Lamb, R.I.P....Janie Lamb was a tremendously important fan in the '50s and early '60s who is nearly forgotten today, probably because ...n Anne Reid, "Jamie Lamb began a long career of leadership in The National Fan Federation (N3F)."
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  • The article "The Fan in the High Castle" by Lilian Edwards, Christina Lake and Simon Ounsley, al ...he Twins" and stood successfully as joint candidates for the TransAtlantic Fan Fund.
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  • [[Image:Fan-Fare33-cv_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Fan-Fare'''<br/> Vol. 3 No. 3 1953 <br/>Cover art by Charles Momberger ]] '''Fan-Fare''' was a science fiction and weird fiction fanzine by [[W. Paul Ganley
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  • In 1948 she and co-editor Russ Manning released [[Fan Artisan]]. It was the official organ of the group ''The Fantasy Artisans Cl ...other work, and information about requests from fanzine editors for art. ''Fan Artisans'' was the first publication to come from the club.
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  • ...years. In her first year of editorship she entered the [[Skyrack]] Readers Fan Poll as the third favourite fanzine in Britain. ...News]]) published regular installments of his "TAFF Tales" (TransAtlantic Fan Fund Tales), and Andy Young supplied installments of his accounts in Europe
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  • ...es]], [[Black Flames]], [[Chanticleer]], [[En Garde (Ashley)|En Garde]], [[Fan]], [[Guteto]], [[Ichor]], [[Le Zombie]], [[Nova (1940s)|Nova]], [[Shangri L During the 1940s, Jack Riggs was an active fan who attended the February 1945 Boskone Convention in Boston, sponsored by T
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  • '''Fan''' was a science fiction fanzine by Walter Daugherty. Issue 5 appeared in October 1945, and featured a fan census.
    1 KB (196 words) - 15:50, 14 July 2014
  • ...ional Fantasy Fan Federation, or N3F as it was commonly referred to, was a fan-run organization which was started in the U.S.A. in 1941, and the same year ...st issue of ''Bonfire'' with the first issue titled ''The National Fantasy Fan'' (#4.1), which was edited by Evans. According to the NFFF official website
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  • ...or Best Fan Artist and the Fan Activity Achievement Award (FAAns) for Best Fan Artist - Humour Award for 1977.
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  • ...as voted Best British Fanzine for the year 1961 by the [[Skyrack]] Readers Fan Poll. ...homson's columns from [[Ploy]], his covers for [[Hyphen]], excerpts from [[Fan BEMS]], 62 cartoons, and 63 illustrations, as well as articles and other ar
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  • ...gins also published [[The Science Fiction Fan (U.S.A.)|The Science Fiction Fan]].
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  • '''Hudson Luce''' was a [[zine]] fan and publisher from Cincinnati, OH. He published exactly one issue of the [[ ...e zine back to life. Luce had no publishing experience, but was a longtime fan of zines, and felt, in true [[DIY]] spirit, that he could keep the small pu
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  • ...tman, Milton Rothman ([[Fantasy Fiction Telegram]], [[The National Fantasy Fan]]) and Bob Tucker ([[Le Zombie]], [[Science Fiction Newsletter]]). ...s as this anonymous fifteenth fan, leading to the expression "Type Fifteen Fan".
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  • ...doll collecting, wacky fan experiences, Cher comics, the Cher Convention, fan cook-offs, impersonator stories, and an advice column called "Ask Cher Scho
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  • ...indsay''' (1921-1996) was a fanzine publisher, writer, and science fiction fan from the UK. ...ritten by [[Walt Willis]] for ''Nebula'', Ethel Lindsay joined the Glascow fan group the Newlands SF club, and immediately began publishing her fanzine [[
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  • Loius "Russ" Russell Chauvenet was a science fiction fan and one of the founders of science fiction 'fandom'. He started the Boston .... and announce our intention to plug 'fanzine' as the best short form of 'fan magazine.' "''
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  • [[Image:Si_Fan_4_copy.jpg‎ |right|frame|'''Si-Fan''' <br/>Issue 4 1961 <br/>Cover art by Dave Prosser ]] '''Si-Fan''' was a science fiction fanzine published by Gerald "Jerry" Page and Jerry
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  • ...urrent events and news about fan activities, ''Dark Shadows'' festival and fan conventions, video and DVD releases, books, collectibles, CD audio dramas f Also included is the column "Fan News" in which fans keep each other updated on their own work, including zi
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  • ...aclysm]]), [[W. Paul Ganley]] (writing as Toby Duane) ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), and Lee Gann.
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  • ...([[Loki]], [[Beowulf]], [[Sun Spots]]), Jack Speer ([[The National Fantasy Fan]]), and Bob Tucker ([[Le Zombie]], [[Science Fiction Newsletter]]).
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  • ...ou ([[Phlotsam]]), [[W. Paul Ganley]] (as Toby Duane) ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), Claude Hall ([[Muzzy]]), Walt Klein, Al Leverentz ([[Grotesque (Le ...t on to publish [[Ignatz]] and [[Torrents]] and was the art director for [[Fan To See]]. She later co-edited the zine [[Churn]] with Art Rapp ([[Spacewarp
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  • '''Tetto''' is a typical [[fanzine|fan zine]] about Transmission steel towers published by IWAFUCHI Megumi from 20
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  • ...lso voted 'Best Fanzine Report' for the same year. Ella herself was voted 'Fan Personality of the Year' for 1962. ...ason for wanting to attend the Seattle Worldcon, one that involved Seattle fan, Wally Weber ([[Cry of the Nameless]]). As [[Harry Warner, Jr.]] explains:
    2 KB (360 words) - 13:03, 22 August 2013
  • ...ina Lake]], of the 1980s fanzine [[This Never Happens]]. The article, "The Fan in the High Castle" by Lilian Edwards, Christina Lake and Simon Ounsley, fr ...he Twins" and stood successfully as joint candidates for the TransAtlantic Fan Fund.
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  • Williams had previously published [[The Science Fantasy Fan]] in early 1941, but had fell ill and needed to abandon his publication wh Williams was a well regarded fan artist whose work had appeared in [[Futurian War Digest]] and [[Zenith]], a
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  • ...ess Association| APA]] participant. He twice won the [[Hugo Award for Best Fan Writer]]. ...nown as Best LetterHack, is now called The Harry Warner Jr. Award for Best Fan Correspondent.
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  • ...is a Bay Area-based Fan Artist who has twice won the [[Hugo Award for Best Fan Artist]].
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  • ...he first issue was released in 1950 in North Tonawanda, New York, U.S.A. ''Fan-Fare'' was published from 1950-1954, reaching at least three volumes of iss During the run of ''Fan-Fare'', Ganley also released [[Snowflakes in the Sun]], a one-issue-only p
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  • In 1958, Vince Clarke wrote, "...new British publishing fan Bobbie Wild probably ran away with the year's honours in material, publishi ...[[Skyrack]] Fan Poll for 1962. Roberta Gray was voted one of the ten best Fan Writers for the same year.
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  • This humor zine featured [[comic]]s, clip art and celebrity fan fiction about such folk heroes as Buddy Hackett and, The Fonz.
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  • ...Theme''; the column "Hammer and Stake", with ''Dark Shadows'' news items; fan fiction "Curse of Dark Shadows" Part One; reviews of the ''Dark Shadows'' p ...th", featuring cast member David Selby; regular column "Hammer and Stake"; fan fiction "Curse of Dark Shadows", Part Two; plus word search.
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  • ...Widner''' (sometime written as R Twidner, born 1918) is a science fiction fan and zine publisher. ...ght ([[Snide]]), was responsible for the formation of the National Fantasy Fan Federation. His current [[Fantasy Amateur Press Association| FAPA]] zine [[
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  • ...]), [[W. Paul Ganley]] (as himself and as Toby Duane) ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), A.W. Haddon, Orville W. Mosher, and Ev Winne. ''Tyrann'' was a member of "Fanvariety Enterprises", an affiliation of fan publishers put together by Max Keasler and Bill Venable. It included such p
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  • ...e Outlander]], [[Shangri L'Affaires]]), Jack Speer ([[The National Fantasy Fan]]), Robert L. Stein, [[Genevieve K. Stephens]] ([[Loki]]), Gilbert Swenson,
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  • ...t Evans ([[Nova (1940s)|Nova]], [[The Timebinder]], [[The National Fantasy Fan]]), Burton Satz, and Charles Wilgus. ...ol McKinney ([[Deviant]]), Art Rapp ([[Spacewarp]], [[The National Fantasy Fan]]), Jan Sadler ([[SLANder]]), [[Walt Willis]] ([[Hyphen]]).
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  • ...:NikitasBoot1.jpg|200px|thumb|left]]Nikita's Boot was a somewhat political fan/scene zine produced in 1993 in Milwaukee, WI.
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  • ...die, Paul Enevers, [[W. Paul Ganley]] as 'Toby Duane' ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), R.H. Orrey, Russell Watkins and [[Charles Wells]] ([[Fiendetta]]). ...led back to reveal such surprises as a multi-coloured and carefully folded fan in issue 1, and pop-up hands in issue 11.
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  • ...d went to "The Unknown Faned" who published ''The Canadian Science Fiction Fan'' in 1936. The Awards were present at VCon in Vancouver, British Columbia. ...en from write-in suggestions, and were: Best Fan Artist: Scott Patri; Best Fan Writer: Taral Wayne; Best Loc Hack: Michael John Bertrand; Best Fanzine: [
    2 KB (341 words) - 21:34, 16 March 2014
  • ...ateur Press Association]], ERB-APA, N'APA (the APA of the National Fantasy Fan Federation), Alarums & Excursions, and The Connection. He currently publish From 2009 to 2010, he was the editor of [[The National Fantasy Fan]]. He serves as official editor of [[.zap!!]], the [[Amateur Press Associat
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  • ...sst. ed., writer, slave"; [[Walt Willis]], "assoc. ed., ghod, damon knight fan"; [[Harry Warner, Jr.]], "fanzinest retired, and staff consultant"; [[Arthu ...([[Leprechaun]], [[Science*Fiction]]), Jack Speer ([[The National Fantasy Fan]]), Harry Warner, Jr. ([[Horizons]]), and Walt Willis ([[Hyphen]]).
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  • [[Phil Clarke]] was the [[editor]] of Nuneaton, England fan[[zine]] [[Damn Latin]].
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  • ...8, from September 1953, calls it,'' "A rather entertaining new face on the fan scene, with stories by Celia Block and Lew A. Gaff, a column by Marian Cox, Ray Thompson was a fan artist and writer who contributed to fanzines such as [[Vega]] and wrote th
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  • '''Robbie Bourget''' is a fanzine editor and fan convention organizer.
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  • ...ing to ''Partners In Wonder'' by Eric Lief Davin, "In January, 1946 female fan Jim-E. Daugherty published a feminist science fiction fanzine entitled ''Bl ...g with [[Atres Artes]], [[Chanticleer]], [[En Garde (Ashley)|En Garde]], [[Fan]], [[Guteto]], [[Ichor]], [[Le Zombie]], [[Lethe]], [[Nova (1940s)|Nova]],
    1 KB (206 words) - 04:42, 28 June 2014
  • ...tyle adventure stories starring a fictionalized version of science fiction fan Wrai Ballard. Wrai Ballard, at the time, was the official editor of SAPS.
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  • [[Image:TNFF834997_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The National Fantasy Fan'''<br/>February 1983]] ...asy Fan''' was a science fiction fanzine published by the National Fantasy Fan Federation.
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  • ...media science fiction fanzine published by the As Yet Unnamed Doctor Who Fan Club of Newfoundland (AYUDWFCON) from St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada. ''The Whostorian '' is now a podcast and has also produced fan films, and other activities.
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  • ...a member of the Boston Science Fiction Society, and also ran the National Fan Federation's Writer's Bureau. She started a small group for writers that ha ...was the recipient of the 1967 Kaymar Award, given by The National Fantasy Fan Federation.
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  • The comic strip "Dodd's Fan-Dome" was by George Metzger. ...ation that was to cause him some trouble later in the decade when American fan Dave Jenrette 'revealed' him to be a hoax."
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  • ...h ([[Fantasias]]), [[W. Paul Ganley]] as 'Toby Duane' ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), Dean Grennell ([[Grue]], [[Filler]]), Raymond Palmer ([[The Comet] ...asy Bulletin'' was a member of "Fanvariety Enterprises", an affiliation of fan publishers put together by Max Keasler and Bill Venable. It included such p
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  • '''Old Toys''' is a science fiction collection of the fan writings of [[Taral Wayne]]. ...ue of [[BSFan]] #17, edited by Elaine Stiles; "The Ghost On My Bed", and "Fan Loon's Lives" from the February 1986 issue of [[New Toy]] #1, edited by Tar
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  • ...shamedly a Duffzine)..." At this time she was running for DUFF (Down Under Fan Fund). ...'', and Christine published [[The Flight of the Kangaroo]], her Down Under Fan Fund trip report on her visit to North America, in 1976.
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  • ...each issue of ''The Damned Patrol'', the organ of what Gibson called 'the Fan Squadron'." The membership of the Fan Squadron changed as each issue came out and, over the course of the run of
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  • ...4-December 1997) was the [[fanzine]] of the Official Prisoner Cell Block H Fan Club - Australasia; published bimonthly in twelve issues in Westmead, NSW.
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  • W. Paul Ganley also published the science fiction fanzine [[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]] during the 1950s. Later in the 1970s he returned to zine publishing
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  • ...on, plus other contributions from [[W. Paul Ganley]] ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]) (writing as Toby Duane), and Dr. David H. Keller.
    1 KB (213 words) - 07:27, 4 November 2011
  • ...r ([[The National Fantasy Fan]]); this issue also included reviews of many fan publications, including [[Forrest J Ackerman]]'s poemzine ''Outlandi'' and
    1 KB (217 words) - 00:41, 2 August 2012
  • ...ich made top national trading lists, was the nucleus of a small but active fan group at Tulane University, was a friend of both Rosel G. Brown and Daniel
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  • ...1958, ''Rambler'' began as ''Fantasy and Jazz Fan'', then simply as ''Jazz Fan'' , and it was with issue 10 that the title became ''Rambler''.
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  • He followed this zine with [[Psycho No1 Fan]]. [[Janelle Hessig]] contributed artwork. * [[Psycho No1 Fan]]
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  • At the same time, she was also the Art Director for the fanzine [[Fan To See]] by Larry Touzinsky, which began publishing in 1953. *[[Fan To See]]
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  • .... Wollheim''' was a fanzine publisher, science fiction editor, writer, and fan from New York, U.S.A. *[[Fan Slants]]
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  • '''Niall Harrison''' is a British science fiction fan writer often identified with ''Third Row Fandom''.
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  • ...h "The Frog in God' s Throat"; [[Sheryl Birkhead]] ([[The National Fantasy Fan]]); Donn Brazier ([[Title]]), with “Stop Shaking the Boat—You’re Maki Bruce D. Arthurs also published the fan anthology [[Fanthology 75]].
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  • ...luded the categories Best Fanzine, Best Single Issue, Best Fanwriter, Best Fan Artist, and Best Article.
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  • ...This fanzine was one of the very early fan publications devoted mainly to fan activities.
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  • Contributors of writing included [[W. Paul Ganley]] ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), Lee Hoffman, Betty Howard, Ken Krueger ([[Abortions]], [[Space Tra
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  • ...1980s. it featured book and convention reviews, editorials, articles, and fan fiction, but mainly concentrated on episodes from Pat's life. The first issue appeared in Spring 1988. It included the fan fiction story "Our 21st Century Writers" by Allen Varney.
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  • ...ion|VOMbozine]], by Forrest J Ackerman and Myrtle Douglas (Morojo); [[Wolf Fan]], and others. Featured were short stories and fan fiction by Ray Bradbury ([[Futuria Fantasia]]), Jay Edwards, Jack Riggs, an
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  • ...hilip Jose Farmer, [[W. Paul Ganley]] as 'Toby Duane' ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), Gene Hunter, Clive Jackson, David H. Keller, Barbara Kurtiak, [[Li Cover art was by Ralph Rayburn Phillips (No 1), [[Jerri Bullock]] ([[Fan Artisan]]) (No. 2), [[Lee Hoffman]] ([[Quandry]]), (No 3), Ben Jaxon (No 4)
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  • ...il at least October 1952, after which Ray C. Higgs ([[The National Fantasy Fan]], [[Arion]], [[Fantasia (Higgs)|Fantasia]]) assumed the editorship. ...Donald E. Gates was club President and Honey Wood ([[The National Fantasy Fan]]) was Vice-President. In 1954, K. Martin Carlson ([[The Kay-Mar Trader]])
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  • '''Charles Wells''' is a fanzine publisher and fan artist from the U.S.A. Charles Wells began his fan published career in Savannah, Georgia, U.S.A., with ''Fiendetta''. At least
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  • McCormick was named the Poet Laureate of the National Fantasy Fan Federation in 1951. *[[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]
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  • ...gust Derleth, Frederick Feirstein, [[W. Paul Ganley]] ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), Hyacinthe Hill, Orma McCormick ([[Starlanes]]), Vernon Payne, Edit
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  • Issue 9 was subtitled ''The Old Fan's Almanac'' and was a parody of ''The Farmer's Almanac'', and included the
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  • '''Mae Strelkov''' was a fanzine writer and fan artist. In the 1970s, she was the recipient of a special 'fan fund' to bring her to the U.S.A. for the 1974 Worldcon.
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  • ...reprinted articles from old fanzines that the editors thought important to fan history; among these articles was writing by Charles Burbee, F. Towner Lane ..., Dave Rike, Ron Ellik and Pete Graham. Carl Brandon became a very popular fan within the SF community, whose articles appeared in several fanzines of the
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  • ...ne edited by [[Chris Garcia]] as a part of his race for the Trans-Atlantic Fan Fund.
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  • '''The Science Fiction Fan''' was a fanzine published by Olon F. Wiggins. ...g/fanzines/ScienceFictionFan/index.html Issue 48 of '''The Science Fiction Fan''' online]
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  • Other contributions from other issues include fan fiction by Harlan Ellison ([[Science Fantasy Bulletin]]), and an article by
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  • ...lous-Faust-Fan-zine-vol-1-no-2_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Fabulous Faust Fan-Zine'''<br/>Volume 1, No. 2 December 1948<br/>Cover art by William F. Nolan '''The Fabulous Faust Fan-Zine''' was a fanzine edited and published by Darrell C. Richardson.
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  • .... News and opinion of the Worldcon artshows, survey, advice and opinion on fan and pro artwork, layout, mimeo colourwork, etc etc. Highly recommended." In his biography for Fan Guests of Honor Bjo and John Trimble for "Conjosé", the 2002 Worldcon, Tom
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  • Alpajpuri (aka Paul Novitski) was a well known science fiction and fantasy fan artist . He edited his fanzine ''Carandaith'' in number of locations, inc ...and rear cover by John Ingham. It contained "The She-Devil & Dr. Webster", fan fiction by Walter Wentz; and "Bored of the Rings", commentary by Alpajpuri.
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  • ''Fanthology '87'' is an anthology of fan writing that appeared in various fanzines previous to 1987. It was publishe ...er Than Thou]], "The Cracked Eye" by Gary Hubbard from [[Trap Door]], "The Fan in the High Castle" by [[Lilian Edwards]], [[Christina Lake]], and Simon Ou
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  • ...e idea of Joyce as "High Priestess", which seemed to cool down a potential fan feud.
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  • ...Fortier ([[Starlight (1941)|Starlight]]), Charles D. Hornig ([[The Fantasy Fan]]), and Gus Willmorth ([[Fantasy Advertiser]]). Also featured were poems by ...g with [[Atres Artes]], [[Black Flames]], [[Chanticleer]], [[En Garde]], [[Fan]], [[Guteto]], [[Ichor]], [[Le Zombie]], [[Lethe]], [[Nova (1940s)|Nova]],
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  • ...cutus''' was a media science fiction [[fanzine]] published by the Next Gen Fan Club in Canberra, ACT.
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  • ...o Award as "Outstanding Actifan" (active fan). He was nominated for a best fan writer Hugo in 1969 and two retro-Hugos in the same category (in 2001, 2004 ...e Enchanted Duplicator" (1954), co-written with Bob Shaw, an allegory of a fan's quest to produce the perfect fanzine.
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  • ...he]], [[Black Flames]], [[Chanticleer]], [[En Garde (Ashley)|En Garde]], [[Fan]], [[Guteto]], [[Ichor]], [[Le Zombie]], [[Nova (1940s)|Nova]], [[Shangri L ...Fantasy Aspects]], a fanzine devoted to reprints, for The National Fantasy Fan Federation. Terry Carr, in the first issue of [[Entropy (U.S.A.)|Entropy]],
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  • ...War Digest]]), Paul H. Spencer, Charles R. Tanner ([[The National Fantasy Fan]]), [[Eydthe Eyde|Tigrina]] ([[Hymn To Satan]], [[Vice Versa]]), Bob Tucker ...with [[Atres Artes]], [[Black Flames]], [[En Garde (Ashley)|En Garde]], [[Fan]], [[Guteto]], [[Ichor]], [[Le Zombie]], [[Lethe]], [[Nova (1940s)|Nova]],
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  • ...al. It includes a short essay about being an empowered female heavy metal fan.
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  • ...Ganley]], writing of the 1950s when he was publishing [[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]], says of Al Leverentz, "I had previously met Al Leverentz, who was a
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  • ...first Down Under Fan Fund (DUFF), a fund which helps send a North American fan to Australia and New Zealand (or vice versa in alternate years). Upon her r
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  • '''John Purcell''' (March 22, 1954 - ) is a fan writer and [[fanzine]] editor currently living in College Station, Texas, U ...ut issue was dated March, 2007, and featured a cover by Hugo Award winning fan artist, Brad Foster, who also produced the cover for the first annish of [[
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  • "Bill Watson was a San Francisco fan of the forties; his fanzine DIABLERIE appeared on ..., Milton A. Rothman ([[Fantasy Fiction Telegram]], [[The National Fantasy Fan]]), Bob Tucker ([[Le Zombie]], [[Science Fiction Newsletter]]), Graph Walde
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  • ...is issue reprints three poems by Robert E. Howard - two from [[The Fantasy Fan]], the other from [[The Phantagraph]].
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  • ...Revelations is a zine about Lola's world view, which often features music, fan fiction drabbles, and the comic ''Cthulhu Knows Best''.
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  • ...ucing beautiful covers which were recognized by the [[Checkpoint]] Readers Fan Poll, notably for ''Zimri'' #6, awarded Best Fanzine Cover of 1974. *[[The Science Fantasy Fan]]
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  • ....has some of the best fan writers, is one of the ’zines no self-respecting fan should miss."
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  • ...e idea of Joyce as "High Priestess", which seemed to cool down a potential fan feud. ...issue to date, was released February 2006. Included are Joyce's memoirs, a fan history of the days of ''ODD'' fanzine, the fans in St. Louis, Missouri and
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  • Contributions of writing included "The Fan Who Hated Quotecards" by Terry Carr, who was publishing [[Innuendo]] at tha *[http://stromata.tripod.com/id319.htm "The Fan Who Hated Quotecards" by Terry Carr, from '''Goojie Publications''']
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  • ...omiley Fan Veterans & Scottish Dancing Society". It was filled with absurd fan fiction stories, and puns, poems, and other word play of a surrealistic nat Issue two appeared November 1954 with more fan fiction and the the addition of advertisements for "Widower's", a fictitio
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  • '''Juanita Coulson''' is a zine editor, fan artist, writer, and musician. Juanita Coulson was active as a fan artist during the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s and contributed illustrations to
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  • *[[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)]]
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  • ''Vampire'' has been cited by writers and fan historians as being popular and a focal point of the period immediately fol ...John Holbrook Kaley, Sam Moskowitz ([[New Fandom]]), Norman F. Stanley ([[Fan-Tods]]), Dale Tarr, [[Eydthe Eyde|Tigrina]] ([[Hymn To Satan]]), Al Weinst
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  • ...; "The Old One" by [[W. Paul Ganley]] (as Toby Duane) ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]) (#5).
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  • ...993-1995) was a science fiction [[fanzine]] published by the ''Star Trek'' fan club Trek Australis, in Sydney, NSW.
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  • ...pear in Canada (the first is reported to be [[The Canadian Science Fiction Fan]] in 1936, but its existence can't be confirmed), and perhaps the second zi *[[The Science Fiction Fan (U.S.A.)|The Science Fiction Fan]]
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  • ...er, [[W. Paul Ganley]] (as Toby Duane and as himself) ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), Richard E. Geis ([[Psychotic]]), Dean Grennell ([[Filler]], [[Grue ''Starlanes'' was a member of "Fanvariety Enterprises", an affiliation of fan publishers put together by Max Keasler and Bill Venable. It included such p
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  • ...Speer and Richard Eney. Contributions include Jack Speer's science fiction fan history, "Up to Now"; "Mutation Or Death", [[John B. Michel]]'s tract for T ...were by James Blish; Redd Boggs; Charles Burbee; Dean Grennell ; "New York Fan History" Part 1 from [[Green Thoughts]], and Part 2 from [[Spacewarp]], by
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  • ...Pannell, Kingsborough Reedley, Darrell C. Richardson ([[The Fabulous Faust Fan-Zine]]), Jim Skrzynski, Ken Slater ([[Vector]]), Edward E. Smith, Norm Stor ...les Eaton, O.G. Estes, John Grossman (''Scientifantasy''), Russ Manning ([[Fan Artisan]]), Ralph Rayburn Phillips, G. Waible.
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  • ...as the creator of the [[comic]] [[Luhey's Doggie Doodles]]. He was an avid fan of [[zine|zines]] and corresponded with numerous zinesters during the '90s.
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  • Cover artists included Jerry Bixby, [[Jerri Bullock]] ([[Fan Artisan]]), Dick Carver, Les Chapman, [[Margaret Dominick (DEA)|Margaret Do ...E.E. Evans, Erik Fennel, W. Paul Ganley as Toby Duane ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), Horace Gold, Vaughn Greene, Jim Haden, Joe E. Hensley, Lee Hoffman
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  • ...ium in the 1950s. It was the official organ of the Antwerp Science Fiction Fan Club. The first issue appeared in Summer 1953. ...nglish-speaking world of the peculiar form of self-expression known as the fan magazine. The editors are two young Belgians who, fortunately, write better
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  • ...Faulkner]] ([[Shangri L'Affaires]]), Eva Firestone ([[The National Fantasy Fan]]), Joe Gibson ([[G2]], [[The Damned Patrol]]), Jim Harmon, Bert Hirschhor ...ch of Fandom'' was a member of "Fanvariety Enterprises", an affiliation of fan publishers put together by Max Keasler and Bill Venable. It included such p
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  • ...makes a strong point in his editorial, particularly so as this particular fan fiction actually seems to be readable, extremely so in fact. Reviews and le ...Publications for 1964, and Charles Platt was voted one of the top British Fan Writers for the same year.
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  • ...ver, Dorothy Quick, Stanley Weinbaum, and Lin Carter. Remember, this is a fan magazine, not a professional publication. The price: ten cents." Cover art was by [[Jerri Bullock]] ([[Fan Artisan]]), with illustrations by Bullock and John Grossman.
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  • ...nd Olon F. Wiggins ([[The Science Fiction Fan (U.S.A.)|The Science Fiction Fan]]).
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  • ...lack markers. The girls interviewed their friend's bands, and had a strong fan base with their following of the (now-defunct) band Atomik Toasters.
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  • [[Jay Crasdan]] (Born Jeremiah Elliott Crasdan, 1970- ) is a fan writer and zine editor born and raised in Evanston, IL and currently living
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  • ...y, Vera L. Eckert, [[W. Paul Ganley]] (as Toby Duane) ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), Clive Jackson, John W. Jakes, Duverne Konrick, Vera Bishop Konrick
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  • Jerry Burge later went on to co-edit [[Si-Fan]], and Ian Macauley went on to edit [[ASPO]]. ''Cosmag'' was a member of "Fanvariety Enterprises", an affiliation of fan publishers put together by Max Keasler and Bill Venable. It included such p
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  • ...aul Medici, Catherine Mintz, Bill Morrison, Gerald W. Page ([[Lore]], [[Si-Fan]]), Simon Perchik, Adam Donaldson Powell, W. Fraser Sandercombe, Ann K. Sch W. Paul Ganley was also the publisher of [[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]] (1950-1954), [[Snowflakes in the Sun]] (1953), Weirdbook (1968-1997)
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  • ...red that this was a FAPA zine. It featured an article entitled "The Female Fan" and a short essay about James Branch Cabell. ...appeared in Spring 1942. It included social commentary, and "Portrait of a Fan", a spoof of Forrest Ackerman (editor of [[Voice of the Imagi-Nation]]) by
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  • ...y Fan]]; [[Unique]]), poetry by C.S. Youd (editor of [[The Fantast]] and [[Fan Dance]]); and illustrations of Poe by Turner, as well as an editorial page ...Cthulhu]]); "The Prospect Before Us", speculative fiction by Marion Eadie; fan news and letters in the "Hot Air" column; and lines from ''Faust'' illustr
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  • ...ng the [[Nova Award for Best Fanzine]] in 1974, and the Checkpoint Readers Fan Poll as Best Fanzine for 1973-1974.
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  • Sub-titled ''Where the Blood Hits the Fan!'', the zine covered the dirtiest and scariest of movies, from exploitation
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  • A big fan of the old Tom Swift novels, Wannop also made a 'special edition' zine call
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  • ...on ([[Science Fantasy Bulletin]]), [[W. Paul Ganley]] ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), Dean Grennell ([[Filler]], [[Grue]]), Lynn A. Hickman ([[TLMA]], [ ''Vega'' was a member of "Fanvariety Enterprises", an affiliation of fan publishers put together by Max Keasler and Bill Venable. It included such p
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  • Along with [[Atres Artes]], [[Black Flames]], [[Chanticleer]], [[Fan]], [[Guteto]], [[Ichor]], [[Le Zombie]], [[Lethe]], [[Shangri L'Affaires]], In 1945, E. Everett Evans became the first editor of [[The National Fantasy Fan]].
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  • ...eased publishing. Starting in 1939, it included short essays, articles and fan art. It was the volatile letter column, however, which made "VOM", as it wa ...es]], [[Black Flames]], [[Chanticleer]], [[En Garde (Ashley)|En Garde]], [[Fan]], [[Guteto]], [[Ichor]], [[Le Zombie]], [[Lethe]], [[Nova (1940s)|Nova]],
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  • ...elle E. Dinwiddie, [[W. Paul Ganley]] (as Toby Duane) ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), Bob Johnson ([[Orb]]), Laura Kinzer, [[Lilith Lorraine]] ([[Challe
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  • ...on ([[IF!]]), Phil Rasch, Oliver Saari, Jack Speer ([[The National Fantasy Fan]]), Ken Tuttle, and [[Walt Willis]] ([[Slant]], [[Hyphen]]). Artists featured were Richard Bergeron ([[Warhoon]]), [[Jerri Bullock]] ([[Fan Artisan]]), Eugene Calewaert ([[Eclipse]]), Terry Carr ([[Innuendo]]), Hen
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  • ...[[The National Fantasy Fan]]), Darrell C. Richardson ([[The Fabulous Faust Fan-Zine]]), Frank Robinson, Dick Ryan, Jerry Sohl, Betty Sullivan, Charles Lat
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  • ...dney Dean, E. Everett Evans ([[Nova (1940s)|Nova]], [[The National Fantasy Fan]]), Malcolm Ferguson, Walter H. Gillings, Bob Gibson, J.T. Gibson, Maurice ..., [[Harry Turner]] ([[Zenith]]) and Arthur Williams ([[The Science Fantasy Fan]], [[Unique]]).
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  • ...Cover, for issues 9, 8 and 10. ''Maya'' issue 3 won the Checkpoint Readers Fan Poll for Best single issue of a British Fanzine in 1972, and Mary Legg won
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  • ...ers, discussions of controversies within the ''Dark Shadows'' community, a fan letter column,and classified ads for ''Dark Shadows'' paraphernalia. More t
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  • The idea was that fan editors, in order to save space, would type in the appropriate number and r ''Filler'' was a Canadian Amateur Fan Publishers (CAFP) zine which, in the 1950s, also included [[A Bas]] by [[Bo
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  • Georgina Ellis began publishing fanzines and producing fan art in the early 1950s in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. ...en January 1955 and September 1956. It was distributed by Canadian Amateur Fan Publishers as well and also contained contributions by Harry Calneck. A 12
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  • ...nce fiction fanzines since the early '50s, and won the Hugo Award for Best Fan Writer in 1968. ...otic]] and [[Science Fiction Review.]] He also has been active in numerous fan events, such as organizing the 1967 World Science Fiction Convention in New
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  • ...her trip to the U.S.A. She was the recipient of "TAFF", the TransAtlantic Fan Fund for 1962, which made it possible for British science fiction fans to v
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  • ...eleased by a small group of around ten schoolgirls who comprised the Sigma fan club.
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  • [[SaBean MoreL]] is a fan [[writer]] from the Chicagoland area currently living in Santa Barbara, Cal
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  • ...lso included was a reprint of [[Donald Wollheim]]'s [[Curious Stories]], a fan magazine that had previously been published in an edition of only 4 copies. ...., Olon F. Wiggins ([[The Science Fiction Fan (U.S.A.)|The Science Fiction Fan]]), Donald A. Wollheim ([[The Phantagraph]]), and others.
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  • ...Hanover Sts - Charleston, S. C. A quarterly which sells for 15¢ a copy FAN FAN is the O-O of no organization."
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  • Hirsh also mentions, "other items in the issue include...D. West's review of fan ...rs ago D. West wrote a comprehensive and generally intelligent overview of fan artists for a fanzine called ''Lagoon'', published by Simon Ounsley. There
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  • According to Len Moffatt's account, "Califania Tales Part Four: the APA Fan's Tales", published in [[No Award]] #13, from 2003; "I had dropped out of F
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  • ...''Futurian War Digest'', the fanzine was hot off the presses; "New British fan magazine to make its appearance recently is GEMINI, put out by Ron Lane, 22 *[http://www.htspweb.co.uk/fandf/romart/het/footnotes/ronlane.htm Manchester Fan '''Ron Lane'''] by [[Harry Turner]]
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  • ...tions by Jack Harness, which included "A Fan Art Folio for People Who Hate Fan Art", "A Short Guide to Norman Wansborough", "For Yielding is Sin", "The Le
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  • ...rticles included Richard Billings, [[W. Paul Ganley]] ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), [[Lee Hoffman]] ([[Quandry]], [[The Chattahoochee, Okefenokee, & O
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  • *[[The National Fantasy Fan]]
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  • ...e, and Venable; fiction by Art Rapp ([[Spacewarp]], [[The National Fantasy Fan]]) and Manly Banister; Letters from Clancy and others; and more.
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  • ...was also one of the co-editors of the long running [[The National Fantasy Fan]] during the late 1940s and early 1950s, and in the 1950s also published th
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  • ...e, bad pop songs and door-to-door scythe salesmen. If you're a Bill Murray fan, you'll love Who Cares. If you think anti-humor is the best humor, you'll l
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  • '''No Award''' is a science fiction [[fanzine]] edited by Los Angeles-based fan [[Marty Cantor]]. ...done in the style of Richard Bergeron ([[Warhoon]]) as a commentary on the fan feud they were at the center of.
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  • ...ed actor's filmographies, articles, comic strip reprints, photographs, and fan art.
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  • Michael H. Cline was well regarded as a fan artist, doing covers for publications such as [[Crypt of Cthulhu]], among o
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  • ...and verse, between Kidd and Ray C. Higgs, editor of [[The National Fantasy Fan]], and later the fanzines [[Arion]], [[Fantasia (Higgs)|Fantasia]], and [[T
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  • ...Brandt, George G. Clarke, Hugo Gernsback, Charles D. Hornig ([[The Fantasy Fan]]), Henry James, "Planet Rambler", A.L. Selikowitz, Vic Shea, T. O'Conor Sl
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  • ...of the stories for ''Knight Shift'' were written by members of the FKFIC-L fan fiction mailing list.
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  • ...tyle adventure stories starring a fictionalized version of science fiction fan Wrai Ballard. Wrai Ballard, at the time, was the official editor of SAPS.
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  • ''Terran Times'' featured articles, reviews, art work, poetry, and fan fiction and, aside from ''Star Trek'', also covered some mainstream science
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  • ...ms, books, cards and journals, and other items. Atomic Books also receives fan mail for cult filmmaker John Waters.
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  • *No. 1: The first issue includes story of how the author became a fan, and reviews of shows from the ''Join Us'' tour
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  • ...950s, Ganley had published the science fiction fanzine [[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]. He returned to publishing in the 1970s with the release of ''Eerie
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  • ...larke ([[Science Fantasy News]]), E. Everett Evans ([[The National Fantasy Fan]]), [[Rory Faulkner]] ([[Shangri L'Affaires]]), [[Nan Gerding]] ([[The Chig ...many installments in various fanzines. This resulted in the Transatlantic Fan Fund (TAFF), which became a tradition in science fiction fandom.
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  • ...anes]]), Charlotte Picard, Art Rapp ([[Spacewarp]], [[The National Fantasy Fan]]), Agatha Grey Southern, Mario Stanza, Patty Tewksbury, Emili A. Thompson, ...later published [[Postways]], a fanzine sponsored by the National Fantasy Fan Federation
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  • ...ibe without doing it an in- justice. It's true satire (which 98 percent of fan satire isn't) and it really should have come out in a college humor mag or In 1953-1954, John Magnus was also editor of [[The National Fantasy Fan]]. From 1952 till 1954 he released ''SF'', and then from 1954 till 1958 Mag
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  • ...Patrizio, and Wally Weber ([[Cry of the Nameless]], [[The National Fantasy Fan]]).
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  • Dwight Decker also published [[True Fan Adventure Theater]] in the 1960s.
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  • ...7, included, among other items, cover art by Jack Gaughan, Sherlock Holmes fan fiction, articles, and an obituary for writer John Kendrick Bangs.
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  • ...irst zine, created when she was eighteen years old. At that time in the SF fan community there were not a lot of women editors and for the first year ''Qu ...both the [[Hugo Award for Best Fan Writer]] and the [[Hugo Award for Best Fan Artist]]. She also won a "Retro Hugo" for "Best Fanzine" for ''Quandry'' in
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  • Decoy was an Australian DeForest Kelley / Leonard "Bones" McCoy fan club, and ''The McCoy Tapes'' was their official bi-monthly newsletter. A t
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  • Subtitled "Fine Fan Fict-Pict", ''Jeet'' was published in Auburn, New York, U.S.A. in the 1970s
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  • ..., called ''My Fair Femmefan'', originally credited to Carl Brandon, a hoax fan created by Terry Carr. ''A Bas'' was a Canadian Amateur Fan Publishers (CAFP) zine which, in the 1950s, also included [[Damn!]] by Norm
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  • ...nd Milton A. Rothman ([[Fantasy Fiction Telegram]], [[The National Fantasy Fan]]).
    1 KB (149 words) - 05:16, 14 September 2012
  • ...he began her long involvement in SF fandom in high school as a literary SF fan, publishing her own fanzine - [[Girl’s own fanzine]], and went on to publ
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  • ...zine but soon became a personal journal listing of all of Lindsay's recent fan activity, such as the fanzines he recently received, and several book revie Contributors of art work included [[Sheryl Birkhead]] ([[The National Fantasy Fan]]), Brad W. Foster, Ian Gunn, Teddy Harvia, and [[Bill Rotsler|William Rots
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  • ...onstellation''' was a ''Star Trek'' [[fanzine]] published by the Westrek fan club in Bentley, Western Australia.
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  • *[[Who's the Boss?]] an erotic fan fiction series featuring Bruce Springsteen (2010)
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  • ...Claude Plum, Alfred W. Purdy, Phil Rasch, Graham Stone, Larry Touzinsky ([[Fan To See]]), Wally Weber ([[Cry of the Nameless]]), Neil Wood, and Paul Wysko ''Vanations'' was a member of "Fanvariety Enterprises", an affiliation of fan publishers put together by Max Keasler and Bill Venable. It included such p
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  • ...was also one of the co-editors of the long running [[The National Fantasy Fan]] during the late 1940s and early 1950s, and in the 1950s also published th
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  • ...ry 2003, mentions that Sheldon Deretchin was one of the many guests at the fan apartment/'slan-shack'/meeting place called "The Dive" where he, Dick and P
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  • ''SF'' was a member of "Fanvariety Enterprises", an affiliation of fan publishers put together by Max Keasler and Bill Venable. It included such p In 1953-1954, John Magnus was also editor of [[The National Fantasy Fan]]. From 1954 till 1958 Magnus published ''Varioso'', and in 1958, he relea
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  • *The FAPA Fan *The Futurian Fan
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  • Art work for ''Triton'' was contributed by [[Jerri Bullock]] ([[Fan Artisan]]) and [[Bill Rotsler|William Rotsler]].
    1 KB (167 words) - 18:57, 4 June 2012
  • ...53 till 1955. She also published [[Ignatz]] and was the art director for [[Fan To See]]. She later co-edited the zine [[Churn]] with Art Rapp ([[Spacewarp
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  • ...lso publishing [[Aspidistra]] and [[Amor]] at the same time, won for Best Fan Writer in 1974.
    3 KB (377 words) - 02:39, 17 January 2016
  • ...), P. Tex Sigma, Charles R. Tanner (later editor of [[The National Fantasy Fan]]), Dale Tarr, [[Harry Warner, Jr.]] ([[Horizons]]), and Stanley G. Weinbau .... Perhaps her head was quite turned because he was so unlike the "typical" fan. Even taller and handsomer than his fellow Texan, Dale Hart (who was also a
    4 KB (610 words) - 05:58, 7 January 2014
  • Paul Wyszkowski was a fan for several decades, contributing to Norman Browne's [[Vanations]] in the 1
    1 KB (166 words) - 14:32, 8 January 2012
  • ...[Mimosa]], " Being a train driver does not bar one from becoming an active fan, as witness the sometimes-remembered-in-Melbourne James Styles - although I
    1 KB (170 words) - 18:41, 16 July 2012
  • ...49, had an announcement on the cover that the zine was now combined with ''Fan Artisan''.
    3 KB (392 words) - 18:57, 11 May 2013
  • Contents include fan mail,murder articles, Ed Gein, Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path), Dr. Death, Contents include fan mail and zine reviews, murder and assorted violence articles, dust explosiv
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  • In 1974 she won the Hugo Award for 'Best Fan Writer'. ...contribute. By the end of 1977, she had again won the Hugo Award for 'Best Fan Writer'.
    3 KB (432 words) - 21:55, 26 June 2014
  • In 1973, Len and June Moffatt won the Trans-Atlantic Fan Fund for a trip from the U.S.A. to Europe and ''The Moffatt House Abroad''
    1 KB (192 words) - 03:52, 28 March 2013
  • ...of 2007 with submissions and some writing by the creator/editor. Features fan-submitted interviews with (hed) p.e., Cylon Dion, and some death metal acts
    1 KB (176 words) - 20:49, 21 November 2013
  • ...weight intellectual sparring," in his article "The Philosophical Theory of Fan History".
    1 KB (172 words) - 20:45, 17 September 2015
  • ...Society, established by Joanne Burger ([[Pegasus]], [[The National Fantasy Fan]]), H.H. Hollis, Joseph F. Pumilia, Lisa Tuttle, and Bill Wallace in 1969.
    1 KB (167 words) - 04:05, 4 August 2013
  • ...n, Mose Mallette, Norman G. Markham, Mercer M. McDowell, Gerald Page ([[Si-Fan]]), L.E. Preston, E. Hoffman Price, Andrew E. Rothovius, Robert M. Slater,
    1 KB (172 words) - 22:51, 19 August 2011
  • ...blished in 2002 and was about Krissy's tween years being a Bay City Roller fan.
    1 KB (194 words) - 01:14, 22 February 2015
  • ...bert Foster, Carlton L. Frederick, [[W. Paul Ganley]] ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]]), Andrew Garrison, Jack Gaughan, Al HaLevy ([[Rhodomagnetic Digest]] Covers were by Vaughn Bode, John Boland, Jerry Burge ([[Si-Fan]]), Larry Dickison, Diana Paxson, Dennis Smith, and others, with illustrat
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  • ...id-1950s, whose other fanzines included [[The Fantasmith]], ''Fantascience Fan'', ''Mars'',''The Outlaw'', ''Prometheus'', [[Sevagram]], [[Soma]], [[The
    1 KB (177 words) - 17:09, 23 March 2015
  • ...t Evans ([[Nova (1940s)|Nova]], [[The Timebinder]], [[The National Fantasy Fan]]) was Assistant Editor. ...[Light]]), E. Everret Evans ([[Nova (1940s)|Nova]], [[The National Fantasy Fan]]), Joe Gilbert ([[The Southern Star]]), William Groveman ([[Fantaseer]]),
    4 KB (608 words) - 04:46, 28 June 2014
  • ...earing in the list of the [[Skyrack]] Reader's Poll of the Top Ten British Fan Publications in their respective years of publication. As well, she was one
    1 KB (180 words) - 22:35, 9 June 2012
  • ...ut as a comics zine and ended up a scinence fiction zine. The article "The Fan in the High Castle" by Lilian Edwards, Christina Lake and Simon Ounsley, fr
    1 KB (192 words) - 01:35, 27 June 2014
  • ...'' was a media science fiction [[fanzine]] published by the Victoria based fan club Time-Trekkers.
    1 KB (169 words) - 23:08, 25 August 2014
  • ...nadian television series ''Forever Knight''. ''Knightbeat'' featured short fan fiction stories, poetry, and art work.
    1 KB (173 words) - 08:34, 8 March 2012
  • ...merican: Service); a photo of John Fargo, President of the John Wayne Gacy Fan Club; and a letter from preacher Pat Robertson.
    1 KB (188 words) - 22:42, 28 April 2009
  • Puberty Strike was followed by the zine [[Psycho No1 Fan]].
    1 KB (198 words) - 07:58, 27 July 2011
  • ...n-existing fan “Joan W. Carr” who, in reality, was a hoax created by male fan H.P. “Sandy” Sanderson. As a sergeant in the British Army stationed in ...y Ann Bloch, supposedly the 11-year old daughter of SF writer and longtime fan Robert Bloch.
    5 KB (781 words) - 19:42, 5 October 2015
  • ...t Klien, and was the newsletter of the Official International Dark Shadows Fan Club. It was first published in 1970, in the U.S.A.
    1 KB (216 words) - 20:27, 24 August 2014
  • ...)|Chaos]]), John Christopher (Christopher Samuel Youd) ([[The Fantast]], [[Fan Dance]]), and Jean Howard. The issue also included an article on poetry by
    1 KB (179 words) - 16:27, 3 September 2014
  • Jackie Causgrove was a well known fan artist. Eric Meyers, in [[Pixel]] #12, from April 2007, says, "When I recal
    1 KB (195 words) - 01:25, 28 January 2016
  • The fanzine included articles, essays, fan fiction, art work, photographs, poetry,reprints of the ''Dark Shadows'' ser
    1 KB (171 words) - 02:36, 24 February 2024
  • ...Pulp]], [[Six Shooter]], and [[Attitude]], reporting on her Trans Atlantic Fan Fund trip .
    1 KB (186 words) - 01:37, 26 May 2012
  • Linda Blanchard is one of several SF fans who appear in the fan-fiction story, "Visit to a Small Factory" by Marc Ortlieb, which originally
    1 KB (185 words) - 22:47, 16 March 2015
  • ...contributions by C. Christopher Cross, Damon Knight, Robert Lowndes and a fan poll by [[Art Widner]], editor of [[FanFare]].
    1 KB (179 words) - 01:36, 21 July 2011
  • ...r Press Society|SAPS]]. Copies were also published by the National Fantasy Fan Federation for free distribution to its members. Apart from these distribut
    1 KB (203 words) - 03:12, 13 August 2013
  • ...I got his P.O. box address. Being naive, I sent him a copy with a gushing fan letter asking to interview him. Here I was believing that Matt Groening was
    3 KB (547 words) - 17:16, 1 December 2013
  • Appelstein was "a huge fan" of the early Eighties post-punk music scene. In later issues, he set out t
    1 KB (214 words) - 22:00, 29 November 2015
  • ...fandoms, including Sherlock Holmes, and ''Blake's 7''. Each issue featured fan fiction focussing on the various companions of ''Doctor Who'' - after they
    1 KB (202 words) - 20:21, 24 August 2014
  • ...). Tudor's dispatches from the United States during his 1996 TransAtlantic Fan Fund trip were later collated as ''Have Bag, Will Travel''; earlier fanzine
    1 KB (199 words) - 06:28, 14 August 2011
  • '''Fanthology 75''' is a fan anthology edited and published in 1976 by Bruce D. Arthurs.
    1 KB (177 words) - 06:06, 27 June 2014
  • ...0 till 1961. In this same period both John and Bjo Trimble appeared in the fan film ''[[The Musquite Kid Rides Again]]'', based on [[The Ballard Chronicle
    1 KB (200 words) - 19:09, 14 March 2015
  • .... Evans ([[Nova (1940s)|Nova]], [[The Timebinder]], [[The National Fantasy Fan]]), [[Lee Hoffman]] ([[Quandry]]), David H. Keller, [[Lilith Lorraine]] ([[
    1 KB (202 words) - 00:33, 2 September 2012
  • ..., William F. Nolan, J. Pensky, Darrell C. Richardson ([[The Fabulous Faust Fan-Zine]]), Vaughn Green Rivers, Sam Sackett ([[Fantastic Worlds]]), Leland Sa ...f the Nameless]]), August Derluth, Paul Powlesland, and Larry Touzinsky ([[Fan To See]]).
    3 KB (431 words) - 02:08, 19 August 2012
  • ...ard H. Eney ([[A Sense Of FAPA]]), [[W. Paul Ganley]] ([[Fan-Fare (U.S.A.)|Fan-Fare]], [[Eerie Country]]), Jane Gaskell, Harry Harrison, C.C. Hebron, Fran
    3 KB (408 words) - 23:07, 18 September 2015
  • ...1970s, Joanne Burger was also one of the editors of [[The National Fantasy Fan]].
    1 KB (213 words) - 04:13, 8 October 2013
  • ...ing you a chance to send in letters and be actively involved!" It featured fan stories, poems, and art. Four issues were released in the 1990s.
    1 KB (211 words) - 19:21, 2 April 2015
  • ...A. between 1995 and 1999. The focus of the zine was on writing fiction and fan fiction. it also included articles, essays, art work, and poetry.
    2 KB (217 words) - 19:34, 2 April 2015
  • ...esh with a new 20 pp. 8vo printed magazine. The result was by far the best fan publication in Australia at that time. The second issue (also #1) appeared
    1 KB (189 words) - 00:29, 25 January 2016
  • ...sy and adventure". ''Science Fiction Darkside'' features articles, essays, fan fiction, art, comics, and letters to the editor. Early issues were dedicate
    1 KB (189 words) - 16:54, 6 March 2012

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