Difference between revisions of "Warp"

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'''Warp''', was a science fiction fanzine published by the Montreal Science Fiction and Fantasy Association and edited by Lynda Pelley.
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[[Image:WARP78_COVER_Small.jpg‎|right]]
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'''Warp'''  is a science fiction fanzine published by the Montreal Science Fiction and Fantasy Association.
  
''Warp'', subtitled ''The Montreal Science Fiction and Fantasy Newsletter'',  was published in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The last issue was number 50, published in October 2000.
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''Warp'', subtitled ''The Montreal Science Fiction and Fantasy Newsletter'',  is published in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The Montreal Science Fiction and Fantasy Association, or MonSFFA as they called themselves, initially put out 6 issues a year, and now put out 2 issues a year. The most recent issue was the Spring 2011 issue, available online. It was previously edited by Lynda Pelley and is now edited by Cathy Palmer-Lister.
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''Warp'' covers literary and media science fiction and fantasy, as well as comics, gaming, animation, scale model building, costuming, memorabilia, film and video production and fandom.  
  
Contributors included Joe Aspler, Josee Bellemare, Keith Braithwaite, Susan Denham, George Dodds, Edouard Dubois, Jr., John Dupuis, Dominique Durocher, Brian Ekers,  Glen Grant, Kevin Holden, Stephane Marcotte,  Cathy Palmer-Lister, Lynda Pelley, Theresa Penalba, Ernst-Udo Peters, Alain Peyrefitte, Carl Phillips, Andre Poliquin, Barbara Silverman, Sylvain St-Pierre, and Yves Veilleux.
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Contributors included Joe Aspler, Josee Bellemare, Keith Braithwaite, Susan Denham, George Dodds, Edouard Dubois, Jr., John Dupuis, Dominique Durocher, Brian Ekers,  Glen Grant, Kevin Holden, Guy H. Lillian III ([[Challenger]], [[The Zine Dump]]), Stephane Marcotte,  Cathy Palmer-Lister, Lynda Pelley, Theresa Penalba, [[Lloyd Penney]] ([[Torus]]), Ernst-Udo Peters, Alain Peyrefitte, Carl Phillips, Andre Poliquin, Barbara Silverman, Sylvain St-Pierre, and Yves Veilleux.
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Artwork was contributed by Bernard Reischel, among others.
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The club also makes short amateur films such as ''Plant 9 From Outer Space'', a tribute to Ed Wood released in March 1996, and the sequel, ''The Fed Ex Files'', from the 1990s and, in the 2000s,  ''Encounters of the Very Close Kind'' (2001), ''Beavra'' (2003), ''Mooseman'' (2004), and ''The Simpleton's Life'' (2005).
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''Warp'' won the [[Aurora Award for Best Fanzine]] for the year 1999.  
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==
*[http://www3.sympatico.ca/draken35/MonSFFA/back.html '''Warp''' covers on line]
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*[http://www.monsffa.com/monsffahtml/warp.html '''Warp''' on-line E-mail the president of MonSFFA (president@monsffa.com) to request the access password for each issue]
  
 
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[[Category:Science Fiction Zines]]
 
[[Category:Science Fiction Zines]]

Latest revision as of 17:23, 9 March 2015

WARP78 COVER Small.jpg

Warp is a science fiction fanzine published by the Montreal Science Fiction and Fantasy Association.

Warp, subtitled The Montreal Science Fiction and Fantasy Newsletter, is published in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The Montreal Science Fiction and Fantasy Association, or MonSFFA as they called themselves, initially put out 6 issues a year, and now put out 2 issues a year. The most recent issue was the Spring 2011 issue, available online. It was previously edited by Lynda Pelley and is now edited by Cathy Palmer-Lister.

Warp covers literary and media science fiction and fantasy, as well as comics, gaming, animation, scale model building, costuming, memorabilia, film and video production and fandom.

Contributors included Joe Aspler, Josee Bellemare, Keith Braithwaite, Susan Denham, George Dodds, Edouard Dubois, Jr., John Dupuis, Dominique Durocher, Brian Ekers, Glen Grant, Kevin Holden, Guy H. Lillian III (Challenger, The Zine Dump), Stephane Marcotte, Cathy Palmer-Lister, Lynda Pelley, Theresa Penalba, Lloyd Penney (Torus), Ernst-Udo Peters, Alain Peyrefitte, Carl Phillips, Andre Poliquin, Barbara Silverman, Sylvain St-Pierre, and Yves Veilleux.

Artwork was contributed by Bernard Reischel, among others.

The club also makes short amateur films such as Plant 9 From Outer Space, a tribute to Ed Wood released in March 1996, and the sequel, The Fed Ex Files, from the 1990s and, in the 2000s, Encounters of the Very Close Kind (2001), Beavra (2003), Mooseman (2004), and The Simpleton's Life (2005).

Warp won the Aurora Award for Best Fanzine for the year 1999.

External Links