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Fantasy Fan, v. 1, issue 2, October 1933
Page 16
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16 THE FANTASY FAN October, 1933 later." --David Stolaroff "Received my copy of your magazine and liked it swell. Just what I've been looking for! Your promise of some more new Clark Ashton Smith stories make it even more enticing. Good luck to you!" --Duane W. Rimel Well, fans, just to show you that the above has not gone to our head, read what someone else says: "At present, 'The Fantasy Fan' isn't worth the time it takes to read or the ink to print it. And same can be said about all the Science Fiction 'fan' magazines." --B.K. Goree, Jr. Mr. Goree forgot to mention that "The Fantasy Fan" isn't worth the paper it's printed on. Ink is very cheap. "The first issue is really good, but I think a great many improvements can be made. I would suggest that you use a stiff cover of some heavy paper, with a table of contents either on the front cover, as in the 'Science Fiction Digest,' or on the inside of the front cover. A better grade of paper should prove of advantage. Leave the size the way it is. "Now for the articles themselves. These were all good, especially Julius Schwartz's on the collection of science fiction, Science Fiction in English Magazines and Sequels by Popular Demand. I do not care an awful lot for Mr. Smith's stories, but have read some dandies by him. Some of his stories are a good cure for sleeping sickness, I agree with Mr. Ackerman on some points in The Boiling Point, but on others--aw, phooie, Mr. Ackerman! Because I just half agree with him, I think I will stay neutral in the controversy. Best wishes to you in your new venture. I hope ARGOSY FANTASTICS (Courtesy Don Moore, Managing Editor, Argosy) Fantasy Fans may be interested to know some of the forthcoming fantastic and weird stories scheduled for publication in Argosy, which has always featured this type of fiction. In the November 4th issue, Ray Cummings has a novelette, "Terror of the Unseen," in which a criminal scientist masters the secret of electrical invisibility and throws a great city into chaos. It is an exciting piece of science fiction complete in this issue. The following week, November 11th, Erle Stanley Gardner presents the second of this series of stories about the Roadrunner, a lone wolf of the Mexican border who has a strange faculty of seeing in the dark--a scientifically possible but rare phenomenon which leads him into unusual adventures. This novelette is entitled "Border Justice." Otis Adelbert Kline starts his second novel of the red planet in the November 25th issue. "The Outlaw of Mars" is a full length novel of adventure in the weird world of canals, filled with amazing warfare and fantastic animals. you double your circulation in a few months." --Oswald Train We have made several of the improvements you mention, and will make others in good time. Do you want a contents page, fans, or would you rther have the space used for some interesting article? Give us your opinions on the current issue, and tell us your likes and dislikes. We want to hear from you. The Editor
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16 THE FANTASY FAN October, 1933 later." --David Stolaroff "Received my copy of your magazine and liked it swell. Just what I've been looking for! Your promise of some more new Clark Ashton Smith stories make it even more enticing. Good luck to you!" --Duane W. Rimel Well, fans, just to show you that the above has not gone to our head, read what someone else says: "At present, 'The Fantasy Fan' isn't worth the time it takes to read or the ink to print it. And same can be said about all the Science Fiction 'fan' magazines." --B.K. Goree, Jr. Mr. Goree forgot to mention that "The Fantasy Fan" isn't worth the paper it's printed on. Ink is very cheap. "The first issue is really good, but I think a great many improvements can be made. I would suggest that you use a stiff cover of some heavy paper, with a table of contents either on the front cover, as in the 'Science Fiction Digest,' or on the inside of the front cover. A better grade of paper should prove of advantage. Leave the size the way it is. "Now for the articles themselves. These were all good, especially Julius Schwartz's on the collection of science fiction, Science Fiction in English Magazines and Sequels by Popular Demand. I do not care an awful lot for Mr. Smith's stories, but have read some dandies by him. Some of his stories are a good cure for sleeping sickness, I agree with Mr. Ackerman on some points in The Boiling Point, but on others--aw, phooie, Mr. Ackerman! Because I just half agree with him, I think I will stay neutral in the controversy. Best wishes to you in your new venture. I hope ARGOSY FANTASTICS (Courtesy Don Moore, Managing Editor, Argosy) Fantasy Fans may be interested to know some of the forthcoming fantastic and weird stories scheduled for publication in Argosy, which has always featured this type of fiction. In the November 4th issue, Ray Cummings has a novelette, "Terror of the Unseen," in which a criminal scientist masters the secret of electrical invisibility and throws a great city into chaos. It is an exciting piece of science fiction complete in this issue. The following week, November 11th, Erle Stanley Gardner presents the second of this series of stories about the Roadrunner, a lone wolf of the Mexican border who has a strange faculty of seeing in the dark--a scientifically possible but rare phenomenon which leads him into unusual adventures. This novelette is entitled "Border Justice." Otis Adelbert Kline starts his second novel of the red planet in the November 25th issue. "The Outlaw of Mars" is a full length novel of adventure in the weird world of canals, filled with amazing warfare and fantastic animals. you double your circulation in a few months." --Oswald Train We have made several of the improvements you mention, and will make others in good time. Do you want a contents page, fans, or would you rther have the space used for some interesting article? Give us your opinions on the current issue, and tell us your likes and dislikes. We want to hear from you. The Editor
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