Table of Contents Vol. 34 No. 4 Ian Ballantine

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Table of Contents Vol. 34 No. 4 Ian Ballantine April 1995 Table of Contents vol. 34 no. 4 M a i n S t o r ie s Locus Looks a t Books Omni Ceases Monthly Ian Ballantine - 13- Publication.................................. 7 1916-1995 Distillations: Short Fiction British Book Summary 1994 ... 7 Reviews by Mark R. Kelly: Interzone 2/95; Asimov's 5/95; SF Age 3/95; Ana­ Proteus Launched....................... 8 log 4/95, 5/95, 6/95; F&SF 3/95; Tomorrow 2/95; Koontz vs. TriStar....................... 8 Crank! #4, Autumn/94; Strange Plasma #8; Ab­ solute Magnitude Winter/Spring 95; Omni 3/95. 1995 World Fantasy Award - 17- Judges Announced................. 8 Reviews by Gary K. Wolfe: Where Books Are B ought........ 8 The Steampunk Trilogy, Paul Di Filippo; Metro­ politan, Walter Jon Williams; Rushing to Para­ Preliminary Stoker Award dise, J.G. Ballard; Nebula Awards 29, Pamela Ballot Issued.............................. 8 Sargent, ed.; The Armless Maiden and Other Tales for Childhood’s Survivors, Terri Windling, V.C. Andrews® Triumphant...... 8 ed.; The Ultimate Egoist: Volume I: The Com­ Lethem Wins Crawford ............. 9 plete Stories of Theodore Sturgeon, Paul Will­ iams, ed.; The Ultimate Guide to Science Fic­ Dillons Bankruptcy...................... 9 tion: An A-Z of Science Fiction Books by Title, 2nd ed., David Pringle; Future Perfect: Ameri­ T h e D ata F ile can Science Fiction of the Nineteenth Century, Worldcon News.......................................9 revised and expanded edition, H. Bruce Franklin, ed. Announcements...................................... 9 - 21 - Magazine News....................................... 9 Reviews by Faren Miller: Book News............................................... 9 The Lions of Al-Rassan, Guy Gavriel Kay; The Online News............................................. 9 Blind God is Watching, Nancy Springer; The Financial News........................................ 9 Armless Maiden and Other Tales for Award News........................................... 64 Childhood’s Survivors, Terri Windling, ed.; Jas­ mine Nights, S.P. Somtow; The Cursed, Dave Market News.......................................... 65 Duncan; Hunter’s Haunt, Dave Duncan; SHORT Court Cases........................................... 65 TAKES: Demon Sword, Ken Hood; The Rushdie Update..................................... 65 Steampunk Trilogy, Paul Di Filippo; Resume Rights & Options................................... 65 With Monsters, William Browning Spencer Multi-Media Update............................... 65 -25- Publications Received..........................65 Reviews by Russell Letson: Catalogs Received................................ 65 Ian Ballantine, one of the innovators of Metropolitan, Walter Jon Williams; Genellan: mass market publishing in the US, died Planetfall, Scott G. Gier; Profiteer: Hostile I n t e r v ie w March 9, at age 79. See page 60. Takeover #1, S. Andrew Swann; SHORT TAKE: Clive Barker: Life, Death, and The Weight, Allen Steele -27- the Whole Damned Thing ......4 Reviews by Edward Bryant: I nternational Relic, Douglas Preston & Lincoln Child; The X- O b itu a r ie s SF in France................................ 3 4 Files: Goblins, Charles Grant; From Hell: Book Ian Ballantine......................................... 60 SF in Brazil................................... 35 One, Alan Moore; SHORT TAKES: Harlan Appreciation by Frederik Pohl........ 61 Ellison’s Dream Corridor Special, Harlan SF in the Czech Republic....... 38 Ellison; Dead in the West, Joe R. Lansdale Joyce Slater........................................... 62 SF in the Nordic Countries .... 39 -31- Philip E. Cleator..................................... 62 Short Reviews by Carolyn Cushman: Appreciation by Arthur C. Clarke ....62 L is tin g s Bill Collins.............................................. 62 Circus of the Damned, Laurell K. Hamilton; The Magazines Received - February.. 41 Bellmaker, Brian Jacques; Mus of Kerbridge, Nigel D. Findley..................................... 62 Paul Kidd; Mind of the Magic, Holly Lisle; Appreciation by Sharon Mulvihill ....63 Books Received - February..........42 Everlastin’, Mickee Madden; The Berserker’s British Books - January................. 53 Horse, Lisa Maxwell; Freedom’s Landing, Anne B estsellers..........................................58 McCaffrey; Storm at the End of Time, Pamela F. Service; Wren’s War, Sherwood Smith; Compan­ C o lum n s & D e p a r t m e n t s ions of the Night, Vivian Vande Velde; The Cry­ People & Publishing........................10 ing for a Vision, Walter Wangerin, Jr. Editorial M atters ...............................63 Letters, information, and credit card sub­ scriptions can be sent by E-mail to : locus@ Locus Letters.....................................64 genie.geis.com, or by fax to 510-339-8144. Publisher & Editor-in-Chief: Charles N. Brown; Managing Editor: Marianne S. Jablon; Editors: Faren C. Miller, Carolyn F. Cushman; Assistant Editor: Kirsten Gong-Wong; Editorial Trainee: Amy Sisson; Contributing Editors: Edward Bryant, Mark R. Kelly, Russell Letson, Gary K. Wolfe; Special Projects: William G. Contento; Photographer: Beth Gwinn. Locus, The Newspaper of the Science Fiction Field (ISSN 0047-4959), is published m onthly, at $3.95 per copy, by Locus Publications, 34 Ridgewood Lane, Oakland CA 94611. Please send all mail to: Locus Publications, P.O. Box 13305, Oakland CA 94661. Telephone (510) 339-9196 ; (510) 339-9198. FAX (510) 339-8144. E-mail: [email protected]. Individual subscriptions jn the US: $40.00 for 12 issues, $74.00 for 24 issues via second class mail. In Canada: $45.00 for 12 issues, $84.00 for 24 issues via second class mail. First class individual subscriptions in the US or Canada are $50.00 for 12 issues, $90.00 for 24 issues. Individual overseas subscriptions are $45.00 for 12 issues, $84.00 for 24 issues via sea mail. Individual subscriptions to Europe or South America via air mail are $67.00 for 12 issues, $114.00 for 24 issues. Individual subscriptions to Australia, Asia, or Africa via air mail are $78.00 for 12 issues, $130.00 for 24 issues. Institutional subscriptions are $3.00 extra per year. Make checks payable to Locus Publications. All subscriptions payable directly in US funds only. Overseas checks must be drawn on a US bank and include computer encoding numbers at bottom. When converting from second class to first class delivery, please convert all remaining issues on your present subscription ($1.00 per issue). The number after your name on the mailing label is that of the last issue on your present subscription. If you change your address, please notify us immediately. Second class mail is not usually forwarded; it is either returned or destroyed. We subtract one issue from your subscription for each returned copy. We keep expired addresses on file for one year, so tell us if your subscription is a renewal or completely new. British Subscription Agent: Fantast (Medway) Ltd. P.O. Box 23, Upwell Wisbech, CAMBS PE14 9BU, UK. Japanese Subscription Agent: Yoshio Kobayashi, 1-29-13-707 Sangenjaya, Setagaya-ku, Tokyo 154, Japan; Australian Subscription Agent: Justin Ackroyd, Slow Glass Books G.P.O Box 2708X, Melbourne, Victoria, 3001, Australia. Bookseller discounts available. Display advertising rates on request. c 1995 by Locus Publications. We take no responsibility for unsolicited submissions. Printed in the United States. Second class postage paid at Oakland, California. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Locus Publications, P.O. Box 13305, Oakland CA 94661. LOCUS April 1995/3.
Recommended publications
  • JUDITH MERRIL-PDF-Sep23-07.Pdf (368.7Kb)
    JUDITH MERRIL: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY AND GUIDE Compiled by Elizabeth Cummins Department of English and Technical Communication University of Missouri-Rolla Rolla, MO 65409-0560 College Station, TX The Center for the Bibliography of Science Fiction and Fantasy December 2006 Table of Contents Preface Judith Merril Chronology A. Books B. Short Fiction C. Nonfiction D. Poetry E. Other Media F. Editorial Credits G. Secondary Sources About Elizabeth Cummins PREFACE Scope and Purpose This Judith Merril bibliography includes both primary and secondary works, arranged in categories that are suitable for her career and that are, generally, common to the other bibliographies in the Center for Bibliographic Studies in Science Fiction. Works by Merril include a variety of types and modes—pieces she wrote at Morris High School in the Bronx, newsletters and fanzines she edited; sports, westerns, and detective fiction and non-fiction published in pulp magazines up to 1950; science fiction stories, novellas, and novels; book reviews; critical essays; edited anthologies; and both audio and video recordings of her fiction and non-fiction. Works about Merill cover over six decades, beginning shortly after her first science fiction story appeared (1948) and continuing after her death (1997), and in several modes— biography, news, critical commentary, tribute, visual and audio records. This new online bibliography updates and expands the primary bibliography I published in 2001 (Elizabeth Cummins, “Bibliography of Works by Judith Merril,” Extrapolation, vol. 42, 2001). It also adds a secondary bibliography. However, the reasons for producing a research- based Merril bibliography have been the same for both publications. Published bibliographies of Merril’s work have been incomplete and often inaccurate.
    [Show full text]
  • Palgrave Macmillan X PREFACE
    The Evolution of Modern Fantasy From Antiquarianism to the Ballantine Adult Fantasy Series Jamie Williamson palgrave macmillan x PREFACE some cohesion. On the other hand, this approach tends toward oversim­ plification and breeds a kind of tunnel vision. One area which that tunnel vision has largely eliminated from consid­ eration in histories of fantasy has been the narrative poetry, some quite long, of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries: work that engaged similar subject matter, identifieditself with similar areas of premodem and tradi­ tional narrative, and was widely read by many of the writers of the BAFS Introduction canon. Another area, not neglected but needing some refinement of per­ spective, has to do with those "epics and romances and sagas": they are gen­ erally alluded to rather indiscriminately as stufffrom (vaguely) "way back Charting the Terrain then." But modern access to these works is via scholarly editions, transla­ tions, epitomes, and retellings, themselves reflectingmodern perspectives; to readers of two centuries ago, the medieval Arthurian romances seeing print forthe first time were as new as Pride and Prejudice. My contention is that what we call modern fantasywas in facta creative extension of the he coalesc�ce of fantasy-thatcontem or ry l ter cat go y wh s _ _ r, � � �,:, � � � : antiquarian work that made these older works available. The history here, Tname most readily evokes notions of epic trilogies witb mythic then, begins in the eighteenth century. settings and characters-into a discrete genre occurred quite recently and This is, obviously, a wide arc to cover, and the following, of necessity, abruptly, a direct result of the crossing of a resurgence of interest in Ameri­ treats individual authors and works with brevity; detailed close readinghas can popular "Sword and Sorcery" in the early 1960s with the massive com­ been avoided.
    [Show full text]
  • The Post-War Years and the Evolution of the PBO
    The Post-War Years and the Evolution of the PBO by Bruce Black Shortly after the war, the paperback industry exploded onto the U.S. publishing scene with such unrestrained growth, that within a decade, supply would far exceed demand. In an industry with such diversity as this one, the evolution of paperbacks during the late 1940’s was predictable, at least from the aspect of an armchair quarterback looking back at the era. Publishers were forced to find gimmicks to make their books stand apart from the others. The market niches were all there to be filled. They only had to pick and choose. It soon became obvious that post-war tastes had evolved. Returning servicemen were more conservative than they’d been when they left. They longed for life at home; for families, and idealistic family values. On the other hand, soldiers overseas had been afforded a glimpse of books published outside the narrower constraints placed on American printers. American censorship laws were some of the most restrictive in the world, and now many prospective book-buyers in this country had been able to see that fact first hand. This gave further leeway to publishers trying to find their post-war identities, and many chose to “push the limits” of what social conservatives viewed as appropriate. NAL / Signet If the explosion had a single source of ignition, it could probably be traced to Penguin, with the arrival of one player in our drama and the departure of another. The arrival was Victor Weybright, who joined the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Dialogues with Creative Legends
    Dialogues with Creative Legends Aha Moments in a Designer’s Career This page intentionally left blank Dialogues with Creative Legends Aha Moments in a Designer’s Career DAVID CALVIN LAUFER FOREWORD BY RICHARD SAUL WURMAN Dialogues with Creative Legends: Aha Moments in a Designer’s Career David Calvin Laufer Notice of Rights All rights reserved. No part of this book may be New Riders reproduced or transmitted in any form by any www.newriders.com means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written New Riders is an imprint of Peachpit, a permission of the publisher. For information division of Pearson Education. on getting permission for reprints and excerpts, contact [email protected]. To report errors, please send a note to [email protected] Notice of Liability The information in this book is distributed on Copyright © 2013 by David Laufer an “As Is” basis without warranty. While every precaution has been taken in the preparation of the book, neither the author nor Peachpit Project Editor: Michael J. Nolan shall have any liability to any person or entity Development Editor: Margaret Anderson/ with respect to any loss or damage caused or Stellarvisions alleged to be caused directly or indirectly by Production Editor: David Van Ness the instructions contained in this book or by Copyeditor: Gretchen Dykstra the computer software and hardware products Indexer: Valerie Haynes Perry described in it. Proofreader: Jennifer Needham Design: Brandbook LLC, Atlanta Trademarks Many of the designations used by manufacturers and sellers to distinguish their products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations appear in this book, and Peachpit was aware of a trademark claim, the designations appear as requested by the owner of the ISBN-13: 978-0-321-88564-7 trademark.
    [Show full text]
  • Fahrenheit 451
    FAHRENHEIT 451: A DESCRIPTIVE BIBLIOGRAPHY Amanda Kay Barrett Submitted to the faculty of the University Graduate School in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Arts in the Department of English, Indiana University May 2011 Accepted by the Faculty of Indiana University, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts. __________________________________________ Jonathan R. Eller, Ph.D., Chair Master’s Thesis Committee __________________________________________ William F. Touponce, Ph.D. __________________________________________ M. A. Coleman, Ph.D. ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS To my wonderful thesis committee, especially Dr. Jonathan Eller who guided me step by step through the writing and editing of this thesis. To my family and friends for encouraging me and supporting me during the long days of typing, reading and editing. Special thanks to my mother, for being my rock and my role model. To the entire English department at IUPUI – I have enjoyed all these years in your hands and look forward to being a loyal and enthusiastic alumna. iii TABLE OF CONTENTS Narrative Introduction ..........................................................................................................1 Genealogical Table of Contents .........................................................................................17 Fahrenheit 451: A Descriptive Bibliography .....................................................................24 Primary Bibliography.........................................................................................................91
    [Show full text]
  • The Convention Itself
    The Seventh World Fantasy Convention Oct. 30 - Nov. 1.1981 V ■ /n Jg in iiiWjF. ni III HITV Report #2 I * < ? I fl « f Guests of Honor Alan Garner Brian Frond Peter S. Beagle Master of Ceremonies Karl Edward Wagner Jack Rems, Jeff Frane, Chairmen Will Stone, Art Show Dan Chow, Dealers Room Debbie Notkin, Programming Mark Johnson, Bill Bow and others 1981 World Fantasy Award Nominations Life Achievement: Joseph Payne Brennan Avram Davidson L. Sprague de Camp C. L. Moore Andre Norton Jack Vance Best Novel: Ariosto by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro Firelord by Parke Godwin The Mist by Stephen King (in Dark Forces) The Shadow of the Torturer by Gene Wolfe Shadowland by Peter Straub Best Short Fiction: “Cabin 33” by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro (in Shadows 3) “Children of the Kingdom” by T.E.D. Klein (in Dark Forces) “The Ugly Chickens” by Howard Waldrop (in Universe 10) “Unicorn Tapestry” by Suzy McKee Charnas (in New Dimensions 11) Best Anthology or Collection: Dark Forces ed. by Kirby McCauley Dragons of Light ed. by Orson Scott Card Mummy! A Chrestomathy of Crypt-ology ed. by Bill Pronzini New Terrors 1 ed. by Ramsey Campbell Shadows 3 ed. by Charles L. Grant Shatterday by Harlan Ellison Best Artist: Alicia Austin Thomas Canty Don Maitz Rowena Morrill Michael Whelan Gahan Wilson Special Award (Professional) Terry Carr (anthologist) Lester del Rey (Del Rey/Ballantine Books) Edward L. Ferman (Magazine of Fantasy ir Science Fiction) David G. Hartwell (Pocket/Timescape/Simon & Schuster) Tim Underwood/Chuck Miller (Underwood & Miller) Donald A. Wollheim (DAW Books) Special Award (Non-professional) Pat Cadigan/Arnie Fenner (for Shayol) Charles de Lint/Charles R.
    [Show full text]
  • Lunacon 1991 Program Book.Pdf
    LARRY NIVEN STEVEN ACHILLES’ CHOICE LARRY NIVEN & STEVEN BARNES Cover and over a dozen illustrations by Boris Vallejo MARCH 1991 * 85099-9 *$15.95 THE RED TAPE WAR JACK CHALKER, MIKE RESNICK & GEORGE ALEC EFFINGER APRIL 1991 • 85151-0 • $ 17.95 BEYOND THE GATE OF WORLDS ROBERT SILVERBERG, JOHN BRUNNER, & CHELSEA QUINN YARBRO JANUARY 1991 • 55444-2 • $3.95 TOR BOOKS 1991 AOUR 10TH ANNIVERSARY YEAR TO s youLUIlflCDn will notice, Feinberg, who is both a top phycisistand Ballantine, 1991 and Gerald Feinberg are all there hove been a a long time SF fan. We are attempting among the best in their respective profes­ few changes this to explore all phases of the field, with sions, and weare honored thatthey chose year. The most special highlights on areas of SF pub­ to join us. They are also splendid obvious is our new lishing that don't normally get discussed people, who have been a joy to work location. Thanks at conventions. We also have a strong with, and I suspect you will enjoy meet­ to your continued Art programming track, with most of the ing them quite as much as I have enjoyed support, Lunacon has become success­ arranging to have them with us. In ad­ ful enough to require a move to larger dition to our Guests of Honor, over 200 other people active in all phases of Sci­ quarters. Our new facility provides both “Thanks to additional function space forconvention ence Fiction and Fantasy have con­ activities, and additional accomodations sented to join us and provide insights into for the attendees.
    [Show full text]
  • Programming Participants' Guide and Biographies
    Programming Participants’ Guide and Biographies Compliments of the Conference Cassette Company The official audio recorders of Chicon 2000 Audio cassettes available for sale on site and post convention. Conference Cassette Company George Williams Phone: (410) 643-4190 310 Love Point Road, Suite 101 Stevensville MD 21666 Chicon. 2000 Programming Participant's Guide Table of Contents A Letter from the Chairman Programming Director's Welcome................................................... 1 By Tom Veal A Letter from the Chairman.............................................................1 Before the Internet, there was television. Before The Importance of Programming to a Convention........................... 2 television, there were movies. Before movies, there Workicon Programming - Then and Now........................................3 were printed books. Before printed books, there were The Minicon Moderator Tip Sheet................................................... 5 manuscripts. Before manuscripts, there were tablets. A Neo-Pro's Guide to Fandom and Con-dom.................................. 9 Before tablets, there was talking. Each technique Chicon Programming Managers..................................................... 15 improved on its successor. Yet now, six thousand years Program Participants' Biographies................................................... 16 after this progression began, we humans do most of our teaching and learning through the earliest method: unadorned, unmediated speech. Programming Director’s Welcome
    [Show full text]
  • Collecting Vintage Mass Market Paperbacks and Paperback Originals
    Collecting Vintage Mass Market Paperbacks And Paperback Originals by Bruce Black In the Beginning In 1939, a man named Robert DeGraff gambled on American literacy and won. Whether or not there were different types of readers in the U.S., there were distinctly different markets. Books were sold to those who could afford the sizable $2 to $3 price tag. Cheaper, paperbound books did exist, but most were very specialized: romances, mysteries, westerns and adolescent adventure novels made up the bulk of these titles. Many had serial characters. Almost none were considered significant literature. They were what would later be called “digest-sized” books, and the covers, though they supported color, were much thinner than those of the paperbacks that we think of today. And then there were the pulps … cheap magazines that catered to various literary genres and offered serialized works (and sometimes complete novels) that sold for a quarter or less. DeGraff wanted to offer modern reprints of favorite books at pulp magazine prices. Well, actually the concept wasn’t new at all. The first true English-language mass market paperbacks were printed more than a century before by Tauchnitz of Leipzig, Germany. Tauchnitz began publishing the books in 1835, reprinting popular British and American works at the rate of one per week, and it continued to do so well into the 1930’s … almost a hundred years and more than 5,000 titles in all. The unwritten agreement for the right to print the books was that the volumes would not be sold in any English-speaking country (most were probably sold in France).
    [Show full text]
  • The Evolution of Modern Fantasy from Antiquarianism to the Ballantine Adult Fantasy Series
    Copyrighted Material - 9781137518088 The Evolution of Modern Fantasy From Antiquarianism to the Ballantine Adult Fantasy Series Jamie Williamson Copyrighted Material - 9781137518088 Copyrighted Material - 9781137518088 the evolution of modern fantasy Copyright © Jamie Williamson, 2015. All rights reserved. First published in 2015 by PALGRAVE MACMILLAN® in the United States— a division of St. Martin’s Press LLC, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010. Where this book is distributed in the UK, Europe and the rest of the world, this is by Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited, registered in England, company number 785998, of Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 6XS. Palgrave Macmillan is the global academic imprint of the above companies and has companies and representatives throughout the world. Palgrave® and Macmillan® are registered trademarks in the United States, the United Kingdom, Europe and other countries. ISBN: 978- 1- 137- 51808- 8 Library of Congress Cataloging- in- Publication Data Williamson, Jamie. The evolution of modern fantasy : from antiquarianism to the Ballantine adult fantasy series / by Jamie Williamson. pages cm Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978- 1- 137- 51808- 8 (hardback : alk. paper) 1. Fantasy literature— History and criticism. I. Title. PN56.F34W55 2015 809.3'8766— dc23 2015003219 A catalogue record of the book is available from the British Library. Design by Scribe Inc. First edition: July 2015 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Copyrighted Material - 9781137518088 Copyrighted
    [Show full text]
  • Tributes to J.R.R. Tolkien
    Volume 18 Number 3 Article 4 Summer 7-15-1992 Tributes to J.R.R. Tolkien Glen H. GoodKnight Follow this and additional works at: https://dc.swosu.edu/mythlore Part of the Children's and Young Adult Literature Commons Recommended Citation GoodKnight, Glen H. (1992) "Tributes to J.R.R. Tolkien," Mythlore: A Journal of J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Charles Williams, and Mythopoeic Literature: Vol. 18 : No. 3 , Article 4. Available at: https://dc.swosu.edu/mythlore/vol18/iss3/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Mythopoeic Society at SWOSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Mythlore: A Journal of J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Charles Williams, and Mythopoeic Literature by an authorized editor of SWOSU Digital Commons. An ADA compliant document is available upon request. For more information, please contact [email protected]. To join the Mythopoeic Society go to: http://www.mythsoc.org/join.htm Mythcon 51: A VIRTUAL “HALFLING” MYTHCON July 31 - August 1, 2021 (Saturday and Sunday) http://www.mythsoc.org/mythcon/mythcon-51.htm Mythcon 52: The Mythic, the Fantastic, and the Alien Albuquerque, New Mexico; July 29 - August 1, 2022 http://www.mythsoc.org/mythcon/mythcon-52.htm Abstract "The following are tributes written by readers of Mythlore. So many tributes have been submitted, that despite those given here, there are many more that will have to wait until the next issue. If you do not find your tribute here, please understand. Many of the tributes are very personal, but that is Tolkien's magic as a writer — he invites us as readers to participate in the act of sub-creation: our own imaginations complete the details of the stories, and they become part of us." — Glen GoodKnight This article is available in Mythlore: A Journal of J.R.R.
    [Show full text]
  • World Fantasy Convention Progress Report #1
    Address Correction Requested Address CorrectionRequested Convention 2004 2004 Convention World Fantasy Tempe, AZ 85285-6665Tempe, USA C/O LepreconInc. P.O. Box26665 The 30th Annual World Fantasy Convention October 28-31, 2004 Tempe Mission Palms Hotel Tempe, Arizona USA Progress Report #1 P 12 P 1 Leprecon Inc. presents World Fantasy Con 2004 Registration Form NAME(S) _____________________________________________________________ The 30th Annual ADDRESS ____________________________________________________________ World Fantasy Convention CITY _________________________________________________________________ October 28-31, 2004 STATE/PROVINCE _____________________________________________________ Tempe Mission Palms Hotel ZIP/POSTAL CODE _____________________________________________________ Tempe, Arizona USA COUNTRY ____________________________________________________________ EMAIL _______________________________________________________________ Author Guest of Honour PHONE _______________________________________________________________ Gwyneth Jones FAX __________________________________________________________________ Artist Guest of Honor PROFESSION (Writer, Artist, Editor, Fan, etc.) ______________________________________________________________________ Janny Wurts _______ Supporting Membership(s) at US$35 each = US$_________ Editor Guest of Honor _______ Attending Membership(s) at US$_______ each = US$_________ Ellen Datlow Total US$___________ _______ Check: We accept travelers checks, personal checks, business checks, cashiers Publisher
    [Show full text]