Difference between revisions of "Peter Duncan"
(add bibliographic details, links. Photo credit, actually the book is as by B. M. (although one later pb reissue had Buddy)) |
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− | [[File:Peter Duncan.jpeg|thumb|right|'''B. M. Atkinson, Jr.''' | + | [[File:Peter Duncan.jpeg|thumb|right|'''B. M. Atkinson, Jr.'''<br>''From the dust jacket of ''What Dr. Spock Didn't Tell Us: A Survival Kit for Parents'' (1959). Photo credited to Cort Best and Bud Kamenish.'']] |
(January 7, 1918 – August 8, 1994) | (January 7, 1918 – August 8, 1994) | ||
− | '''Peter Duncan''' was the [[fannish]] | + | '''Peter Duncan''' was the [[fannish]] [[pename]] of B. M. (Butler Markham) "Buddy" Atkinson, Jr.,<ref>Per [http://www.philsp.com/homeville/FMI/s00/s00048.htm#A2 FictionMags Index.]</ref> later a journalist, humor columnist and writer for TV shows including ''The Beverly Hillbillies''. |
He co-[[published]] ''[[Science Fiction Forward]]'' with [[Ray Van Houten]], with whom he also attempted to launch the [[Intellectual Brotherhood of Pro-Scientists]]. | He co-[[published]] ''[[Science Fiction Forward]]'' with [[Ray Van Houten]], with whom he also attempted to launch the [[Intellectual Brotherhood of Pro-Scientists]]. | ||
− | + | His hatchet job, "Why [[Critic]]s Get Dyspepsia, or, [[weird fiction|Weird Fiction]] Today" (''[[Science Fiction Collector]]'' Vol. 5 Issue 3 / #27, September/October 1939), about the death of [[Robert E. Howard]], appalled [[H. C. Koenig]], who wrote in [https://www.fanac.org/fanzines/Sci_Fic_Weekly/sfw08-02.html "Their Own Petard"], ''[[Science Fiction Weekly]]'' 8 (April 7, 1940): | |
+ | Every reader has a right to criticize, provided he or she keeps within the bounds of decency.[...] But his paragraphs on the Howard [[suicide]] are about the lowest, meanest, most despicable and contemptible paragraphs it's ever been my misfortune to read.[...] Duncan should be blacklisted by every decent [[fan magazine]]. | ||
− | + | He [[gafiated]] during [[World War II]], but reused the name Peter Duncan for two paperbacks mixing crime, comic and risqué elements in 1959 and 1960. The former became popular in France. | |
− | + | * [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/40410250/the-courier-journal/ Obituary] in the [[Louisville]] (Ky.) ''Courier-Journal''. | |
+ | * [https://mysteryfile.com/blog/?p=62827 “Mystery Review: PETER DUNCAN – Sweet Cheat.”] | ||
+ | * [https://www.strangetypes.com/2020/02/the-telltale-tart-by-peter-duncan.html ''The Tell-Tale Tart''] review, with a link to Atkinson's 1953 story. | ||
+ | * [[wikipedia:fr:Peter Duncan (écrivain)|French Wikipedia entry. ]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{fanzines}} | ||
+ | * ''[[Science Fiction Forward]]'' (with [[Ray Van Houten]]) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ____ | ||
+ | <references /> | ||
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{{person|born=1918|died=1994}} [[Category:fan]] [[Category:penname]] [[Category:US]] | {{person|born=1918|died=1994}} [[Category:fan]] [[Category:penname]] [[Category:US]] |
Latest revision as of 03:17, 28 May 2023
(January 7, 1918 – August 8, 1994)
Peter Duncan was the fannish pename of B. M. (Butler Markham) "Buddy" Atkinson, Jr.,[1] later a journalist, humor columnist and writer for TV shows including The Beverly Hillbillies.
He co-published Science Fiction Forward with Ray Van Houten, with whom he also attempted to launch the Intellectual Brotherhood of Pro-Scientists.
His hatchet job, "Why Critics Get Dyspepsia, or, Weird Fiction Today" (Science Fiction Collector Vol. 5 Issue 3 / #27, September/October 1939), about the death of Robert E. Howard, appalled H. C. Koenig, who wrote in "Their Own Petard", Science Fiction Weekly 8 (April 7, 1940):
Every reader has a right to criticize, provided he or she keeps within the bounds of decency.[...] But his paragraphs on the Howard suicide are about the lowest, meanest, most despicable and contemptible paragraphs it's ever been my misfortune to read.[...] Duncan should be blacklisted by every decent fan magazine.
He gafiated during World War II, but reused the name Peter Duncan for two paperbacks mixing crime, comic and risqué elements in 1959 and 1960. The former became popular in France.
- Obituary in the Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal.
- “Mystery Review: PETER DUNCAN – Sweet Cheat.”
- The Tell-Tale Tart review, with a link to Atkinson's 1953 story.
- French Wikipedia entry.
____
- ↑ Per FictionMags Index.
Person | 1918—1994 |
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