Difference between revisions of "Grue"
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21 ||Summer 1954 ||46 || | 21 ||Summer 1954 ||46 || | ||
22 ||Autumn 1954 ||46 ||in [[FAPA]] 69 | 22 ||Autumn 1954 ||46 ||in [[FAPA]] 69 | ||
− | 23 ||March 1955 ||53 || | + | 23 ||March 1955 ||53 || includes a short story by [[Harlan Ellison]] |
24 ||Summer 1955 ||30 || | 24 ||Summer 1955 ||30 || | ||
25 ||November 1955 ||30 ||in [[FAPA]] 73 | 25 ||November 1955 ||30 ||in [[FAPA]] 73 |
Revision as of 00:11, 28 November 2020
A fanzine published by Dean Grennell and circulated through FAPA. It was nominated for the 1956 Best Fanzine Hugo.
Issue | Date | Pages | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
15 | June 1953 | 6 | |
18 | Fall 1953 | 12 | #s 1-17 were Letter substitutes |
19 | Winter 1953 | 24 | |
20 | Spring 1954 | 46 | in FAPA 67 |
21 | Summer 1954 | 46 | |
22 | Autumn 1954 | 46 | in FAPA 69 |
23 | March 1955 | 53 | includes a short story by Harlan Ellison |
24 | Summer 1955 | 30 | |
25 | November 1955 | 30 | in FAPA 73 |
26 | December 1955 | 22 | |
27 | February 1956 | 22 | in FAPA 74 |
28 | October 1956 | 50 | |
29 | April 1958 | 56 | Last genzine issue; in FAPA 83 |
30 | August 1962 | 8 | in FAPA 100 |
31 | August 1964 | ||
31b | August 1969 | ||
33 | February 1970 | ||
34 | |||
35 | |||
36 | November 1971 | ||
37 | |||
38 | |||
NN | August 1974 | 1 | |
39 | |||
40 | November 1977 | 4 | |
41 | November 1977 | 4 | Single-sided |
42 | February 1978 | 9 | " |
43 | August 1979 | 10 | " in FAPA 168 |
There was also a joint issue with Tucker called Le Gruesome Zombie.
Grue online at fanac.org
From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959 |
(Grennell) Probably will prove one of the fanzines of history. Its complete genesis is worth quoting as a specimen:
"In casting about for a fanzine title, I considered several: Stellar Stories, Fiasco, and Grue: The Fan's Magazine [quasi, True, The Man's Magazine, published about this time], were three I kept coming back to. I discovered that my sneaky subconscious had picked up the first from an ad in Other (ptui!) Worlds. I asked the advice of friend-and-mentor Bob Silverberg and he opined that either Fiasco or Grue would act as a deadly blight on a fanzine... in fact, why did I want to cast yet another effort into a field already sadly overcrowded? Despite this, perhaps even because of it, I clung to Grue as a title. Sometime in January of 1953 I drew up a tentative cover for it, bearing a picture of a little man in a spacesuit standing beside his rocket in a moon-crater, about to light a fuse trailing out the bottom of it. I stuck this to the wall for a while and later, as I finished writing a larger-than-usual letter to someone, I put the cover picture on the front of the letter, stapled it down the left margin, and so Grue was born. [Trumpets off.] "So went the first fourteen copies; all custom-made, with hand-drawn illos, tipped-in photos, etc. Number fifteen was a four-page kind of one-shot done on a spirit duplicator. 16&17 reverted to typed originals again and when I got into FAPA in the fall of 1953 I decided to keep the title as a FAPAzine, so it appeared there as #18. All issues since then have been consecutively published -- from 20 onwards with the use of Gestetner in blue on white. There have been a few custom issues of Grue since then, but these are given fractional numbers to fit them in between the published issues, as 'GRUE #25 1/2'." -- Dean Grennell. |
Publication | 1953—1979 |
This is a publication page. Please extend it by adding information about when and by whom it was published, how many issues it has had, (including adding a partial or complete checklist), its contents (including perhaps a ToC listing), its size and repro method, regular columnists, its impact on fandom, or by adding scans or links to scans. See Standards for Publications. |