Difference between revisions of "Peter Weston"

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{{recognition}}
 
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* 1973 -- [[Nova Award]] for ''[[Speculation (Weston)|Speculation]]''
 
* 1973 -- [[Nova Award]] for ''[[Speculation (Weston)|Speculation]]''
* 1974 -- [[Tynecon 74]], [[TAFF]]
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* 1974 -- [[Tynecon 74]], [[1974 TAFF Race|TAFF]]
 
* 1975 -- [[Doc Weir Award]]
 
* 1975 -- [[Doc Weir Award]]
 
* 2000 -- [[Boskone 37]]
 
* 2000 -- [[Boskone 37]]

Revision as of 22:28, 16 July 2020

(October 19, 1943 - January 5, 2017)

A British Fan of All Trades, Peter Weston's many and varied activities include founding the longest-lived fan group in the U.K., editing the Andromeda series of original anthologies, chairing the Seacon '79 Worldcon, and editing Speculation.

He was FGoH at Noreascon 4, the 2004 Worldcon.

From 1963 until 1976 he published the award-winning, multi-named fanzine Zenith, Zenith-Speculation, and Speculation getting four Hugo nominations and a Nova Award for it.

Starting in 1966 he reviewed fanzines in Vector in a column named "Behind the Scenes", under the pseudonym "Malcolm Edwards". This caused confusion a few years later when a real Malcolm Edwards began contributing to British fanzines. By coincidence, both the fake Malcolm Edwards and the real Malcolm Edwards both went on to chair British Worldcons.

He organized the Speculation Conferences, a series of science fiction symposia in Birmingham, UK inspired by Speculation, co-founded the Birmingham Science Fiction Group (BSFG) in 1971 (chairing it, also) and helped start Novacon later that year. In 1979 he chaired the Worldcon, Seacon '79, and in October 2008 ran Cytricon V in Kettering, a sequel to and commemoration of the event at which the modern British Science Fiction Association was created. He was on the committee of Eastercon 22. At Cytricon V a surprise ceremony was held, inducting Weston and fellow fan Rog Peyton into the long-dormant fannish Knights of Saint Fantony. He published the Thirdmancon Combozine for Thirdmancon.

His personal history of British fandom, With Stars in My Eyes, was nominated for the 2005 Best Related Book Hugo. Following that in 2006, he revived his 1983 fanzine Prolapse as a forum for discussion of British fan history, and followed his tradition by renaming it Relapse a couple of years later, also winning a Nova Award for that. He helped organize ReRepetercon in 2004. He also published Nexus.

For years, Peter's foundry cast the Hugo rockets for the Hugo Awards; the bases are the --fault-- responsibility of the individual Worldcon committees.

Awards, Honors and GoHships:

Helicon 2 GoH profile


Person 19432017
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