Difference between revisions of "Beryl Mercer"

From ZineWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 7: Line 7:
 
In 1968, the first manned spaceship orbited around the moon. Beryl Mercer echoed the popular sentiment of the day in her fanzine  [[DEC.27th.,1968]] which, she wrote, was...
 
In 1968, the first manned spaceship orbited around the moon. Beryl Mercer echoed the popular sentiment of the day in her fanzine  [[DEC.27th.,1968]] which, she wrote, was...
  
    "...offered as a token of my gratitude to the people of the USA. I would have given ten years of my life to have been fit enough and brilliant enough to have been a member of Apollo-8's crew."  
+
"...offered as a token of my gratitude to the people of the USA. I would have given ten years of my life to have been fit enough and brilliant enough to have been a member of Apollo-8's crew."  
  
 
In 1969, Beryl Mercer won the "Doc" Weir Award, presented annually at Eastercon for service to British fandom.
 
In 1969, Beryl Mercer won the "Doc" Weir Award, presented annually at Eastercon for service to British fandom.

Revision as of 22:46, 12 May 2011

Beryl Mercer (nee Henley) is a fanzine editor from the UK.

Her first fanzine , produced in the 1960s, was Link, so-edited with Mary Reed. Link was published from 1964 till 1966, and not without a certain amount of controversy. This title is regarded as one of the "New Wave" of zines emerging in the 1960s, who were often at odds with an earlier generation of fanzine editors and fans. After the demise of Link, Beryl went on to do her OMPA zine Oz, while Mary did Crabapple.

In 1968, Beryl co-edited one issue of Grimwab with well known fan artist Harry Bell.

In 1968, the first manned spaceship orbited around the moon. Beryl Mercer echoed the popular sentiment of the day in her fanzine DEC.27th.,1968 which, she wrote, was...

"...offered as a token of my gratitude to the people of the USA. I would have given ten years of my life to have been fit enough and brilliant enough to have been a member of Apollo-8's crew."

In 1969, Beryl Mercer won the "Doc" Weir Award, presented annually at Eastercon for service to British fandom.

In the 1970s Beryl co-edited The Once and Future Worm with her husband Archie Mercer, The first issue appeared in October of 1976 and the fanzine saw fifteen issues released, the last one in June 1981.

Zines

Contributions