Difference between revisions of "The Wolverine"

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'''The Wolverine''' was an amateur press publication edited by Horace L Lawson.  
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'''The Wolverine''' was an amateur press publication edited by Horace L. Lawson and Marjorie C. Lawson.  
  
''The Wolverine'' described itself as "An Amateur Free-Lance" publication. As of issue 13, it was co-edited by Marjorie C. Lawson. It appeared in the early 1900s and continued into the 1920s and was published in Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A.
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''The Wolverine'' described itself as "An Amateur Free-Lance" publication. As of issue 13, Horace was joined by co-editor Lawson. It appeared in the early 1900s and continued into the 1920s and was published in Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A.
  
Contributors included Edward Costello, James Lawrence Crowley, Betty Earle, Arthur H. Goodenough, Edna Hyde, Harry Lehmkuhl, Stella Kellerman, Frank Belknap Long, H. P. Lovecraft, Lilian Middleton, Annie Pearce, Peggy Reid, Leo G. Schussman, Dan Sweeney,Charles L.H. Wagner, Daisy Crump Whitehead.
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Contributors included Edward Costello, James Lawrence Crowley, Betty Earle, Arthur H. Goodenough, Edna Hyde (earlier known as Edna van der Heide, editor of [[The Inspiration]]), Harry Lehmkuhl, Stella Kellerman, Frank Belknap Long, [[H. P. Lovecraft]] (as himself, and as Lewis Theobald) ([[The United Co-Operative]]), Lillian Middleton, Annie Pearce, Peggy Reid, Leo G. Schussman, Dan Sweeney, Charles L.H. Wagner, and Daisy Crump Whitehead.
  
''The Wolverine'' was the first publisher of five of Lovecraft's pieces; "Arthur Jermyn" in March 1921; "The Nameless City" in November 1921; "The Street in December" in 1920; "The Vivisector" in June 1921; and "On the Return of Maurice Winter"Moe, Esq." in June 1921.  
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''The Wolverine'' was the first publisher of five of Lovecraft's pieces; "Arthur Jermyn", in March 1921; "The Nameless City", in November 1921; "The Street in December", in 1920; "The Vivisector", in June 1921; and "On the Return of Maurice Winter"Moe, Esq.", in June 1921.  
  
[[Category:Zine]]
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[[Category:Zine|Wolverine]]
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.|Wolverine]]
[[Category:Michigan Zines]]
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[[Category:Michigan Zines|Wolverine]]
[[Category:1910's publications]]
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[[Category:1910's publications|Wolverine]]
[[Category:1920's publications]]
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[[Category:1920's publications|Wolverine]]
[[Category:Literary Zines]]
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[[Category:Literary Zines|Wolverine]]
[[Category:Supernatural]]
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[[Category:Apazine|Wolverine]]
[[Category:Lovecraft]]
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[[Category:Lovecraft|Wolverine]]

Latest revision as of 19:42, 13 December 2011

The Wolverine was an amateur press publication edited by Horace L. Lawson and Marjorie C. Lawson.

The Wolverine described itself as "An Amateur Free-Lance" publication. As of issue 13, Horace was joined by co-editor Lawson. It appeared in the early 1900s and continued into the 1920s and was published in Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A.

Contributors included Edward Costello, James Lawrence Crowley, Betty Earle, Arthur H. Goodenough, Edna Hyde (earlier known as Edna van der Heide, editor of The Inspiration), Harry Lehmkuhl, Stella Kellerman, Frank Belknap Long, H. P. Lovecraft (as himself, and as Lewis Theobald) (The United Co-Operative), Lillian Middleton, Annie Pearce, Peggy Reid, Leo G. Schussman, Dan Sweeney, Charles L.H. Wagner, and Daisy Crump Whitehead.

The Wolverine was the first publisher of five of Lovecraft's pieces; "Arthur Jermyn", in March 1921; "The Nameless City", in November 1921; "The Street in December", in 1920; "The Vivisector", in June 1921; and "On the Return of Maurice Winter"Moe, Esq.", in June 1921.