Difference between revisions of "Soma"
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'''Soma''' was a science fiction poetry fanzine by Van Splawn in St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A. | '''Soma''' was a science fiction poetry fanzine by Van Splawn in St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A. | ||
− | ''Soma'' was a small 4 page fanzine that | + | ''Soma'' was a small 4 page fanzine that featured exclusively poetry in its pages. Two issues were released: May 1952, and August 1952. The second issue was a split zine with another title by Splawn, called [[Djinn]]. |
The first issue included poetry by Redd Boggs ([[Sky Hook]]), George Ebey ([[Sappho]]), James Russell Gray, Marijane Nuttall, and William Young. The three poems by Young were original to this issue; the others were reprints from previous fanzines. | The first issue included poetry by Redd Boggs ([[Sky Hook]]), George Ebey ([[Sappho]]), James Russell Gray, Marijane Nuttall, and William Young. The three poems by Young were original to this issue; the others were reprints from previous fanzines. |
Latest revision as of 05:34, 10 September 2014
Soma was a science fiction poetry fanzine by Van Splawn in St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A.
Soma was a small 4 page fanzine that featured exclusively poetry in its pages. Two issues were released: May 1952, and August 1952. The second issue was a split zine with another title by Splawn, called Djinn.
The first issue included poetry by Redd Boggs (Sky Hook), George Ebey (Sappho), James Russell Gray, Marijane Nuttall, and William Young. The three poems by Young were original to this issue; the others were reprints from previous fanzines.
The contributions to Issue Two were the poems "Cosmic Lie" by Lilith Lorraine (Challenge, Different, Flame); "Youthful Martyr" by Orma McCormick (Starlanes); "The Angel Tree" by Richard Shaver (The Shaver Mystery Magazine); "Ennui" by Clark Ashton Smith; and "Tide's Gambit" by William Young.
The cover of Issue Two was by Richard Bergeron (Warhoon).
Van Splawn was the editor of Djinn and Sevagram, and co-editor of The Star Rover (with F. Lee Baldwin and Fritz Hoffmann), Worlds Apart (with Paul C. Cox, John Kelly Jr. and J.T. Oliver), Time Stream (with Paul Cox and J.T. Oliver), and also released the single-issue fanzine The Fantasmith in 1953, among other zines.