Difference between revisions of "Crux"
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− | '''Crux''' | + | '''Crux''' was a science fiction fanzine published in Ararat, Victoria by James Styles. |
− | John Foyster, in his article "Scraps from an Album", writes about the Australian SF scene the 60s and 70s, in [[Mimosa]], " Being a train driver does not bar one from becoming an active fan, as witness the sometimes-remembered-in-Melbourne James Styles - although I feel Roman (Mazurak) was more serious about his work than James was, just as James was more serious about 'active fandom' than Roman was. As Roman pointed out to me at the Worldcon, an old train driver (though he isn't that old) still has to work his shifts, and for Roman that meant he could only attend parts of the Worldcon." | + | ''Crux'' was published from 1976 till 1982. ISSN: 0313-945X. |
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+ | John Foyster ([[Australian Science Fiction Review (second series)]]), in his article "Scraps from an Album", writes about the Australian SF scene the 60s and 70s, in [[Mimosa]], " Being a train driver does not bar one from becoming an active fan, as witness the sometimes-remembered-in-Melbourne James Styles - although I feel Roman (Mazurak) was more serious about his work than James was, just as James was more serious about 'active fandom' than Roman was. As Roman pointed out to me at the Worldcon, an old train driver (though he isn't that old) still has to work his shifts, and for Roman that meant he could only attend parts of the Worldcon." | ||
==External Links== | ==External Links== |
Latest revision as of 18:41, 16 July 2012
Crux was a science fiction fanzine published in Ararat, Victoria by James Styles.
Crux was published from 1976 till 1982. ISSN: 0313-945X.
John Foyster (Australian Science Fiction Review (second series)), in his article "Scraps from an Album", writes about the Australian SF scene the 60s and 70s, in Mimosa, " Being a train driver does not bar one from becoming an active fan, as witness the sometimes-remembered-in-Melbourne James Styles - although I feel Roman (Mazurak) was more serious about his work than James was, just as James was more serious about 'active fandom' than Roman was. As Roman pointed out to me at the Worldcon, an old train driver (though he isn't that old) still has to work his shifts, and for Roman that meant he could only attend parts of the Worldcon."
External Links
- Crux, National Library of Australia catalogue record