Difference between revisions of "Hugin and Munin"
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''Hugin and Munin'', named for the two ravens of the Norse god Odin, who representing 'thought' (Hugin) and 'memory' (Munin), was published in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada from 1966 to 1968. t least 7 issues appeared. | ''Hugin and Munin'', named for the two ravens of the Norse god Odin, who representing 'thought' (Hugin) and 'memory' (Munin), was published in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada from 1966 to 1968. t least 7 issues appeared. | ||
− | Contributors included Crayden Arcand, Mike Glicksohn ([[Energumen]]), Ray Nelson, Chris Redmond, Earl Schultz, Colin Stafford, [[Susan Wood]] ([[Aspidistra]]), Marg Yeo, and Roger Zelazny. | + | Contributors included Crayden Arcand, Mike Glicksohn ([[Energumen]]), Ray Nelson, Chris Redmond, Earl Schultz, Colin Stafford, [[Susan Wood]] ([[Aspidistra]]), Marg Yeo, and Roger Zelazny, with piece called "Sorry folks, I never could think up imaginative titles". |
Artwork was contributed by Derek Carter, Jack Gaughan, Alexis Gilliland, and Murray Long. | Artwork was contributed by Derek Carter, Jack Gaughan, Alexis Gilliland, and Murray Long. |
Revision as of 08:12, 8 September 2012
Hugin and Munin is a science fiction fanzine by Richard Labonte.
Hugin and Munin, named for the two ravens of the Norse god Odin, who representing 'thought' (Hugin) and 'memory' (Munin), was published in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada from 1966 to 1968. t least 7 issues appeared.
Contributors included Crayden Arcand, Mike Glicksohn (Energumen), Ray Nelson, Chris Redmond, Earl Schultz, Colin Stafford, Susan Wood (Aspidistra), Marg Yeo, and Roger Zelazny, with piece called "Sorry folks, I never could think up imaginative titles".
Artwork was contributed by Derek Carter, Jack Gaughan, Alexis Gilliland, and Murray Long.
Letters came from Issac Asimov, Alexei Panshin and George W. Price.
In Checkpoint 6/7 from September 1969, Peter Roberts writes in his review of issue 7, "HaM is a nice fanzine; that's my first thought when considering it for review and I think I'm going to have difficulty clarifying it to any sensible degree -- it's just a feeling that comes up out of its orange pages... "
Hugin and Munin #6 was a split zine with Kevas and Trillium.
Richard LaBonte also published the fanzines Acusfoos and Low-Down.