Difference between revisions of "Black Flames"
Drew morse (talk | contribs) m |
|||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
Jim-E. Daugherty was better known in Los Angeles as Virginia Laney Daugherty, where she was a member of the Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society. She attended the 1946 Pacificon 4th World SF Convention, and is featured in the program. | Jim-E. Daugherty was better known in Los Angeles as Virginia Laney Daugherty, where she was a member of the Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society. She attended the 1946 Pacificon 4th World SF Convention, and is featured in the program. | ||
− | Along with [[Atres Artes]], [[Chanticleer]], [[ | + | Along with [[Atres Artes]], [[Chanticleer]], [[Futuria Fantasia]], [[Guteto]], [[Ichor]], [[Le Zombie]], [[Lethe]], [[Nova (1940s)|Nova]], [[Shangri L'Affaires]], and [[Voice of the Imagi-Nation]], ''Black Flames'' was included in the anthology fanzine [[Pacificon Combozine]] for the convention. |
[[Category:Zine]] | [[Category:Zine]] |
Revision as of 22:48, 15 October 2011
Black Flames was a science fiction and fantasy fanzine by Jim-E. Daugherty.
According to Partners In Wonder by Eric Lief Davin, "In January, 1946 female fan Jim-E. Daugherty published a feminist science fiction fanzine entitled Black Flames, in honor of Stanley G. Weinbaum's Amazon queen, 'Margaret of Urbs'."
'Margaret of Urbs' was also known as 'The Black Flame' in the first part, called "Dawn of Flame", of Weinbaum's post-apocalyptic novel, The Black Flame.
The cover of this 22 page fanzine was by Fay Dishington.
Jim-E. Daugherty was better known in Los Angeles as Virginia Laney Daugherty, where she was a member of the Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society. She attended the 1946 Pacificon 4th World SF Convention, and is featured in the program.
Along with Atres Artes, Chanticleer, Futuria Fantasia, Guteto, Ichor, Le Zombie, Lethe, Nova, Shangri L'Affaires, and Voice of the Imagi-Nation, Black Flames was included in the anthology fanzine Pacificon Combozine for the convention.