Difference between revisions of "Cthulhu"
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''Cthulhu'' ran only one issue, published in Summer 1942. | ''Cthulhu'' ran only one issue, published in Summer 1942. | ||
− | Contributors included Eric C. Hopkins, John B. Michel ([[Terrible Tales of Tittering Terror]]), Eric S. Needham (later editor of [[Now & Then]]), Eric Frank Russell, Donald Raymond Smith, Douglas R. Webster | + | Contributors included Eric C. Hopkins, John B. Michel ([[Terrible Tales of Tittering Terror]]), Eric S. Needham (later editor of [[Now & Then]]), Eric Frank Russell, Donald Raymond Smith, Douglas R. Webster, Christopher Samuel Youd (John Christopher) ([[The Fantast]]), and a few others. |
Webster's ''Cthulhu'' holds distinction of being the first the first publication to have [[H. P. Lovecraft]]'s "Cthulhu" in its title. | Webster's ''Cthulhu'' holds distinction of being the first the first publication to have [[H. P. Lovecraft]]'s "Cthulhu" in its title. |
Revision as of 12:33, 17 October 2011
Cthuhlu was a science fiction, fantasy, and weird literature fanzine edited and published by Douglas R. Webster in Aberdeen, Scotland.
Cthulhu ran only one issue, published in Summer 1942.
Contributors included Eric C. Hopkins, John B. Michel (Terrible Tales of Tittering Terror), Eric S. Needham (later editor of Now & Then), Eric Frank Russell, Donald Raymond Smith, Douglas R. Webster, Christopher Samuel Youd (John Christopher) (The Fantast), and a few others.
Webster's Cthulhu holds distinction of being the first the first publication to have H. P. Lovecraft's "Cthulhu" in its title.
Webster published fewer than 40 copies of Cthuthu #1, one copy each for a "limited clientele" of his choosing (recipients listed in full on page one).