Difference between revisions of "EYE"

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Issue #3, from December 1954,  featured the article "Mordecai of the White Horse" by Frank Arnold, an account of the activites at the White Horse pub, where all of London science fiction fandom met. It was later preprinted in [[Relapse]] #18.  
 
Issue #3, from December 1954,  featured the article "Mordecai of the White Horse" by Frank Arnold, an account of the activites at the White Horse pub, where all of London science fiction fandom met. It was later preprinted in [[Relapse]] #18.  
  
Other contributors included Ron Bennett ([[Ploy]]), among others.
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Other contributors included Ron Bennett ([[Ploy]], [[Skyrack]], [[Alpha]]), among others.
  
 
Stuart Mackenzie also published the titles [[Convention 1955]] and [[Ib Tenebo]] for [[Offtrails Magazine Publishers Association|OMPA]].
 
Stuart Mackenzie also published the titles [[Convention 1955]] and [[Ib Tenebo]] for [[Offtrails Magazine Publishers Association|OMPA]].

Revision as of 00:16, 19 November 2012

EYE, sometimes written as "i", was a science fiction fanzine by Vince Clarke, Stuart Mackenzie, and E.C. Tubb.

EYE was published in London, England in the 1950s. The first issue appeared in 1954. Six issues appeared, the last issue in 1955.

Issue #1 featured written contributions from Bryan Berry, John Brunner, Daphne Buckmaster (Esprit), Nigel Lindsay, and Stuart Mackenzie.

Issue #3, from December 1954, featured the article "Mordecai of the White Horse" by Frank Arnold, an account of the activites at the White Horse pub, where all of London science fiction fandom met. It was later preprinted in Relapse #18.

Other contributors included Ron Bennett (Ploy, Skyrack, Alpha), among others.

Stuart Mackenzie also published the titles Convention 1955 and Ib Tenebo for OMPA.

E.C. 'Ted' Tubb would go on to become the editor of the first issue of Vector which appeared in the summer of 1958.

Vince Clarke began publishing fanzines in January 1949 with the first issue of Science Fantasy News, released throughout the 1950s and 16 issues were released, the last in June 1960. He returned to publishing in the 1980s and 1990s as co-editor of Pulp, with Avedon Carol, Rob Hansen, John Harvey and Pam Wells.

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