-
collection of fandom-related
jargon Fancyclopedia II. It did not, however,
occur in the 1944
predecessor to that work,
Fancyclopedia I,
suggesting the term came...
- fandom,
Speer wrote Up to Now: A
History of
Science Fiction Fandom and
Fancyclopedia.
Speer was born in Comanche, Oklahoma. He
received his bachelor's degree...
-
magazine to
focus on
science fiction rather than science. The
authors of
Fancyclopedia 3
argue The
Planet is the
first fanzine for this reason.
Editor Luis...
- magazine, a
standard bedsheet size is
usually 9¾" x 12". **** Eney's
Fancyclopedia II
gives the
following entry: Bedsheet: A
prozine size; 9x12. At various...
-
science fiction fandom,
appearing occasionally in fanzines, as
noted in
Fancyclopedia II (1959).
Ballantine has also been the
publisher of
books featuring...
- see
entry trufan Fancyclopedia I by John
Bristol (Jack Speer), the
Fantasy Foundation, 1944
Fancyclopedia II
published 1959
Fancyclopedia III
Archived 2021-07-27...
- Bob Tucker's The Neo-Fan Guide;
other early references include 1959's
Fancyclopedia II and
Donald Franson's 1962 work A Key to the
Terminology of Science-Fiction...
- What's on Netflix. 2019-03-16.
Retrieved 2019-03-21. "VCON 34 -
Fancyclopedia 3".
fancyclopedia.org.
Retrieved 2019-03-22. "Home Page". VCON 43 - OCT 11-13...
- Fanzines.
Carbondale & Evanston:
Southern Illinois University Press. "
Fancyclopedia I: C –
Cosmic Circle". fanac.org. 12
August 1999.
Archived from the...
- (1946).
Terminology was yet unsettled; the 1944
edition of Jack Speer's
Fancyclopedia used the term
costume party.
Rules governing costumes became established...