Or maybe they just made it up/extrapolated it from what they had seen of Mr. Spock to this point. That wouldn't be out of the realm of possibility for fans of that periodOn a different topic, last night we read the January 1967 issue of Vulcanalia, the very first Trekzine, to our two gatherings (East and West Coast).
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It's just two pages long, and you can see the first page at Fanlore.
As you can see from the front, it's put out by a Brooklyn club that has at least two members. Treasurer Elyse Pines was active in New York fandom though I don't know if that fandom predated her Trek involvement. I know she and Vulcanian Enterprises Preisdent Dana L. Fries both went to Nycon (Worldcon) '67, just seven months from now. (time travel tense is fun!)
The second page is particularly interesting. It has both a biography of Leonard Nimoy and one of Mr. Spock:
"Mister Spock is the science officer and first officer on the USS Enterprise.
His mother was an earth space scientist who traveled to the planet Vulcan on a research mission. There she met, worked with and married,Spock's father, a Vulcan native.
Vulcan is a hot, arid planet larger than earth. Because of its greater gravity, Vulcans are extremely powerful and agile.Their blood is green and assimilates oxygen at an extremely rapid rate.Their hearing is super-sensitive, and their knowledge of the human mind and body is so scientifically advanced as to be uncanny. Spock can actually render a man unconscious la: applying fine pressure to various nerve centers.
[our young Trek initiate with a Spock crush was most gleeful when she read this passage...]
Emotionally the Vulcans are stoics. In ages past, they were a fierce, warring race.For self-preservation,emotional control became necessary and was gradually accomplished.It is considered bad taste and illogical for a Vulcan to show his feelings.
Spock is, of course, caught between two worlds,being half alien to earth and half earthling to the Vulcan. Not being fully at ease in either society, he chose the space service and science as a way of life."
I do not know where this info came from as it includes stuff not in the show as of January: Since Friese and Pines also had pictures of Leonard Nimoy, perhaps this stuff came straight from the horse's mouth (or his agent)?
Or maybe they just made it up Splash/extrapolated it from what they had seen of Mr. Spock to this point. That wouldn't be out of the realm of possibility for fans of that period
Perhaps, though I find it unlikely. The information regarding Vulcan, that Vulcans are called Vulcans (Vuilcanian was still being used, though not exclusively), their sensitive hearing, those would all make it into the canon eventually.
Also, their biography of Spock had to come from somewhere. Perhaps culled from clippings and magazines, but it also might have been another gift from Nimoy or his agent.
Also, their biography of Spock had to come from somewhere.
That somewhere could have been their imaginations, however. My experience with fan publications, which would date to, say, 20 years after the period you're describing, was that about 75% of the pieces were largely made up by the authors. Their tack was "you don't know that it DIDN'T happen this way, so..." I, on the other hand, spent significant time actually researching my pieces. James Van Hise took one of my articles, produced by me sweating over VHS tapes for weeks, and edited it together with three others, all of whom just guessed what the thought reality would be. I was pissed.
I don't thjink "true" science fiction fans care for Star Trek or most televised versions of science fiction. I was actually a fan of scence fiction before I was a fan of Star Trek so I can understand the snobbery.
I live in acity of over $2 million people in Australia and the two specialist science fiction bookshops we have don't have Star Trek books. They have Star Wars (limited). I asked about this and one owner told me politly we don't have the business but I suspect they are "true" scifi fans.
How were fanzines distributed anyway? In the 80s I saw some for sale in my other city science fiction bookshop (Star Trek, Dr Who, Blakes 7 I think) ? This was in Australia though
Gideon, I hope you’re planning on writing a book on the true history of early Star Trek fandom. I enjoyed Verba’s history of Trek fanzines, but she was there almost right from the start, which might color her viewpoint. I definitely think there’s room for an outsider view, written half a century after the fact. And, if you have access to the ‘zines, you’ve got the primary research materials.
I hope I’m not the only one who would read the HELL out of such a book!
As I posted before, on Jan 7:Good. Sounds like we agree that a million is too high. That's something!
So have fans over the years just conflated a dubious number originally applied to that Committee campaign with the end of the second season Bjo Trimbel campaign?
Please don't mentioned it again.
And that would establish a minimum not a maximum. Seriously, you think it is one sale/subscription equals only one fan? No sharing? No multi-reader households, or classroom copies* or issues shared amongst club members? And that only fans who could afford subscriptions were "dedicated?" (BTW, as an aside, how are you representing the 1967 cost for all this reading your are doing? A change jar maybe, to account for all the costs you would paying if you were really in 1967? With the collections to some local charity perhaps?)I did some research for you. Analog's distribution was ~145,000 per month, a little under half of whom were subscribers. It was by far the biggest mag, the others having circulations under 100,000, closer to 50,000. And there was cross over, so one can't just add them all together.
This gibes well with ACE having average sales runs of 40-70K.
So one could guess that the dedicated reading community of SF fans was 100-200K.
And that would establish a minimum not a maximum. Seriously, you think it is one sale/subscription equals only one fan? No sharing? No multi-reader households, or classroom copies* or issues shared amongst club members?
And that only fans who could afford subscriptions were "dedicated?"
(BTW, as an aside, how are you representing the 1967 cost for all this reading your are doing? A change jar maybe, to account for all the costs you would paying if you were really in 1967? With the collections to some local charity perhaps?)
And on the subject of sharing, even your "I'll sit this one out" fan received three copies of the Letter from three different people and shared it with the local club, who may or may not have been subscribers of anything—and yet could have responded to the campaign. where are those in you accounting?
*(Like my physics teacher in high school. RIP, John Arnold)
You might enjoy Galactic Journey. We put up a new article every other day, and we cover far more than just Trek (indeed, one gains a greater appreciation for Trek in context, I've found).
Oh, the Journey is one of my regular internet fanzines (along with File 770, Black Gate, Camestros Felapton, and Scalzi’s Whatever.) I really enjoy it!
I’ve even seen you “live”, at the 2019 NASFiC in Utah. I mean, I sat in the audience for one of your panels. I was already a Galactic Journey fan by then. It was a great panel, as I recall.
Starlight? Or did you mean Starlog?Any spacecraft fan art from the zines?
Starlight had a few on what the replacement of the refit might be…
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