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Hugo Award for Best Fanzine

The Hugo Award for Best Fanzine is given annually to fanzines. These are amateur magazines for science fiction/fantasy-related subject, which do not pay their contributors. Fanzines are generally produced out of the love of the genre, its authors, books and films. Historically, fanzines were...
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F. M. Busby

Francis Marion Busby (March 11, 1921 - February 17, 2005) was a science fiction writer and figure in science fiction fandom. In 1960 he was a co-winner of the Hugo Award for Best Fanzine. He began writing short fiction in 1957, but did not start...

Earl Kemp

Earl Kemp (born 1929) is an American science fiction editor, critic, and fan who won a Hugo Award for Best Fanzine in 1961 for Who Killed Science Fiction, a collection of questions and answers with top writers in the field. Kemp also helped found...

Richard A. Lupoff

Richard Allen Lupoff, (born February 21, 1935, Brooklyn, New York), is a science fiction and mystery author, who has also written humor, satire, non-fiction and reviews. In addition to his two dozen novels and more than 40 short stories, he has also...

Robert Coulson

Robert Stratton "Buck" Coulson (May 12, 1928 - February 19, 1999) was an American science fiction writer, well-known fan, filk song writer, fanzine editor and bookseller from Indiana. Coulson's novels include But What of Earth? (1976, ISBN 0-373...

Juanita Coulson

Juanita Coulson (born February 12, 1933) is an American science fiction and fantasy writer. She is also widely known in filk music circles since the 1950s for her singing and songwriting; she has won several Pegasus Awards for her filking. For...

Camille Cazedessus Jr.

Camille Cazedessus II (born December 8, 1938), also known as "Caz", is an American editor and publisher. Known for his work about pulp fiction, he has published over 200 issues of fanzines on the topic since 1960 under the titles ERB-dom, The...

Terry Carr

Terry Gene Carr (February 19, 1937 – April 7, 1987) was a U.S. science fiction author and editor. Terry Carr was born in Grants Pass, Oregon. He was an enthusiastic publisher of science fiction fanzines, which later helped open his way into the...

Andrew I. Porter

Andrew Ian Porter, (born March 24, 1946) entered science fiction fandom in 1960 and became active in fan groups in New York City. He published many different fanzines (including the newszine S.F.Weekly, from 1966-68, and Algol). He started his...

Susan Wood

Susan Joan Wood (August 22, 1948-November 12, 1980 was a Canadian author, critic, and science fiction fan, born in Ottawa, Ontario. Wood discovered science fiction fandom while she was studying at Carleton University in the 1960s. Wood met fellow...

George H. Scithers

George H. Scithers is a science fiction fan, author, and editor. A long-time member of the World Science Fiction Society, he published a fanzine starting in the '50's, wrote short stories, and moved on to edit several prominent science fiction...

Richard E. Geis

Richard E. Geis is an American erotica and science fiction writer who won the Hugo Award for Best Fan Writer in 1982 and 1983. His recent writings may be read on his page at eFanzines.com.

Mike Glyer

Mike Glyer is a publisher of the science fiction fan newszine File 770. He holds the record for being nominated for the Hugo Awards the most times, 45, and has won 9 times. File 770 won Best Fanzine Hugo in 1984, 1985, 1989, 2000, 2001 and 2008, and...

David Langford

David Rowland Langford (born 10 April 1953) is a British author, editor and critic, largely active within the science fiction field. He publishes the science fiction fanzine and newsletter Ansible. David Langford was born and grew up in Newport,...

Lee Hoffman

Lee Hoffman, born Shirley Bell Hoffman, (August 14, 1932, Chicago, Illinois - February 6, 2007, Port Charlotte, Florida) was an American science fiction fan, an editor of early folk music fanzines, and an author of science fiction, Western and...

Charles N. Brown

Charles Nikki Brown (June 24, 1937 - July 12, 2009) was the co-founder and editor of Locus, a news and reviews magazine dealing with the science fiction and fantasy genres of literature. He was born on June 24, 1937 in Brooklyn, New York. He...

John Klima

John Klima (born 1971 in Wisconsin, United States) is an American anthology and science fiction magazine editor, whose science fiction zine, Electric Velocipede, won the Hugo Award for Best Fanzine in 2009. He was nominated for a World Fantasy Award...
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