By J. Zollie Howard, then reporter, eventually editor.
From his induction in the Tennessee journalism Hall of Fame.
Courtesy Rusty Burke and Bobby Derie.
By J. Zollie Howard, then reporter, eventually editor.
From his induction in the Tennessee journalism Hall of Fame.
Courtesy Rusty Burke and Bobby Derie.
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| painting by Ron Barber; James Sallis misspelled |
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| painting by Robert McCall; the repro unfocused... or at least it looks blurry as printed--not the photo... |
Meanwhile, James Baen was able to launch the paperback magazine Destinies, which for all the world felt like a more prosperous version of his Galaxy magazine, featuring most of the same writers and illustrators, with a few thrown in (such as Dean Ing or the legendary Clifford Simak) who were more likely previously (or then-recently) to have written for Analog. It was nice to see Spider Robinson's book reviews, a fixture of Baen's Galaxy and briefly having appeared in Analog, find a new home in Baen's new magazine...though the messianic tone of Baen's approach, even given also his undercurrent of support for literary experimenters, made his magazine a little off-putting at times. And while there were several anthology series devoted to publishing new fiction in science fiction in 1978 (Damon Knight's Orbit, Judy-Lynn Del Rey's Stellar, Robert Silverberg's New Dimensions, Terry Carr's Universe, Kenneth Bulmer's New Writings in SF, Roy Torgeson's Chrysalis), some even offering nonfiction features as magazines did, only Destinies blatantly advertised and formatted itself like a magazine, in the same manner the fantasy periodical Ariel: The Book of Fantasy or what had dropped New from its title to become American Review did in their fields. Among the fiction, the Ing story was notable for its take on the emerging face of political terrorism, and good stories by Gregory Benford and Charles Sheffield were also offered.