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The project of having a nation-wide Weird Tales Club to exchange views on weird literature and encourage new authors and artists to interpret the weird, the fantastic and the supernatural, has won your hearty support, since it was suggested in the December issue; but suggestions as to how such a nation-wide club should function are very few, so far. Individual Weird Tales Clubs are already established in communities large enough to support them, and combine informal get-together meetings with serious discussion, to both the social and cultural benefit of the members. But what can be done by a Weird Tales Club for the thousands of our readers who live on farms and in communities too small to maintain local clubs? Their interest in weird literature is just as keen. One very practical suggestion has been made: that our readers who are interested in corresponding with other weird story enthusiasts send us their names and addresses, and we will publish these in the magazine. Why not send us a letter at the same time, telling how you became interested in weird fiction?


A Weird Tales Club

Richard H. Jamison writes from Valley Park, Missouri: "I noticed Ralph R. Phillips' letter in the December Eyrie regarding a Weird Tales Club. However, he is wrong in assuming that Gertrude Greazeale's plea for such a club was ignored. A list of names of those interested in corresponding with each other was sent upon request. I am still corresponding with several persons whose names appeared on the original list. Calling it a club, however, is a misnomer. A club has some organization, some purpose, something, however loosely knit, that holds it more or less together. The publishing of the list of names was a beginning, but it was allowed to expire there without ever moving forward. As a suggestion, why not set aside a page or two of the Eyrie for letters and news concerning the club when it is formed? One might almost say that the original club died of starvation. After the original list of names was mailed out not a word was ever heard about the club again, no provision was made for adding new members, in fact I'll bet a majority of the readers didn't know that such a club existed. If a page of the magazine were set aside, however, interest could be kept up by suggestions, news, and the publication of new members' names. One purpose of the club might be helping to put over the Lovcraft Memorial Volume. This book should be a success not only to show our loyalty to the late H.P.L. but also to encourage the publication of succeeding volumes of his letters and poetry, and the works of other authors such as Howard, etc."


Hannes Bok

Ray Bradbury writes from Los Angeles: "Today is the day of days for me, for I have just been to the newsstand and bought my copy of Weird Tales with the cover excellently painted by a young Seattle artist named Hannes Bok. I have waited patiently for years to see Bok do a Weird cover—and now the day has come. I can only say that Bok shows

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