Thursday, June 30, 2011

Preston Langley Hickey Update

I read an obituary today for Preston Langley Hickey, a teller of weird tales and--as it turns out--a publicist for the studio that made everyone's favorite monster movies from the 1950s. You can read more on the original posting for him, here, now updated. Thanks to Andrea Fisher at the Lakewood Public Library, Lakewood, Ohio, for locating the obituary.

Preston Langley "Duke" Hickey (1900-1962). Photograph from the Cleveland Plain Dealer.

Copyright 2011 Terence E. Hanley

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Stella G.S. Perry (1877-1956)

Author, Businesswoman, Social Reformer
Born December 8, 1877, New Orleans, Louisiana
Died November 7, 1956, Brooklyn, New York

Stella George Stern was born on December 8, 1877, in New Orleans, Louisiana, and attended the Southern Academic Institute, Newcomb College, and Barnard College of Columbia University in New York City, where she was class poet and a founding member of a sorority, Alpha Omicron Pi. Stella graduated from Barnard in 1898 and went directly into advertising, working for the John Wanamaker department store in New York City. Eventually she ran her own advertising agency with local and national accounts. She married George Hough Perry on September 19, 1906, and lived most of her adult life in New Jersey, New York, and San Francisco.

Stella G.S. Perry wrote poems, stories, articles, novels, and non-fiction. Her books are many, from Go to Sleep (1911), Melindy (1912), and When Mother Lets Us Act (1913) to several works of non-fiction published late in her life. Her native Louisiana was the setting of a couple of her novels, Palmetto, The Romance of a Louisiana Girl (1920) and Come Home, A Romance of the Louisiana Rice-Lands (1923). She wrote just one story for Weird Tales, "Old Roses," published in the August 1931 issue.

A suffragist, socialist, and Unitarian, Stella worked on behalf of women and children's welfare in her adopted home state of New Jersey. Her husband was appointed Director of Exploitation (yes, that was his title) at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco in 1915. Stella wrote two books on the art and sculpture of the expo, one with the sculptor Alexander Calder.

Stella G.S. Perry died in Brooklyn, New York, on November 7, 1956, a month and a day short of her seventy-ninth birthday.

Stella G.S. Perry's Story in Weird Tales
"Old Roses" (Aug. 1931)

Further Reading
An Internet search for Stella G.S. Perry's name and "Alpha Omicron Pi" will result in several brief biographies of her. The Louisiana Historical Association has a lengthier biography of her at its website, here.

Author and social reformer Stella G.S. Perry (1877-1956).

A postcard for the Panama-Pacific International Exposition. Stella G.S. Perry compiled two books on the art of the exposition, The Sculpture and Mural Decorations of the Exposition (1915) and The Sculpture of the Exposition (1915, with A. Sterling Calder).

Thanks to Randal A. Everts for providing Stella G.S. Perry's place of death.
Text and captions copyright 2011, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Ramon de las Cuevas (1882-1971)

Pseudonym of Mark R. Harrington
Anthropologist, Archaeologist, Author, Museum Curator
Born July 6, 1882, Ann Arbor, Michigan
Died June 30, 1971

By sheer coincidence, I heard from Weird Tales researcher Randal Everts within just a few minutes of posting my entry on Johns Harrington the other day. Mr. Everts, who has been looking into Weird Tales for many years, once wrote an article on four anthropologists who had work published in "The Unique Magazine." I had already posted an article about the anthropologist Alanson B. Skinner (here), but I had also written about another anthropologist without realizing that he, too, was a teller of weird tales. The anthropologist was Johns Harrington's father, Mark R. Harrington. His story was called "Teoquitla the Golden," and it appeared in the November 1924 issue of Weird Tales under the name Ramon de las Cuevas.

Mark Raymond Harrington was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on July 6, 1882. His father, Mark W. Harrington, was something of a Renaissance man, teaching geology, mathematics, botany, and French, as well as serving as curator of the University of Michigan museum. The younger Harrington was fascinated by Indians and their culture even from a young age and began learning their languages and their ways. His family moved to Mount Vernon, New York, where Harrington began collecting Indian artifacts, a hobby that earned him an introduction to Frederic W. Putnam and the American Museum in New York. Putnam took Harrington under his wing, and so a career in anthropology, archaeology, and museum curation began. Harrington received his master's degree in anthropology from Columbia University in 1908 and began field work in the United States and Cuba that would culminate in his monumental discoveries in Nevada during the 1920s and '30s. There is an excellent account of this phase of Harrington's career at the website of the Las Vegas Review-Journal's "First 100," here.

In 1928, Harrington became director of research and soon after curator of the Southwest Museum in Los Angeles. He would spend the rest of his career with the museum, eventually being named curator emeritus. He was also a historical preservationist and consultant on restoring historic buildings. He himself restored an old adobe home in which he raised a family during the 1930s and '40s.

Harrington also preserved names from the past. In the course of his research, Harrington ran across a historic name, "Ramon de las Cuevas," and adopted it as his nom de plume for Weird Tales. Harrington's only known story for "The Unique Magazine" was "Teoquitla the Golden" from November 1924, the first issue with Farnsworth Wright as editor. Harrington wrote many works of non-fiction under his own name as well.

Mark Raymond Harrington died on June 30, 1971, but his name lives on. The San Fernando Valley Historical Society named its library in Harrington's honor before his death. The society's website has a brief biography of him, here, as does the Encyclopedia of Arkansas, here. Marie Harrington authored something that is becoming increasingly rare, a biography in print. It's called On the Trail of Forgotten People: A Personal Account of the Life and Career of Mark Raymond Harrington, published in 1985 by the Great Basin Press of Reno, Nevada. A quote by Dr. Harrington is fitting for all of us attempting to revive some part of the past:
To follow the trail of a forgotten people, to play detective upon the doings of a man who has been dead 10,000 years or so is a thrilling pastime to an explorer under any circumstances. But when the trail leads into a rich virgin field never disturbed by the spade of the relic hunter, THEN your sunburned desert rat of an archaeologist thinks he has discovered a real paradise.
Ramon de las Cuevas' Story in Weird Tales
"Teoquitla the Golden" (Nov. 1924)

Further Reading
I have listed some sources for further reading above. Another good source is a biography by Bruce Bryan, a fellow anthropologist and teller of weird tales, published in The Masterkey, the journal of the Southwest Museum, in the July-September 1971 issue (Vol. 45, No. 3).

Dr. Mark Raymond Harrington (1882-1971), one-time "boy wonder of the archaeological world," discoverer of a lost city in the Southwestern desert, father of Johns H. Harrington, and teller of weird tales. Photo from the website of the San Fernando Valley Historical Society.
An adobe house built by Harrington in 1947, located at 11039 Memory Park Avenue, Mission Hills, California 91345.
The Southwest Museum, a painting by Wendy Hultquist.
Weird Tales, November 1924, with a cover story by Ramon de las Cuevas, aka Mark Harrington, and cover art by Andrew Brosnatch, his first for "The Unique Magazine."

Note: Thanks to Randal Everts for his lead on Mark R. Harrington as Ramon de las Cuevas and for a copy of Bruce Bryan's biographical article from The Masterkey.

Text and captions copyright 2011, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Addendum (Jan. 9, 2015): The Indians of New Jersey: Dickon Among the Lenapes by M.R. Harrington (1963). The cover artist may have been Don Louis Perceval (1908-1979), but I can't be sure. Clarence Ellsworth (1885-1961) was another illustrator of this book, though not necessarily of this cover or this edition. In any case, thanks to Bob (comment below) for drawing this book to my attention.

Text and captions copyright 2011, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Johns Harrington (1918-1992)

Author, Journalist, Editor, Educator
Born September 15, 1918, New York
Died October 10, 1992, California

Johns Heye Harrington was born on September 15, 1918, in New York. His father, Mark R. Harrington (1882-1971), was an anthropologist, archaeologist, author, and museum curator who worked at the American Museum of Natural History, the Peabody Museum of Harvard, and the Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation (where he would have crossed paths with Alanson Skinner, subject of a previous posting). In 1928, Dr. Harrington relocated to California to assume duties as Director of Research at the Southwest Museum in Los Angeles (now part of the Autry National Center). Over the course of his long career, Dr. Harrington excavated a number of important sites in the American Southwest, including one called The Lost City, located in Nevada. He also lived among and studied 43 Indian tribes. In 1930, Dr. and Mrs. Harrington acquired an old, abandoned adobe house. They renovated the house and lived there until 1945. Their son, Johns Harrington, must have lived an exciting childhood.

Johns Harrington attended the University of Southern California (USC) for four years, serving on the staff of The Wampus (the college humor magazine), The Daily Trojan (the college newspaper), and The Alumni Review. In his senior year, he served as president of his chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, the National Professional Journalism Fraternity. He was also member of Phi Kappa Phi and graduated in 1940. World war interrupted his budding career. He enlisted in September 1942 as a private.

After the war, Harrington carried on in his chosen field. He wrote travel articles that appeared in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and Desert Magazine. He spent many years--perhaps a career--with the Los Angeles City Schools as editor of publications. He also contributed to educational journals and books. His work for Weird Tales consisted of a single story, "The Teakwood Box," from March 1938. At the time the story was published, its author was a student at USC and all of nineteen years old.

Harrington lived in Tujunga, California, for many years. His last residence was Glendale. Johns H. Harrington died on October 10, 1992, probably in California.

Johns Harrington's Story and Letter in Weird Tales
Letter to "The Eyrie" (Sept. 1937)
"The Teakwood Box" (Mar. 1938)

Further Reading
You can read more about Mark Harrington at the website of the San Fernando Valley Historical Society, here, and at the website of the Las Vegas Review-Journal's "First 100," here.

Mark R. Harrington was a prominent anthropologist and archaeologist.
His son, Johns H. Harrington (shown here, top right), followed in his footsteps, at least as far as academic achievement went. Journalist, editor, author, and educator, he also earned a Ph.D.
Harrington's story appeared in the March 1938 issue of Weird Tales. His name was crowded from the cover (drawn by Margaret Brundage) by luminaries such as Seabury Quinn, H.P. Lovecraft, Henry Kuttner, and Jack Williamson.

Note: Thanks to Weird Tales researcher Randal A. Everts for confirmation that Johns Heye Harrington was the writer for Weird Tales and for Harrington's middle name.
Text and captions copyright 2011, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Mal Bissell (1916-2006)

Author, Journalist, Carpenter, Photographer, Social Worker, Counselor, Teacher
Born October 1, 1916, New Haven, Connecticut
Died January 1, 2006, Arizona

Mal Bissell lived a long life and was supposed to have been well loved, yet he was often overshadowed by his father, later his wife, when it came to the world of work. Malcolm Havens Bissell, Jr., was born on October 1, 1916, in New Haven, Connecticut. His father, Malcolm Havens Bissell (1889-1975), was a graduate of Yale University (1911, 1918, 1921) and a prominent geologist, geographer, and humanist. Professor Bissell worked for the states of Connecticut and Pennsylvania and taught at Bryn Mawr College before moving west to establish the Department of Geography at the University of Southern California. He had a long and distinguished career at USC and was eventually named professor emeritus. In addition to studying in France and Germany, Professor Bissell did field work in the American Southwest and elsewhere. He was at one time vice-president of the American Humanist Association and a signatory to the Humanist Manifesto II of 1973.

Malcolm Havens Bissell and his wife, Ella Mary Taylor, had two children, Malcolm Havens Bissell, Jr., and Elinor Elizabeth Bissell. Malcolm the son, known as "Mal," wandered through Latin America, working as a reporter and photographer. His story for Weird Tales "grew out of a couple of days I spent at a remote mine in Bolivia," Bissell recalled. At the time, he was "wandering about the country on a mule en route to the U.S.," where he enlisted in the Army on May 26, 1943. A member of the 45th Infantry Division, Bissell saw action in France during World War II.

When he enlisted, Bissell reported having three years of college. Those three years were probably spent at the University of Southern California. Bissell had met a girl there, another writer, though perhaps more ambitious than he. While he was in basic training, the couple worked on a mystery story aimed at popular magazines of the day. Set in Acapulco, the story didn't appear in print until after the war. In the meantime, the writing career of Bissell's college girlfriend took off. I haven't found any record of it, but by the late 1940s, Mal Bissell and Jane de Lange Lewis (1915-2003) were almost certainly married.

Jane de Lange Lewis was born on September 10, 1915, and graduated from Los Angeles High School (where she was a member of the Poetry Club) in 1935. Jane was a Phi Beta Kappa student at USC. The first vice-president of her chapter was none other than Kenneth M. Bissell, Mal Bissell's uncle, and a professor at the university. It isn't hard to imagine that Jane Lewis and Mal Bissell met at USC. (She was in the class of 1939.) Sooner or later they would have married. They also collaborated on their fiction, although Jane's career--uninterrupted by military service--proved more successful. Writing under the name Lange Lewis, she published a number of detective novels during the 1940s and '50s. They included Murder Among Friends (1942), Juliet Dies Twice (1943), Meat for Murder (1943), The Birthday Murder (1945), and The Passionate Victims (1952). Her detective was a large and eccentric man named Lt. Richard Tuck. As Jane Beynon, Jane also wrote Cypress Man (1944). Her story, "Murder in Acapulco," written with Mal Bissell a few years prior, appeared in Avon Detective Mysteries #2 in 1947.

Mal Bissell's credits are a little more sparse. He wrote one story for Weird Tales, "The Mask of Don Alfredo," published in the January 1950 issue after it was rejected by The Saturday Evening Post and several other magazines. Having written it in the 1940s, Bissell submitted the story as a graduate student at the University of Chicago. According to the author, his other writing "was limited to short pieces for Popular Photography, a few rejected short stories and at least one unfinished novel." 

Something of a wanderer and one to keep himself separate from his fellows, Bissell worked in construction intermittently for a dozen years and as an adjunct instructor of sociology, social psychology, and psychology. He also worked as a social worker and counselor at the Mental Health Center in Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson for twenty-eight years before moving to a remote house outside of Patagonia, Arizona. After that, I have nothing for Mal Bissell until his death and all-too-brief obituary:
Long-time resident of Tucson and Sonoita [Arizona], born October 1, 1916, passed away January 1, 2006. He was a man like no other, who was much loved and will be greatly missed by his family and friends.
There will be no funeral or memorial services. 
Jane de Lange Lewis continued writing after her marriage to Bissell ended. As Jane Lewis Brandt, she authored several novels of historical and contemporary romance: Love in the Hot-Eye Country (1975), La Chingada (1979; published in Spanish as Malinche in 1980), and Firebrand (1983). She preceded Mal Bissell in death, but only by three years. Her last residence was Sherman Oaks, California. Her death came on February 1, 2003.

Mal Bissell's Story in Weird Tales
"The Mask of Don Alfredo" (Jan. 1950)

Further Reading
Jane Lewis Brandt's novels of the 1970s and '80s, though out of print, are still readily available. The couple's older work is harder to find.

The front and back covers of Lange Lewis' Meat for Murder (1943), one in a series of Dell's popular "map-back" paperbacks.
"Murder in Acapulco" by the husband and wife writing team of Lange Lewis and Mal Bissell appeared in Avon Detective Mysteries #2 (1947).
Jane Lewis Brandt wrote several novels during the 1970s and '80s, including La Chingada (1979).

Thanks to Randal A. Everts for further information on Mal Bissell. The quotes in this article are from a letter by Mal Bissell to Mr. Everts.
Text and captions copyright 2011, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Send News . . .

And If There Isn't Any News, Send Rumors

One of the things I have found in doing research is that there is specialized information hiding out there in the world, information commonplace to those holding it and invaluable to those seeking it. Everything we seek may be there for the finding, in old magazines and newspapers, libraries and archives, local history and genealogy organizations, books out of print, collections of letters and diaries, even in the memories of those who survive. Yet the researcher struggles to put all the pieces together. The word research is literal. Someone searched for it once. Subsequently lost, it becomes subject of search again. . . and again. One benefit of the Internet is that once found, information may not be lost again. Or then again, maybe it will. In any case, Tellers of Weird Tales is a blog for everyone. Everyone can read it and everyone can benefit from it. I would also like anyone who has information to feel free to offer it. That's why I am asking for submissions of information, no matter how grand or trivial. You can contribute through your comments, but you can also email me at:

info@hoosiercartoonists.com [No longer active as of March 21, 2023.]

Feel free to send whatever you have: memories, family stories, photographs, clippings, photocopies, letters--it doesn't matter. Anything can help flesh out the bare bones of fact. I read on one blog that a family member has stories from a writer of weird tales, stories never published. I'm open to publishing things like that on my blog as well. In any case, I look forward to hearing from you.

Weird Tales, November 1941, with a cover by Hannes Bok anticipating America's entry into World War II and illustrating Frank Gruber's "Book of the Dead." Many decades later, Weird Tales author E. Hoffman Price published a memoir with same title, telling of the men and women he had known in association with the magazine and his own writing career.

Copyright 2011, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Harold Freeman Miners (1890-1928)

Author, Businessman
Born January 11, 1890, St. Joseph, Michigan
Died February 22, 1928, Denver, Colorado

Pulp writer Harold Freeman Miners was born on January 11, 1890, in St. Joseph, Michigan, and graduated from St. Joseph High School and Michigan Agricultural College, the forerunner of Michigan State University. He served in the Michigan Naval Militia and--during World War I--the U.S. Navy. At the time he registered for the draft, he was working in the advertising business at the California Fruit Growers Exchange in Chicago. He wrote stories for several magazines, including Argosy All-Story Weekly, The Black Mask, Far West Stories, Fighting Romances from the West and East, McFadden Fiction-Lovers Magazine, Western Story Magazine, and of course Weird Tales. His only story for "The Unique Magazine" was called "Desert Madness," published in the fourth issue, June 1923. Miners also had a story called "The Light in the Cabin" syndicated in American and Canadian newspapers in 1927. He was elected a member of the American Authors' League in 1922.

Miners contracted a severe case of influenza while serving in the Navy. His health deteriorated to a point where he was forced in 1921 to a more hospitable climate in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He spent the last year of his life in a Denver sanitarium and died on February 22, 1928. His body was returned to his hometown for burial. He had not yet reached his fortieth birthday.

Harold Freeman Miners' Story in Weird Tales
"Desert Madness" (June 1923)

Further Reading
Short of buying an old pulp magazine, you're not likely to find any of Miners' work in print.

Weird Tales, June 1923, with cover art by William F. Heitman, and fiction by Harold Freeman Miners, Hamilton Craigie, Otis Adelbert Kline, and many others.

Note: Thanks to local genealogist Brenda Sears for information on Miners' death year and place of burial. Thanks also to Jill Rauh at the Benton Harbor Public Library, Benton Harbor, Michigan, for locating his obituary.
Updated on March 21, 2023.
Text and captions copyright 2011, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Monday, June 13, 2011

Page Cooper's Books

I wrote a little about Page Cooper in a previous posting, but I may not have given her all the space she deserves. I want to add to her credits as well, for in addition to being an author and editor, Anice Page Cooper was a book reviewer, biographer, and gardener. A quote on gardening is worth repeating here:
"It's hard to be both a good mother and a good gardener. Either the flowers or the children are apt to run wild."
Now, a chronological list of Page Cooper's books:
  • About Artists (New York: Doubleday, Page and Company, 1926)
  • Authors and Others (1927)
  • DuBose Heyward: An Appreciation (1930)
  • All the Year 'Round: A Day Book (1938)
  • The Boudoir Companion: Frivolous, Sometimes Venomous Thoughts on Men, Morals, and Women edited by Page Cooper (1938)
  • Faith Baldwin and Her American Family (1938)
  • Sophie Kerr (1938)
  • Hail to Yesterday by Mara Miller as told to Page Cooper (Farrar and Rinehart, 1941)
  • Clear the Tracks: The Story of an Old-Time Locomotive Engineer by Joseph Bromley as told to Page Cooper, illustrated by Stephen J. Voorhies (New York: Whittlesey House, 1943)
  • Gone Away with O'Malley: Seventy Years with Horses, Hounds, and People by M. O'Malley Knott and Page Cooper, illustrated by Paul Brown (New York: Doubleday, Doran, 1944)
  • Footloose Fiddler by Harry Miller and Page Cooper, illustrated by Stephen J. Voorhies (New York: Whittlesey House, 1945)
  • Heritage of Fire: The Story of Richard Wagner's Granddaughter by Friedelind Wagner and Page Cooper (Harper, 1945)
  • Around the World with Kipling by Page Cooper, et al. (1946)
  • Great Horse Stories collected by Page Cooper, illustrated by Paul Brown (Doubleday and Company, 1946) Reprinted as The Big Book of Horse Stories (1959)
  • Navy Nurse (McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1946)
  • Sambumbia: A Discovery of the Dominican Republic, the Modern Hispaniola (New York: The Caribbean Library, 1947)
  • The Bellevue Story (New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1948)
  • Famous Dog Stories (Doubleday, 1949)
  • Man 'O War by Page Cooper and Roger L. Treat (Julian Messner, 1950)
  • Pat's Harmony illustrated by Oliver Grimley (Cleveland: World Publishing Company, 1952)
  • Thunder illustrated by Edward Shenton (Cleveland: World Publishing Company, 1954)
  • Amigo: Circus Horse illustrated by Henry C. Pitz (Cleveland: World Publishing Company, 1955)
  • Silver Spurs to Monterey illustrated by Herman D. Giesen (Cleveland: World Publishing Company, 1956)
  • Red Tartar illustrated by Wesley Dennis (Cleveland: World Publishing Company, 1957)
As you can see, Page Cooper began her career writing biography (and autobiography). She closed it by writing novels, mostly children's novels about horses. Readers of horse stories will never forget her.

 




Text copyright 2011, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Elwood F. Pierce (1886-1940)

Newspaperman, Author
Born December 25, 1886, Elkton, Maryland
Died June 1, 1940, Los Angeles, California

Elwood Franklin Pierce was born on Christmas Day, 1886, in Elkton, Maryland. By the time he was twenty-two and living in Chester, Pennsylvania, he was working as a newspaper editor and supporting his parents. In fact he spent much of his life supporting his family and seems not to have married or had children. Pierce worked for a newspaper in Philadelphia at the time of the First World War. By 1930 he was living in Los Angeles. Between 1924 and 1930 he authored tales for Battle Stories, Breezy Stories, and Everybody's Magazine. Also during that period, Weird Tales published the only story he would write for "The Unique Magazine." It was called "The Dream of Death," and it appeared in the July 1925 issue. In 1928 Duffield and Company published Pierce's novel of adventure for boys, Give a Boy LuckAt his death he was working as wire editor for the International News Service. Pierce died at home on June 1, 1940, in Los Angeles. He was just fifty-three years old. Newspapers for which he worked included the Chester Times, The Morning Republican, and the Philadelphia Inquirer, all in Pennsylvania, as well as the Los Angeles Examiner. Pierce also wrote a series called "I Go to War," published in the Chester Times in 1918.

Elwood F. Pierce's Story in Weird Tales
"The Dream of Death" (July 1925)

Further Reading
"The Dream of Death" in 100 Wild Little Weird Tales, edited by Robert Weinberg, et al. (Barnes and Noble, 1994)


Updated on March 21, 2023.
Text and captions copyright 2011, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Friday, June 10, 2011

Arthur William Bernal (1913-1991)

Aka A.W. Bernal, "Stendahl"
Author, Filmmaker, Food and Restaurant Critic
Born September 12, 1913, Oakland, California
Died October 13, 1991, Bayside, Queens, New York

Arthur William Bernal was born on September 12, 1913, in Oakland, California. An early fan of science fiction, he started writing at age fourteen and broke into magazines with letters to Astounding Stories of Super-Science (June 1930) and Amazing Stories (Aug. 1930). A year later, he provided the cover story ("Cosmic Menace") for the summer issue of Amazing Stories Quarterly. He wasn't quite eighteen years old.

Bernal's "Anaphylaxis" appeared in the July 1935 issue of Fantasy Magazine. He was only twenty-three years old when the magazine offered "A Biographical Sketch of A.W. Bernal," by Alvin E. Perry, a few months later (Jan. 1936). Bernal wrote several more tales for Amazing Stories during the 1930s and '40s: "Draught of Immortality" (Dec. 1935), "Paul Revere and the Time Machine" (Mar. 1940), and "King Arthur's Knight in a Yankee Court" (Apr. 1941). Writing science fiction helped pay his way through school. By 1941, Bernal was ready to pass the baton to younger writers. He ran into one of those young writers at a science fiction convention. The young man had one of Bernal's cover stories pinned to his garage door and told him that someday he would be a good writer like Bernal. "I can remember his name," wrote Bernal. "It was Ray Bradbury."

Weird Tales proved a good market for Bernal's fantastic fiction. "The Unique Magazine" published five of his stories, two of which were multi-issue serials. "The Man Who Played with Time" (Mar. 1932) was the first, presaging Bernal's interest in time travel stories. "Vampires of the Moon" (serial, May-June-July 1934), "The Man Who Was Two Men" (Apr. 1935), "Satan in Exile" (serial, June-July-Aug.-Sept. 1935), and "So Very Strange!" (Apr. 1937) followed. Weird Tales expert Robert Weinberg called "The Man Who Was Two Men," a science fiction comedy story, "a major disaster" and "among the worst stories ever published in Weird Tales." True or not, that didn't stop the editor from making it the cover story for April 1935. "Satan in Exile," by the way, should not be confused with Paul Ernst's series of Doctor Satan stories which began coincidentally in August 1935, halfway through Bernal's similarly titled serial.

At the same time he was writing stories about vampires and devils, Arthur William Bernal began what would have been considered a more respectable career as a journalist. He attended the University of California at Berkeley, majoring in public speaking and graduating in 1936. He married in 1938 and settled in Beverly Hills. (Henry Kuttner lived in Beverly Hills at the same time. The two men may very well have known each other in that small world of Los Angeles fandom, a world that included Ray Bradbury and Forrest J Ackerman.) Bernal continued writing into the early 1940s, but Uncle Sam came calling, and he enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1943. With his background in journalism (and perhaps with some connection to moviemaking), Bernal went to work on training films during the war.

After the war, Bernal worked for a company that made animated cartoons, then freelanced for Corporate Image Films, producing promotional films for industry. In the early 1960s, he created his own company, Firebird Films, and returned to animation with "The Foolish Frog" and "Leopold, the See-Through Crumb Baker." By the end of the decade, he had begun writing reviews of restaurants and soon adopted the pen name "Stendahl." As Stendahl, Bernal appeared on radio and in newspapers between 1970 and 1989. He also wrote six books on food, restaurants, and cooking, and wrote and produced two films on wine tours of Europe. After a long and varied career, Arthur William Bernal died on October 13, 1991, in Bayside, Queens, New York.

Arthur William Bernal's Stories in Weird Tales
"The Man Who Played with Time" (Mar. 1932)
"Vampires of the Moon" (three-part serial, May-June-July 1934)
"The Man Who Was Two Men" (Apr. 1935)
"Satan in Exile" (four-part serial, June-July-Aug. 1935)
"So Very Strange!" (Apr. 1937)

Further Reading

I don't know of any reprints of Bernal's work, but he wrote several books on food, cooking, and restaurants. His obituary in the New York Times (Oct. 16, 1991) offers a good deal of information on his life.

Arthur William Bernal, a picture from his college yearbook, University of California at Berkeley, ca. 1936.
The cover of Amazing Stories Quarterly, Summer 1931. Although Bernal's name does not appear on the cover, the illustration (by Leo Morey) shows a scene from his story, "Cosmic Menace." It was Bernal's first published story in a decade-long career as a pulp fictioneer.
Margaret Brundage provided the illustration for Bernal's only cover story for Weird Tales (Apr. 1935).  What is the next amazing step in radio after television? Bernal's story, "The Man Who Was Two Men," provided one possible answer.
An opening still from Arthur William Bernal's animated short, "The Foolish Frog," sung by Pete Seeger, adapted and directed by Gene Dietch, and animated by a Czechoslovakian studio. You can view the video on YouTube, here.

Thanks to Randal A. Everts for further information.
Text and captions copyright 2011, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Thursday, June 9, 2011

E. Thayles Emmons (1882-1971)

Aka Edwin Thayles Emmons, Edwin Thales Emmons, E.T. Emmons
Newspaper Reporter and Editor, Columnist, Author, Artist, Local Historian, Naturalist
Born April 11, 1882, Woodstock, Vermont
Died May 17, 1971, Geneva, New York

E. Thayles Emmons, also known as Edwin Thayles, Edwin Thales, or just plain E. T. Emmonswas better known to the residents of Geneva, New York, as the editor of their daily newspaper. Emmons wrote one story for Weird Tales. It was called "Two Hours of Death," and it appeared in the May 1923 issue of the magazine, only the third issue to see print.

Emmons was born on April 11, 1882, in Woodstock, Vermont, and grew up in Taftsville. After graduating high school in 1899, he worked for a string of newspapers--Vermont Standard, Brockton Times, Boston AmericanSyracuse Evening Telegram, Rochester Herald--before arriving at the Geneva Daily Times in 1906. He remained with the newspaper for decades to come and in 1945 became executive editor.

Emmons was an indispensable figure in his adopted hometown. He was president of the Geneva Historical Society and the local botanical society and member of numerous other organizations and civic groups. Emmons also wrote stories and nature articles for magazines, a column called "Days of Yore," and a local history, The Story of Geneva (1931). I have found just two magazine credits, Emmons' story for Weird Tales, and another in Locomotive Engineers JournalIn addition, Emmons was a birdwatcher and participated in annual bird censuses. His hobby was collecting ferns.

Emmons came from an old New England family. His descendants still call New York home. The Rochester Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, the National Journalism Fraternity, honored Emmons in January 1969 for his seven decades in the profession. He died on May 17, 1971, in Geneva at the age of eighty-nine.

E. Thayles Emmons' Story in Weird Tales
"Two Hours of Death" (May 1923)

Further Reading
You can read Emmons' story, "James Crowley-Gentleman" from Locomotive Engineers Journal, on Google Books.

"Seneca St. by Night, from Hotel Seneca." Geneva, New York, would have looked like this at about the time Edwin Thales Emmons arrived there to begin work at the Geneva Daily Times in 1906.

Thanks to A Family Member for further information on Edwin Thales Emmons.
Text and captions copyright 2011 Terence E. Hanley