Thursday, December 19, 2013

Merry Christmas from Tellers of Weird Tales!

I have looked through image after image for the right one to wish everyone a Merry Christmas. This one, created by Margaret Brundage for an issue published eighty years ago this month, is it. It even says Dec. 25 in the upper right corner. But if someone in a red outfit comes to your house that evening, you sure don't want it to be this guy. A jolly old elf would be much better.


Merry Christmas To All! 

Text copyright 2013, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Aalla Zaata

I'll end my alphabetical list with another unknown and no doubt another pseudonym. He or she was Aalla Zaata. I doubt that any person has ever borne that name. Mr. or Ms. Zaata wrote one story for Weird Tales from 1935.

And so ends my A to Z list.

Aalla Zaata's Story in Weird Tales
"A Grave Is Five Feet Deep" (July 1935)


Update (Mar. 7, 2017): According to a reader, Aalla Zaata was the pen name of Dora Black Russell, also called Winifred (Brent) Russell, also called Dora Winifred Russell. I will do further research and write a new article about her as time allows.

Text copyright 2013, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

* * *

Update (July 23, 2017):

Aalla Zaata
Pseudonym of Dora Black Russell
Aka Dora Black; Dora, Countess Russell; Winifred (Brent) Russell; Dora Winifred Russell; Virginia Stait
Author, Feminist, Social Activist
Born April 3, 1894, London, England
Died May 31, 1986, Porthcurno, Cornwall, England

In progress . . .

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Katherine Yates (1865-1951)

Née Katherine M. Snyder
Aka E.E. Steven, Katherine P. Mayhew
Author, Publisher, Traveler, Club Woman
Born November 12, 1865, Drumbo, Ontario, Canada
Died October 25, 1951, Los Angeles City or County, California

I first wrote about Katherine Yates on December 13, 2013. I revised my article on January 27, 2016, and now (April 30, 2023) I find it needs a complete overhaul, so:

Katherine Merritte Snyder was born on November 12, 1865, in Drumbo, Ontario, Canada. She was the daughter of Peter M. Snyder (1838-1893) and Julia P. Turner Snyder (1839-1938). Katherine arrived in the United States in 1882. By 1900, she was married and living in Chicago. Her husband was Ralph T. Yates (1856-?), a traveling salesman out of Freeport, Illinois. By Katherine Yates' account, the two were divorced in 1910.  She was living in Chicago when the enumerator of the census came around early that year. By the end of 1910, she had relocated to Honolulu, Hawaii.

Katherine M. Yates was supposed to have had her own publishing company in Chicago, but I haven't found any confirmation of that. Her stories listed in The FictionMags Index make a very short list: "Sallie’s Red Cheek" in Pearson’s Magazine (Sept. 1902) and "Under the Hau Tree" in Weird Tales (Nov. 1925). I have found a couple of other credits for her, "Seventeen and Twenty," a short story serialized in newspapers in 1904, and a story with an unknown title in Mother's Magazine, March 1907. In 1917, a newspaper item announced that her article "Motoring on the Edge of the World" would be published in National Geographic. I don't know whether that ever happened.

The title of Katherine's lone story for Weird Tales, "Under the Hau Tree" (Nov. 1925), refers to a species of hibiscus native to the South Pacific and a part of the flora of Hawaii. The story was reprinted in Magazine of Horror #11 (Nov. 1965) and in the paperback collection The Plague of the Living Dead (1970). 

Katherine M. Yates also wrote books for children. "Chet", from 1909, was illustrated by Harold S. De Lay (1876-1950), who later contributed to Weird Tales as well. Several of her books have titles that are also prepositional phrases. That makes me wonder whether they're related somehow. Katherine's books include:
  • What the Pine Tree Heard (1903)
  • The Grey Story Book (1904)
  • On the Way There (1904)
  • Through the Woods (1906)
  • By the Roadside (1908)
  • Cheery and the Chum, illustrated by Clara Powers Wilson (1908)
  • At the Door (1909)
  • By the Wayside (1909 or before; 1913)
  • "Chet", illustrated by Harold S. De Lay (1909; 1913)
  • On the Way There: A Wonder Tale (1909)
  • Diary of One Month in Honolulu (1910)
  • Along the Trail (1912)
  • A Tale of the Rainbow Land (1914)
  • From Cell to Sunlight (1915?)
  • Up the Sunbeams (1916)
  • On the Hill-Top (1919)
  • In the Valley (1922)
  • Kat and Copy-Cat, a mystery novel as by E.E. Steven (1929)
  • The Feather Cloak (1936)
  • At the Door
  • On the Hill Top
Katherine wrote about "metaphysics" as Katherine P. Mayhew. Again, she used the pen name E.E. Steven for her self-published mystery novel Kat and Copy-Cat (1929). She was the first member of the League of American Pen Woman from Hawaii, and she was in Who's Who in America for 1922-1923. She was active in clubs in Honolulu for many years.

Katherine Yates' grandmother was Marilla (Turner) Marks Hutchins Hills (1807-1901), an author, publisher, and abolitionist. Marilla was from Zorra, Ontario, and attended Oberlin College in Ohio. One of her three marriages was to Reverend David L. Marks (1805-1845) of the Freewill Baptist Church. She had a daughter named Julia Marilla Marks or Julia P. Turner Snyder (1839-1938)--different names, same woman. Judge Edgar Benton Kinkead (1862-1930) of Columbus, originally of Washington County, Ohio, was married to Katherine's sister, Nellie M. Snyder (1862-1947). He was a professor of law at Ohio State University and author of legal textbooks.

I have found some credits for a writer of magazine fiction named Ralph T. Yates. I can't say for sure that he was the husband of Katherine Yates, but the timing is about right. The first three items are from The FictionMags Index. I found the last in my own searches.
  • "Jennie's Brother's Story" in The All-Story Magazine (Aug. 1905)
  • "The Peculiar Cruise of the Tortoise" in The Argosy (Sept. 1905)
  • "Jennie’s Brother and the Dog-Washer" in The All-Story Magazine (June 1906)
  • "The Perspicacity of Maud" in Holland's Magazine (Sept. 1905)
Katherine M. Yates, also called Kate, was a world traveler--or maybe some of her travels were just plans and dreams. She applied for passports in order to travel to Tahiti and New Zealand in 1915; Japan, China, and India in 1917; possibly the Philippines in 1919; and Europe and the British Isles in 1922. She lived in Honolulu, Hawaii, from 1910 until being evacuated in 1942 because of the threat of Japanese invasion. Once back on the mainland, she lived in Santa Paula, then in Laguna Beach, California. Katherine Merritte Snyder Yates died on October 25, 1951, and was buried at Forest Lawn Cemetery in Los Angeles.

Katherine Yates' Story in Weird Tales
"Under the Hau Tree" (Nov. 1925)

Further Reading
"Mystery Story About Honolulu" in the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, November 29, 1929, page 35.
"Katherine Yates Dies in California" in the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, November 14, 1951, page 11.
"Mrs. Julia T. Snyder Dies at 99 Of Injury Received in Fall Tuesday" in the Atlanta Constitution, September 15, 1938, page 8.


Text copyright 2013, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Monday, December 16, 2013

Hasan Vokine & Henri Decrouet

The last names of Hasan Vokine and Henri Decrouet do not begin with X. Whose names do? But both are unknown authors (hence the X) and both were probably pseudonymous authors. If that's the case, then there may have been some likely suspects among the editorial staff of Weird Tales or among their close friends and associates. The curious thing is that Vokine and Decrouet wrote three stories for Weird Tales, so they weren't just filling in. I wonder why they just didn't come out and reveal who they were.

Hasan Vokine's and Henri Decrouet's Stories in Weird Tales
"Sleigh Bells" by Hasan Vokine (Apr. 1925)
"The Revenge of Philippe Auguste" by Hasan Vokine and Henri Decrouet (Aug. 1925)
"The Gong Ringers" by Hasan Vokine (Jan. 1926)

Copyright 2013, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Theodore Snow Wood (1877-1940)

Lawyer, Accountant, Secretary, Author
Born May 18, 1877, Arkansas
Died Fall 1940

Pulp magazines gave many people a chance to live double lives. Readers could escape to the big city or into the Old West, to the jungles of Africa or into lands of long-ago or never-were. Writers of pulp stories might labor away in offices or on farms by day, but at night or on weekends or in their little odd hours, they could play author. And it wasn't just play. If they were good enough, and persistent enough, and maybe lucky enough, they could see their work in print. Theodore Snow Wood may have been one of those. By day he was at various times a lawyer, a bookkeeper, an auditor, an accountant. But when he stepped out of his office and stopped by the newsstand to pick up a magazine, he would have seen his own byline there as a published author.

Theodore Snow Wood was born on May 18, 1877, in Arkansas into a family that wandered. His father, John Wood, was born in Texas. His mother, Antoinette G. Wood, nicknamed Nettie or Annie, was a native of Maine. Each census from 1870 to 1910 found the Wood family in a different place:

1870--Santa Rosa County, Florida
1880--New Orleans, Louisana
1900--Cochran, Georgia
1910--New York City

John Wood died in 1907. In 1910, his widow, Antoinette Wood, lived with her youngest son, Theodore, in New York City. The two were recorded in New York (either in Manhattan or The Bronx) in the censuses of 1910, 1915, and 1920. Antoinette Wood may very well have died in 1920 or 1921. In any case, Theodore S. Wood married a young Marcella Plint on April 3, 1921, in Manhattan. In 1930 and 1940, Wood and his family were in Ridgefield Park, New Jersey, where he continued to work as an accountant.

I have found just three magazine story credits for Theodore Snow Wood:
  • "That Puttun Job" in All-Story Weekly (Feb. 23, 1918)
  • "Vacation Money" in Top-Notch (May 1, 1920)
  • "People vs. Bland" in Weird Tales (July/Aug. 1923)
Theodore Snow Wood died in the fall of 1940. (See his son's comment below.) And that is all I know of him.

Theodore Snow Wood's Story in Weird Tales
"People vs. Bland" (July/Aug. 1923)

Further Reading
None.

Note
This posting is a revision to a previous version in which I misidentified Theodore Snow Wood's parents as Jonas Wood and Angenette G. Harwood. The comments below refer to that original version. Thanks to SOC for pointing out the error.

Revised again on November 19, 2014. Thanks to Randal A. Everts and a family member of Theodore Snow Wood for further information.

Copyright 2013, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Hurley von Ruck (1874-1934)

Author
Born April 22, 1874, Webster Groves, Missouri
Died April 7, 1934, Asheville, North Carolina

Hurley von Ruck, author of "The Terrific Experiment" for Weird Tales (Sept. 1925), was the daughter of Benjamin Franklin Webster (1835-1903), an attorney, and Mary E. Bragg (ca. 1845-1902). Born on April 22, 1874, in Webster Groves, Missouri, she married Silvio Henry von Ruck (1875-1918) by 1900. Silvio von Ruck was a physician and the son of a physician. He was born in Kent, Ohio, of Karl von Ruck, a Turkish-born German national, and his American wife, Delia Moore von Ruck. The elder Dr. von Ruck was a world-renowned authority on tuberculosis, also called consumption. He established Winyah Sanitarium in Asheville, North Carolina, and helped turn that mountain town into a haven for sufferers from the disease. Silvio von Ruck assisted him in his work. A graduate of Toledo High School, the University of Michigan, and New York University, Silvio von Ruck also studied in Vienna and Berlin.

Together, Silvio von Ruck and Hurley Webster von Ruck had a daughter. Born in 1902, she was named Silvia, no doubt after her father, but fittingly also (though perhaps not by intent) after the forests of the Blue Ridge Mountains. (The Blue Ridge Mountains are the birthplace of forestry in America.) There can be no answer as to why suffering descends upon some people beyond their share. Hurley von Ruck is a case in point, for in a period of a week in April 1918, she lost her husband and her sixteen-year-old daughter to pneumonia. Her own parents were already gone. (They had died in 1902-1903.) Within four years of the double blow of husband and daughter dying, Hurley's in-laws also died, Delia von Ruck in 1921, Karl von Ruck in 1922. In 1925, Hurley von Ruck's lone story for Weird Tales, "The Terrific Experiment," was published. I don't know what the story is about, but the title suggests a triumph of science, perhaps over illness.

Hurley von Ruck lived at Winyah Sanitarium in Asheville, North Carolina, from at least 1900 to after 1920. In 1930 she was a guest in a private home. She died on April 7, 1934, in Asheville, only two weeks away from her sixtieth birthday and from the sixteenth anniversary of that terrible week in which she had lost her family.

Hurley von Ruck's Story in Weird Tales
"The Terrific Experiment" (Sept. 1925)

Further Reading
You can read a description of the von Ruck house and a little on the biography of Karl von Ruck on the website of the National Register of Historic Places, here.
"Dr. Silvio von Ruck Dies," New York Times, Apr. 8, 1918.
"Dr. Karl von Ruck," obituary and photograph in The American Journal of Clinical Medicine, Dec. 1922, pp. 861-863.

Winyah Sanitarium, Asheville, North Carolina, established by Doctor Karl von Ruck for treatment of tuberculosis. The sanitarium was home to Hurley von Ruck for many years.
The von Ruck family vault at Riverside Cemetery in Asheville, North Carolina. Photo by CathyO at Find-a-Grave.

Text and captions copyright 2013, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Friday, December 13, 2013

Joseph Upper (1891-1954)

Pseudonym of Joseph Upper Harris
Government Worker, Poet, Playwright
Born January 16, 1891, Watertown, New York
Died March 6, 1954, Washington, D.C.

Joseph Upper Harris, also known as Joseph Upper, was born in Watertown, New York, on January 16, 1891. He worked as a clerk and a stenographer in Watertown and in Washington, D.C. In the late 1910s, he was in the nation's capitol working for the U.S. Post Office. He seems to have begun his writing career as a playwright. His credits include:
  • The Fatal Necklace: A Burlesque Melodrama in One Act (1912)
  • The Green Bird: A Farce Comedy in Three Acts (1912)
  • Reveille: Melodrama in Four Acts (1914) with Agnew C. Blanchard
  • The Deserted House: A Farce in Three Acts (1918)
  • "At the Movies": A Farcical Novelty in One Scene (1921) with Harold B. Allen
Joseph Upper was also a poet:
  • "The Little Gray Doves" in The Smart Set (Feb. 1920)
  • "Approaching Spring" in Poet Lore (1922)
  • "Dregs" in Weird Tales (Oct. 1928)
  • "Modern Portia" in Beloit Poetry Journal (Winter 1952)
  • "Barnyard Blues" in The Saturday Evening Post (Mar. 1954)
He also contributed to Wings, which was edited by Stanton A. Coblentz, as well as Blue Moon, Pagan, Tambour, and I'm sure many other magazines. Upper was included in an anthology, District of Columbia Poets (1932), edited by Henry Harrison. The two poems below reveal a man who must have endured turmoil and despair, but only for so long. Joseph Upper Harris died on March 6, 1954, at his home in Washington, D.C., and was buried at Brookside Cemetery in his native city.

Starlight
by Joseph Upper

The stars
Are numberless;
They are scattered thoughts of noble spirits,
Redeeming from insane futility
The blinding turmoil of an ugly world.

When I have turned my back upon my hopes,
I shall not curse life,
Because the stars
Believe in it.

Storms
by Joseph Upper

In the basin of the fountain, after the storm,
Plum-blossoms float dreamily.
The plum-tree, shorn of its dainty finery, gazes moodily into the water,
Resentment at its loss soothed by the peaceful contemplation
Of all those delicate petals dreaming on the still surface.

In my soul, after the storm,
There is no such peace.

Joseph Upper's Poem in Weird Tales
"Dregs" (Oct. 1928)

Further Reading
You will find tidbits on Joseph Upper scattered across the wide face of the Internet.

Updated on December 9, 2023.
Original text copyright 2013, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Lida Wilson Turner (ca. 1881-1971)

Poet
Born ca. 1881, Ohio
Died June 22, 1971, DeKalb County, Georgia

Lida A. Wilson was born in about 1881 in Ohio. Unfortunately I don't know when or where, nor do I know the names of her parents. And although she attended college, I don't know the name of the institution. Sometime after 1900, she married Charles Gainer Turner (1881-1964), who over the course of his life was a druggist, a businessman, and an inventor. The couple lived in Atlanta and adopted a daughter named Virginia. Lida Wilson Turner had her verse published in Georgia Poets: An Anthology of 33 Contemporaries (1932), Readings in Georgia Literature (1941), and in her own collection, Flagstones and Flowers (1934). She also wrote the words to a song, "Gypsy Music," with music by Bonita Crowe. Lida Wilson Turner had one poem published in Weird Tales, "The Crow" in the June 1930 issue.

The Poet's Garden
by Lida Wilson Turner

I did not write my songs this spring,
I planted them instead.
The ballads that I could not sing
Became a flower bed.

The clever little triolet,
Of musical refrain,
Has bloomed into a violet
Of purple April rain.

The hedges, limited in space,
Are sonnets trimmed with care;
While free verse morning glories race
Their tendrils everywhere.

And when the valley lilies ring
Their clustered bells of white,
In fragrant carillons they bring
The lyrics I would write.

Music
by Lida Wilson Turner

Could I who revel in the sounds of earth
Appreciate the music of a sphere
wheeling regally in endless space?
I, who love the little songs of here?
The sigh of Autumn leaves upon the lawn,
The chorus from a flower bed of bees,
The mating call of birds at nesting time,
A baby's laugh--I am in tune with these.
But music from the universe beyond!
Could I endure such ecstasy of sound?
Or would my roof-tree spirit linger near
Some early harebell ringing close to ground?

Lida Wilson Turner's Poem in Weird Tales
"The Crow" (June 1930)

Further Reading
Lida Wilson Turner's papers exist in a library somewhere, but I'm not sure where. If you can find the books mentioned above, you can read more of her poetry.

Original text copyright 2013, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Solon K. Stewart (1883-1936)

Reporter, Sportswriter, Boxer, Soldier, Author
Born June 1883, Brackettville, Texas
Died October 5, 1936, Denver, Colorado

Solon Kelly Stewart was born in Brackettville, Texas, in June 1883. His father, Solon Stewart (1853 or 1854-1923), was a Maryland-born lawyer and a member of the Texas legislature in 1881-1883. His mother, Laura Georgia Grimshaw (1858-1929), was a housewife. Solon K. Kelly worked as a clerk and by 1905 as a reporter in San Antonio, Texas. One of his credits was for a column called "Doings in the World of Sport" in the San Antonio Gazette. In 1909, he traveled to London to marry. I don't know why he would have gone so far afield to find a wife, but it's worth noting that his mother's father was born in England. In any case, Stewart returned to the United States in time to be counted in the 1910 census with his young wife, Nesta.

Solon K. Stewart enlisted in the Canadian army during World War I and served in the Royal Garrison Artillery in Mesopotamia. He returned once again to his home country in August 1919 and was counted in the 1920 census, but by then tragedy had struck: Nesta Stewart was gone. That was the time of the Spanish Influenza. I wonder if she could have been carried away even before her husband might see her again.

Sometime in the early 1920s, Stewart made the transition from journalist to magazine writer. The FictionMags Index lists his credits (except for the last story):
  • "A Question of Authority" in Brief Stories (Aug. 1922)
  • "The Contract of Corporal Twing" in Harper’s (Feb. 1923)
  • "Un Regalo" in Brief Stories (June 1923)
  • Untitled biographical piece in Brief Stories (Sept. 1923)
  • "Threads" in Brief Stories (Jan. 1924)
  • "At Horkasitas" in The Danger Trail (May 1926)
  • "Roy Bean and the 'Jersey Lily'" in Ace-High Magazine (June #2, 1926)
  • "The Mexican Cargador" in The Danger Trail (June 1926)
  • "Bagdad-on-the-Tigris" in The Danger Trail (July 1926)
  • "Darmie, Wolf" in Ace-High Magazine (Aug. #2, 1926)
  • "A Bagdad Adventure" in The Danger Trail (Aug. 1926)
  • "The Mystery of the Silver Greyhound" in Clues (Nov. 1926)
  • "Bibi Love" in Oriental Stories (Apr./May/June 1931)
That index also lists two stories by S.K. Stewart. I think it's safe to assume they were Solon K. Stewart's work as well:
  • "The Roar of a .45" in Action Stories (Nov. 1925)
  • "Offshore Love" in Love Story Magazine (July 5, 1930)
"The Contract of Corporal Twing" appeared in Harper’s in February 1923 and in The Best Short Stories of 1923. That success would have been reduced by the death of Stewart's father, Solon Stewart, in March 1923, only a month after the publication of the story and coincidentally the month Weird Tales made its debut. Stewart's mother died in 1929. So in a period of a decade or so, Stewart saw at least eleven stories and articles placed in American magazines while losing his wife, his father, and his mother. The last story I have found for him is "Bibi Love," published in Oriental Stories in the April/May/June 1931 issue of that companion magazine to Weird Tales.

In a letter from Robert E. Howard to Tevis Clyde Smith, dated about March 1931, Howard wrote: "He [Harold Preece] also wanted to take me around and introduce me to Solon Stewart, the solitary writer, but I didn't have the energy." That letter and the story in Oriental Stories are the last two mentions of Solon K. Stewart that I have found. His end came soon after, on October 5, 1936, in Denver, Colorado. He was just fifty-three years old. Solon K. Stewart's parents were buried in San Antonio. Their house at 114 Cedar Street is part of the King William Historic District in that city.

Solon K. Stewart's Story in Oriental Stories
"Bibi Love" (Apr./May/June 1931)

Further Reading
An Internet search for "Solon K. Stewart" and "Solon Stewart" will turn up a few items of interest, especially an account of the McNeil train robbery of May 18, 1887.

Solon K. Stewart's byline appeared on the cover of Oriental Stories in the Spring Issue, 1931. The cover artist was Donald von Gelb.

Updated on November 15, 2020 and December 5, 2021.
Text and captions copyright 2013, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Elizabeth Virgins Raplee (1900-1982)

Elizabeth Virginia Raplee
Secretary, Poet
Born November 17, 1900, Clayton, New York
Died March 1982, presumably in New York

A few days ago I wrote about Elizabeth Virgins Raplee. Today I have learned that her name was Elizabeth Virginia Raplee, and with that information, more comes to light. A question remains, however. The name Elizabeth Virgins Raplee comes from Jaffery and Cook's Collector's Index to Weird Tales. So was that a misprint? An error made by the authors? Or was that the original credit in Weird Tales magazine of October 1937?

In any case, Elizabeth M. Virginia Raplee was born on November 17, 1900, in Clayton, New York, and grew up in Watertown. In 1910 (as Elizabeth M.V. Raplee), she was enumerated in Champion, New York, with her granduncle, Arthur Johnson, and his sister, Mary J. Johnson. In 1920, Elizabeth was still in Champion and still with her aunt, Mary J. Johnson, and Mary's nephew, John Johnson. Finally, in 1940, Elizabeth Raplee was back with her French-Canadian mother, Mary Adam, and her brother, Francis Raplee, in New York City. Elizabeth was employed at that time as a secretary at Standard Oil Company.

The family of Mary--perhaps more accurately Marie A.--and Francis Raplee leads back to Elizabeth Raplee's father, Jefferson T. Raplee. In 1900, Jefferson T. Raplee and his wife Marie A. Raplee were hoteliers in Clayton, New York. With them was their young son, William T. Raplee. Jefferson T. Raplee may have been Jefferson T. Raplee, Junior, and the son of Jefferson T. Raplee, aka J.T. Raplee, a broker and banker who was said to have been worth $500,000 before losing his fortune in the panic of 1869. The elder Raplee went to the Westchester County poorhouse with a trunk full of fancy clothing, including a silk hat, a white waistcoat, and a pair of patent leather shoes. The keepers of the poorhouse called him "the most aristocratic guest they ever had." (1) In 1905, his niece, who did not want to be named, found out where he was and fetched him away to New York City. A few months later, at age eighty-six, he returned to the poorhouse--the New York City Farm Colony on Staten Island--at his own request. (2)

In an interview from 1940, Elizabeth Raplee claimed publication of fifty poems in magazines and newspapers in the six years prior to that. (3) One was "To a Skull on My Bookshelf" in Weird Tales for October 1937. Some others from about that period:
  • "Nostalgia" in A Book of Living Poems, edited by William R. Bowlin (1934)
  • "Brief Moment" in Good Housekeeping (July, 1935)
  • "After Silence" in Lewiston Evening Journal (Mar. 29, 1937)
  • "The Call" in Good Housekeeping (Aug. 1942)
  • "Like Summer Rain" in Good Housekeeping (Aug. 1935)
  • "The Poet Considers Perfection" in Good Housekeeping (Aug. 1939)
  • "Recompense" in The Lion and the Unicorn (Vol. 1, No. 1)
Elizabeth Virginia Raplee last resided in Carthage, New York, and died in March 1982. She was eighty-one years old.

To a Skull on My Bookshelf
From Weird Tales, October 1937
(Presumably in the public domain)
by Elizabeth Virgins [sic] Raplee

O bony relic of forgotten days,
Which, from my bookshelf, dominates the room,
Your empty sockets, with sardonic gaze,
Follow me weirdly in the deepening gloom!
I often think, if sudden speech returned,
You might reveal that secret, grisly jest
You're grinning at--or tell me what you've learned
Of that dark realm to which we're all addressed.

By what rude hands were you exhumed, and why
Wrenched from your body in its earthy bed?
Who knows but such indignity will I
Receive at other hands, when I am dead,
And, strangely resurrected, may adorn
The wall or desk of one as yet unborn!

Notes
(1) From "Home for Broker Raplee," New York Times, Aug. 17, 1905, p. 3. See also "Banker To End Days in Dependents' Home," New York Times, Oct. 10, 1905, p. 6.
(2) The Farm Colony now lies in ruins. If decadence is at the root of the weird tale, then the Farm Colony could be the setting of just such a tale.
(3) In the Niagara Falls Gazette, February 17, 1940, p. 6.

Revised December 11, 2013.
Thanks to Randal A. Everts for confirmation of the name and dates of Elizabeth Virginia Raplee.

Text copyright 2013, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Monday, December 9, 2013

Send News

I am about two-thirds of the way through an alphabetical list of authors and the question marks are piling up. Here is a list of unanswered questions thus far:

A--Who was Stafford Aylmer? Where did he live? What did he do for a living? Did he write anything more than just two stories?

B--What is there to tell about George Washington Jones Blume? What of his life? What was the place of his death?

C--How did the story start that O.M. Cabral was a pseudonym of Kenneth H. MacNichol?

D--As a literary agent and editor, Laurence R. D'Orsay played a prominent part in the history of science fiction by employing and teaching Henry Kuttner. He may very well have had other connections to the science fiction scene in Los Angeles. Yet his biography is pretty skimpy. What more can we learn about him?

E--What more of Horatio V. Ellis?

F--Or of Alice Drayton Farnham?

G--Francis D. Grierson is covered pretty well.

H--Without wanting to pry too much, I wonder what happened to Norman Elwood Hamerstrom.

I--I wonder, too, about Alice I'Anson, her family, and her peregrinations.

J--Talbot Johns--another pretty skimpy biography.

K--Was Anthony D. Keogh actually named Mark Anthony Keogh? Did he die in March 1972? See an obituary (unavailable to me) dated March 25, 1972, in the Springfield [Ohio] Daily News.

L & M--Laidlaw and Myers--pretty well covered.

N--Was the Alan Nelson I found the same writer for Weird Tales and other magazines?

O--What more of Anton M. Oliver? Where and when did he die?

P--Of all the writers on the list so far, perhaps none has received shorter shrift from the Internet than Suzanne Pickett. After all, she had a book published this year.

Q--Is the Janice H. Quilligan that I found the same poet for Weird Tales? I like to think Janice is still with us and still writing poetry. Does anyone know?

This is a request for friends and family of these and other writers and artists to come forward and offer whatever you can. And it doesn't matter whether I have written about them yet or not. I can use what you send me to make my biographical sketches better. That goes for living artists and writers as well. You can leave comments or you can email me at:

info@hoosiercartoonists.com (No longer usable as of March 21, 2023.)

Thanks and I hope to hear from you soon. Thanks also to all who read Tellers of Weird Tales and who leave comments and send emails. There is nothing better about writing this blog than to hear from family members.

TH

Copyright 2013, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Janice Hall Quilligan (1922-2015)

Author, Poet, Businesswoman, Graphologist, Teacher
Born January 1, 1922, Brooklyn, New York
Died August 24, 2015

Janice Hall Quilligan was born on New Year's Day 1922 to Maurice J. and Marjorie Quilligan of Brooklyn, New York. Maurice was a U.S. Army veteran of World War I and a salesman of books and magazines. In 1942, he gave his occupation as sales manager for St. Joseph Magazine. Janice's siblings included Leila F., John R., and Maurice W. Quilligan.

Janice H. Quilligan graduated from Bay Ridge High School in Brooklyn and from Hunter College in Manhattan. She worked ten years as reserve director of Bozell & Jacobs, Inc., an advertising and public relations agency. According to her obituary, Janice "had numerous articles and poems published in American and Canadian magazines" during the 1940s and '50s. These included "Avalon" a poem published in the May 1943 issue of Weird Tales when its author was twenty-one years old. "Avalon" had previously been published in the yearbook of Hunter College.

Janice married Ralph Bottenus in 1962 and had one daughter, Valerie H.Q. Bottenus. In 1986, four years after the death of her husband, Janice Bottenus married Felix Klein (1911-1994), a Viennese-born graphologist and a survivor of the Holocaust. Her obituary states that "Janice studied and worked with him in his business, Manhattan Handwriting Consultant, which she carried on after his death in 1994." She wrote Loving Language: A Child Embraces Her Life Through Words (2005, as by Janice Bottenus-Klein) and arranged for the publication of Gestalt Graphology: Exploring the Mystery and Complexity of Human Nature Through Handwriting Analysis (2007), a collection of her late husband's papers. She was well loved, a world traveler, and a "devoted correspondent."

Janice Hall Quilligan Bottenus Klein died on August 24, 2015, at age ninety-three and was buried at Greenwood Union Cemetery in Rye, New York. 

Janice Hall Quilligan's Poem in Weird Tales
"Avalon" (May 1943)

Further Reading
"Guide to the Papers of Felix Klein (1911-1994): 1930-2001" at the website of the Leo Baeck Institute Center for Jewish History, New York, New York, here.
"Paid Notice: Deaths: Klein, Janice Hall" in the New York TimesAug. 28, 2015, here.

Janice Hall Quilligan, a photographic portrait from the yearbook of Hunter College, 1945. Courtesy of Valerie Bottenus by way of Randal A. Everts.


Revised January 6, 2017
Thanks to Randal A. Everts for locating the obituary of Janice Hall Klein and to Valerie Bottenus for further information and the photograph of her mother from 1945.

Text copyright 2013, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Suzanne Pickett (1908-1999)

Aka Sue Pickett
Reporter, Columnist, Short Story Writer, Memoirist
Born January 19, 1908
Died December 21, 1999

We have the vaunted Internet, brimming with information both true and false, trivial and profound, serious and ridiculous. So why does a writer like Suzanne Pickett go without a biography? I'm certain that someone will write to me with more information on her life, but that won't happen until I begin. Update (July 8, 2015): And now someone has written to me, and I thank Victoria Hallman (comment below) for doing so.

Suzanne Pickett, also known as Sue Pickett, was born on January 19, 1908, presumably in Alabama. She saw her first published work on the children's page of the Birmingham News when she was just ten years old. Described as a Bibb County, Alabama, housewife, she also worked as a reporter and columnist for the Centreville News. Sue wrote six stories for Weird Tales, published from May 1952 to the final issue, September 1954. All but the last were reprinted in the British edition of Weird Tales. She also penned one published letter to "The Eyrie." Sue Pickett was the author of at least two books, Hot Dogs for Thanksgiving: A Memoir (1999), which was reworked and reissued as The Path Was Steep: A Triumphant Recollection of Life in the Appalachian Coal Fields and Mining Camps During the Great Depression (2013).

Sue Pickett died on December 21, 1999, at age ninety-one. Although that is all I know of her, her granddaughter, Victoria Hallman, can offer much more.

August 31, 2014: See the update below for more on Suzanne Pickett.
July 8, 2015: Second update with birth and death dates, thanks to Victoria Hallman.

Suzanne Pickett's Stories and Letter in Weird Tales
"A Bit of Moss" (May 1952; reprinted in Weird Tales (UK) #17, 1952)
"There Was Soot on the Cat" (July 1952; reprinted in Weird Tales (UK) #18, 1952)
"I Can't Wear White" (Jan. 1953; reprinted in Weird Tales (UK) #21, 1953)
"Effie's Pets" (Jan. 1954; reprinted in Weird Tales (UK) vol. 1, #3, 1954)
Letter to "The Eyrie" (Jan. 1954)
"Nepthae" (Mar. 1954; reprinted in Weird Tales (UK) vol. 1, #4, 1954)
"Dorgen" (Sept. 1954)

Further Reading
"Memoirist Sue Pickett shares an economics lesson, still meaningful" by Randall Williams on the website New South, Inc., here.

"Effie's Pets," Suzanne Pickett's fourth story for Weird Tales, earned her a spot on the cover in January 1954. She also had a letter printed in that issue. The cover artist was W.H. Silvey.

Update (August 31, 2014): I am still lacking in some details on the life of Suzanne Pickett, but I have at least her own autobiographical sketch from the issue of Weird Tales shown above.

"The Eyrie"
Weird Tales, January 1954

WHEN we read manuscripts for WEIRD TALES—and there are a lot of them coming in day after day, post after post—we sort of "savor" many of them before we settle down to read them. Sometimes the savor lasts (sometimes it doesn't; that's a different story) and it's always a red letter day for us when a story by an author unknown to us, first arouses our interest and then holds it as we get deeper into it. The first story by Suzanne Pickett that crossed our desk caught our eye, and we have seldom been disappointed since. In connection with her intriguing "Effie 's Pets" in this issue Mrs. Pickett tells us:

As for myself, I am married, and my husband is Safety Director for Black Diamond Coal Mining Co., of Birmingham, Alabama. When he started working for them as Superintendent of their West Blocton mine in '42, he was the youngest Sup't in Alabama at that time. We have two daughters and two grandchildren.


My first story was published at about age ten in the children's page of the Birmingham News, my second in a series in the Birmingham Post at age fifteen. But my talents were supposed to be music and painting, so I thought very little of writing, only had the urge to ‘dash off’ a story every five years or so. I write songs (naturally) poetry, etc.


At twenty-four I wrote the News in Rhyme for the Welch Daily News of Welch, W.Va.—Will Rogers and I were featured on the front page!—but I was still going to be a great artist or musician, only I was so busy with my children I had little time. (Oh yes, I also go in for amateur dramatics, etc. Jack of all trades and—well I hope to be good at writing some day.)


Four years ago the urge to write became so strong that I at last started working seriously, I have written and burned one novel and a half. Have three more almost finished, but my big one is a historical novel PAGAN which promises to be worth quite a bit of work. My weird tales come in a flash and are a pleasure to write. I'm glad you like them.


Original text and captions copyright 2013, 2023 Terence E. Hanley