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Letterhack

A letterhack is a fan who is regularly published in magazine and American comic book letter columns.

Origin Edit

The term comes from fanspeak, the slang of science fiction fans, and originally referred to prolific writers of letters to fanzines and professional science fiction magazines of the early twentieth century. It was considered to be an important part of fanac ("fan activity").[1][2][3]

Celebrity and recognition Edit

Many letterhacks[4] became well known throughout the industry. Writer Mark Engblom describes the phenomenon this way:

Chosen by the title's editor (or, in some cases, the writer), a few lucky fans would get the opportunity to share their opinion with not only the creators, but a captive audience of fellow fans as well. In fact, some of the most prolific fans had letters printed almost every month in a variety of titles, becoming minor celebrities in their own right.[5]

David S. Goyer is an example of a fan who later wrote comic book films.[11] Some letterhacks gained entrée into an actual career in comics because of their letter-writing experience. For instance, Bob Rozakis parlayed his frequent published letters to DC comics during the late 1960s and early 1970s into a job as DC's "Answer Man" and eventually a solid career as a DC writer.[citation needed]Kurt Busiek, Mary Jo Duffy, Mike Friedrich, Mark Gruenwald, Fred Hembeck, Harlan Ellison, Tony Isabella, Paul Levitz, Ralph Macchio, Dean Mullaney, Martin Pasko, Diana Schutz, Beau Smith, Roy Thomas, Peter B. Gillis, George R.R. Martin, and Kim Thompson are just a few of the many comic book professionals who got their starts as young letterhacks.[citation needed]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Sheidlower, Jesse (28 August 2009). "letterhack n." Science Fiction Citations for OED. Retrieved July 25, 2014.
  2. ^ Prucher, Jeff (2007). Brave New Words. Oxford University Press. p. 110. ISBN 9780195387063.
  3. ^ Holland, Ralph Merridette (1958). Ghu's Lexicon. p. 12.
  4. ^ Century, Sara. "THE LOST ART OF THE COMIC BOOK LETTERS PAGE," Sy Fy Wire (May 23, 2018).
  5. ^ Engblom, Mark. "The Letters Page = Fanboy Valhalla," Comic Coverage (May 7, 2007). Accessed Feb. 12, 2009.
  6. ^ a b Harper, David. "Backmatter and the Golden Age of Comic Book Letters Columns: In 2015, what have comic creators had to do make letters columns relevant again?" Sktchd Chronicles (September 29, 2015).
  7. ^ De Blieck Jr., Augie. "Pipeline: A Decade of Siren," Comic Book Resources (Sept. 23, 2008). Accessed Sept. 26, 2008.
  8. ^ Paul Dale Roberts, Grand Comics Database. Accessed April 19, 2016.
  9. ^ Cronin, Brian. "Comic Book Urban Legends Revealed" #92, Comic Book Resources (Mar. 1, 2007). Accessed Sept. 27, 2008.
  10. ^ Friedrich, Mike. "Julius Schwartz: The Memorial Service," Challenger: A Science Fiction Fanzine (Summer 2004). Accessed Sept. 28, 2008.
  11. ^ Trenholm, Richard (2016-03-30). "How a 'Batman v Superman' writer predicted Marvel's 'Civil War' 30 years ago". CNET. Retrieved 2019-05-11.


letterhack, letterhack, regularly, published, magazine, american, comic, book, letter, columns, contents, origin, celebrity, recognition, also, referencesorigin, editthe, term, comes, from, fanspeak, slang, science, fiction, fans, originally, referred, prolifi. A letterhack is a fan who is regularly published in magazine and American comic book letter columns Contents 1 Origin 2 Celebrity and recognition 3 See also 4 ReferencesOrigin EditThe term comes from fanspeak the slang of science fiction fans and originally referred to prolific writers of letters to fanzines and professional science fiction magazines of the early twentieth century It was considered to be an important part of fanac fan activity 1 2 3 Celebrity and recognition EditMany letterhacks 4 became well known throughout the industry Writer Mark Engblom describes the phenomenon this way Chosen by the title s editor or in some cases the writer a few lucky fans would get the opportunity to share their opinion with not only the creators but a captive audience of fellow fans as well In fact some of the most prolific fans had letters printed almost every month in a variety of titles becoming minor celebrities in their own right 5 Jerry Bails the father of comics fandom Reed Beebe over 300 letters published since 2010 6 Olav Beemer became one of the most prolific Dutch comic book translators Len Biehl Malcolm Bourne Brian Earl Brown Dale L Coe Augie De Blieck Jr 6 claims to have published over 400 letters 184 confirmed through Grand Comics Database 7 Brett Downard Joe Frank Paul Gambaccini Shirley A Gorman Elizabeth Holden Paul Dale Roberts published over 1 000 letters 8 Jana C Hollingsworth Kashif Blue Panther Husain Guy H Lillian III omnipresent 1960s letterhack Marc Lucas T M Maple aka Jim Burke published over 3 000 letters 9 Joey Marchese Rich Morrissey Uncle Elvis Orten Melissa Page Kent A Phenis Peter Sanderson Bill Schelly comic book historian Al Schroeder III Charles J Sperling Irene Vartanoff omnipresent 1960s letterhack who ended up working behind the scenes for Marvel in the 1970s and 1980s 10 Delmo Walters Jr David S Goyer is an example of a fan who later wrote comic book films 11 Some letterhacks gained entree into an actual career in comics because of their letter writing experience For instance Bob Rozakis parlayed his frequent published letters to DC comics during the late 1960s and early 1970s into a job as DC s Answer Man and eventually a solid career as a DC writer citation needed Kurt Busiek Mary Jo Duffy Mike Friedrich Mark Gruenwald Fred Hembeck Harlan Ellison Tony Isabella Paul Levitz Ralph Macchio Dean Mullaney Martin Pasko Diana Schutz Beau Smith Roy Thomas Peter B Gillis George R R Martin and Kim Thompson are just a few of the many comic book professionals who got their starts as young letterhacks citation needed See also Edit nbsp Look up letterhack in Wiktionary the free dictionary Comic book letter column Fan mail Letter to the editorReferences Edit Sheidlower Jesse 28 August 2009 letterhack n Science Fiction Citations for OED Retrieved July 25 2014 Prucher Jeff 2007 Brave New Words Oxford University Press p 110 ISBN 9780195387063 Holland Ralph Merridette 1958 Ghu s Lexicon p 12 Century Sara THE LOST ART OF THE COMIC BOOK LETTERS PAGE Sy Fy Wire May 23 2018 Engblom Mark The Letters Page Fanboy Valhalla Comic Coverage May 7 2007 Accessed Feb 12 2009 a b Harper David Backmatter and the Golden Age of Comic Book Letters Columns In 2015 what have comic creators had to do make letters columns relevant again Sktchd Chronicles September 29 2015 De Blieck Jr Augie Pipeline A Decade of Siren Comic Book Resources Sept 23 2008 Accessed Sept 26 2008 Paul Dale Roberts Grand Comics Database Accessed April 19 2016 Cronin Brian Comic Book Urban Legends Revealed 92 Comic Book Resources Mar 1 2007 Accessed Sept 27 2008 Friedrich Mike Julius Schwartz The Memorial Service Challenger A Science Fiction Fanzine Summer 2004 Accessed Sept 28 2008 Trenholm Richard 2016 03 30 How a Batman v Superman writer predicted Marvel s Civil War 30 years ago CNET Retrieved 2019 05 11 nbsp This comics related article is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Letterhack amp oldid 1125769306, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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