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Fantasy Press

Fantasy Press was an American publishing house specialising in fantasy and science fiction titles. Established in 1946 by Lloyd Arthur Eshbach[1] in Reading, Pennsylvania, it was most notable for publishing the works of authors such as Robert A. Heinlein and E. E. Smith.[1] One of its more notable offerings was the Lensman series.

Fantasy Press
StatusDefunct
Founded1946
FounderLloyd Arthur Eshbach
SuccessorGnome Press
Country of originUnited States
Headquarters locationReading, Pennsylvania
Publication typesBooks
Fiction genresfantasy and science fiction

Among its books was Of Worlds Beyond: The Science of Science Fiction Writing (1947),[2] which was the first book about modern SF and contained essays by John W. Campbell, Jr., Robert A. Heinlein, A. E. van Vogt and others.

History edit

Lloyd Arthur Eshbach ordered a copy of Skylark of Space from its publisher, the Buffalo Book Company, in 1945 or 1946.[3] Like many of Buffalo's customers, Eshbach was frustrated by Buffalo's delays in publishing and lack of marketing, an area that Eschbach had some expertise in, from his job as a copywriter for Glidden. He wrote to the Buffalo Book Company offering suggestions as to how they could better market their books. Thus started a correspondence between Eshbach and Tom Hadley, of Buffalo and later of the Hadley Publishing Company. Eshbach, who was working as an ad copywriter for the Glidden Company, did all of his work for Hadley as a gesture of good will with no payment. He withdrew when he saw that Hadley's ventures were going nowhere and customers were growing dissatisfied with the publisher.[4]

While never an employee of Hadley, Eshbach helped him with his marketing efforts and as a result ended up with a copy of the mailing list of Hadley's customers.[5] Eshbach jokingly suggested to several of his co-workers that they could probably do as well with a publishing company of their own, and to his surprise, the men agreed.[4] With two of his co-workers from Glidden (A.J. Donnell as illustrator and Lyman H. Houck as bookkeeper) and one other friend of theirs (Herb MacGregor shipping the books), Eshbach used the mailing list to start Fantasy Press.[6] He approached E. E. Smith to obtain the rights to Spacehounds of IPC. Smith was enthusiastic[3] and Spacehounds of IPC became the first title published by the new press. Eshbach had seen the success of Hadley's poorly produced 'Skylark of Space and knew that a well done volume of E.E. Smith would probably be a strong seller. Spacehounds of IPC was extremely successful and sold several thousand copies. Eshbach immediately went out and got contracts for other books he thought would do well. Fantasy Press swiftly became the most successful and important of the fledgling science fiction small presses.[4] Eshbach acquiring the stories, A.J. Donnell as illustrator, Lyman Houck (an accountant friend and fellow Mason) as bookkeeper, and Herb MacGregor shipping the books. Eshbach eventually bought out his partners and operated the press for several years on his own.[3] Ultimately, Fantasy Press was under-capitalized and sales declined in the face of competition from the mainstream publishers. Eshbach wrote his authors and reverted the rights to their books while he took a job with a religious publishing house in Myerstown, Pennsylvania.[3]

Publication standards edit

Good titles were not the only thing going for Eshbach. He knew how to produce an attractive book and did so. All of the Fantasy Press books featured attractive bindings and dustjackets. The paper was of good quality and the typeface was clear and readable. Eshbach believed in illustrated books and all of his publications featured interior illustrations. At first, most of the art was done by A.J. Donnell, one of the founders of the company, but after a few years, Eshbach began using popular science fiction magazine artists as well....Eshbach was an intelligent businessman and knew how to produce a book that would sell. His choices for publication were well thought out. In a brilliant stroke, he contracted for the entire Lensman series by E. E. Smith. Smith completely revised an early non-related novel, Triplanetary, into the introductory novel of the series. He then wrote an entirely new novel, First Lensman, to tie the first novel in with the four adventures of Kimball Kinneson which had originally made up the rest of the series. The six Lensman books were among the best selling of all the Fantasy Press titles.[4]

Lloyd Eshbach established many features for his Fantasy Press that are accepted today as commonplace by collectors of specialty press books.[7] As a way of generating pre-publication capital for new titles, Eshbach hatched the idea of offering special signed editions to those who placed pre-publication orders for new books through the mail. These special editions contained a "limitation leaf" - a page bound or tipped in after the title page - stating that only so many copies of a given book were numbered and signed by the book's author, along with an inscription by or signature of the author as a reward for ordering. Many fans that ordered multiple books from the same author found themselves receiving warm inscriptions as the writer came to know them by name. The normal press run for a Fantasy Press title was about 3,000 copies; in each edition anywhere from 250 to 500 copies would contain the limitation leaf. Today, these signed editions fetch two to four times (or more in the case of authors like Robert Heinlein) the value of an unsigned edition, and are highly sought after by collectors. And the practice of the limited/signed edition is a standard offering among specialty publishers today.

Later years and demise edit

Fantasy Press folded after 1955, a victim of the glut of science fiction books and magazines on the market by that time. What had been a relatively empty playing field in 1946 or 1947, when many of the fan publishers began operations, had become by the mid-1950s a free-for-all, as the mainstream book publishers, seeing the initial successes of the specialty houses, jumped into the fray full-force, bringing with them considerable capitalization and extensive distribution networks with which the fan publishers could scarcely compete. This period also saw the rise of inexpensive paperback publishing, with titles often becoming available in paperback at one-tenth the price of a hardcover, before the specialty house had time to sell out its own edition. Readers became wise to the fact that if they just waited for six months or a year before buying, they could get the book in paperback on the cheap. The collector's market by itself was simply not large enough at that time to support the specialty presses without general reader sales added in. This era heralded the fall of the "big three" science fiction specialty houses - Fantasy Press, Gnome Press, and Shasta Publishers, although Gnome and Shasta managed to hang on for a few years more by sheer force of will. Eshbach knew when to call it quits before the house totally burned to the ground, and reverted rights for all of his books to his authors - as he had no money to pay them with - and formally retreated from the stage of fan publishing. In 1955, Fantasy Press bombed with Under the Triple Suns, a new novel by Stanton Coblentz.

Never one to give in completely, Eshbach continued to experiment whenever his funding allowed. In 1956 he took 500 sets of the remaining unbound sheets for three of his titles and had them bound in paper covers as part of the Fantasy Press "Golden Science Fiction Library", which he then marketed (mostly at conventions)[8] for $1.00 apiece. And, as a favor to Martin Greenberg over at Gnome Press, Eshbach utilized his position as director of the Church Center Press in 1961[9] to assist in the production of two of the last Gnome Press titles, Invaders from the Infinite, by John W. Campbell, Jr., and The Vortex Blaster, by Edward E. Smith - both titles which Eshbach had held the rights to but had transferred to Gnome. As part of his agreement with Greenberg, Eshbach also produced a limited run (about one hundred copies of the Campbell book, and 300 of the Smith) of each title on better-quality book paper under the Fantasy Press logo, which have since become among the most sought-after titles in the Fantasy Press line.

Eshbach had remaining in storage as much as 20,000 unbound sheets[10] for nearly every one of his company's 46 titles (excluding Polaris Press). He sold small quantities of these to Martin Greenberg over at Gnome Press, which Greenberg cheaply bound and sold through his Pick-A-Book operation. But the bulk of these sheets were sold to Donald M. Grant, himself a publisher of mostly fantasy books, who bound quantities of each of them for sale. As the bindings used by both Grant and Greenberg were in most cases different from the originals, this practice created a bewildering number of "variants" that sometimes have collectors today shaking their heads. Grant was still finding unbound sheets in his warehouse twenty years later and binding them for sale, so it was not unusual to see "brand new" copies of Fantasy Press books for sale into the mid and even late 1980s, as much as thirty years after the company had ceased operations. Eshbach also sold Grant a fair quantity of flat dust jackets for Fantasy Press books, some of which are still available on the collector's market today.

Imprints edit

Polaris Press was a subsidiary imprint of Fantasy Press that was created in 1952.[3] Eschbach created the imprint in order to publish books he felt did not quite fit under the Fantasy Press imprint.[11] Ultimately, only two titles were ever issued under the Polaris Press imprint.[3]

Works published by Fantasy Press edit

Works published by Polaris Press edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Clute, John; Peter Nicholls (1995). The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. New York: St. Martin's Griffin. p. 411. ISBN 0-312-13486-X.
  2. ^ Chalker, Jack L.; Mark Owings (1998). The Science-Fantasy Publishers: A Bibliographic History, 1923-1998. Westminster, MD and Baltimore: Mirage Press, Ltd. p. 235.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Eshbach, Lloyd Arthur (1983). Over My Shoulder: Reflections on a Science Fiction Era. Philadelphia: Oswald Train. pp. 109–138. OCLC 10489084.
  4. ^ a b c d Robert Weinberg "Specialty Science Fiction Publishers"ïn Hall W. Hall, ed, Science Fiction Collections: Fantasy, Supernatural and Weird Tales, Haworth Press, 1978, p. 122
  5. ^ Chalker, Jack L.; Mark Owings (1998). The Science-Fantasy Publishers: A Bibliographic History, 1923-1998. Westminster, MD and Baltimore: Mirage Press, Ltd. p. 342.
  6. ^ "Lloyd Arthur Eshbach Papers". Retrieved March 29, 2016.
  7. ^ Over My Shoulder: Reflections On A Science Fiction Era, Lloyd A. Eshbach, 1983, Oswald Train, Publisher
  8. ^ Lloyd Arthur Eshbach - Over My Shoulder: Reflections On A Science Fiction Era,1983, Oswald Train: Publisher, pp360, 364
  9. ^ Lloyd Arthur Eshbach - Over My Shoulder: Reflections On A Science Fiction Era,1983, Oswald Train: Publisher, pp 218-220
  10. ^ Owings and Chalker, The Science Fantasy Publishers, 1998; Over My Shoulder: Reflections On A Science Fiction Era, 1983, Lloyd A, Eshbach, Oswald Train, Publisher
  11. ^ Chalker, Jack L.; Mark Owings (1998). The Science-Fantasy Publishers: A Bibliographic History, 1923-1998. Westminster, MD and Baltimore: Mirage Press, Ltd. p. 524.

References edit

  • Chalker, Jack L.; Mark Owings (1998). The Science-Fantasy Publishers: A Bibliographic History, 1923-1998. Westminster, MD and Baltimore: Mirage Press, Ltd. pp. 232–242, 524.

fantasy, press, this, article, about, american, publisher, science, fiction, fantasy, english, publisher, poetry, poetry, american, publishing, house, specialising, fantasy, science, fiction, titles, established, 1946, lloyd, arthur, eshbach, reading, pennsylv. This article is about the American publisher of science fiction and fantasy For the English publisher of poetry see Fantasy Press poetry Fantasy Press was an American publishing house specialising in fantasy and science fiction titles Established in 1946 by Lloyd Arthur Eshbach 1 in Reading Pennsylvania it was most notable for publishing the works of authors such as Robert A Heinlein and E E Smith 1 One of its more notable offerings was the Lensman series Fantasy PressStatusDefunctFounded1946FounderLloyd Arthur EshbachSuccessorGnome PressCountry of originUnited StatesHeadquarters locationReading PennsylvaniaPublication typesBooksFiction genresfantasy and science fiction Among its books was Of Worlds Beyond The Science of Science Fiction Writing 1947 2 which was the first book about modern SF and contained essays by John W Campbell Jr Robert A Heinlein A E van Vogt and others Contents 1 History 1 1 Publication standards 1 2 Later years and demise 2 Imprints 3 Works published by Fantasy Press 4 Works published by Polaris Press 5 Notes 6 ReferencesHistory editLloyd Arthur Eshbach ordered a copy of Skylark of Space from its publisher the Buffalo Book Company in 1945 or 1946 3 Like many of Buffalo s customers Eshbach was frustrated by Buffalo s delays in publishing and lack of marketing an area that Eschbach had some expertise in from his job as a copywriter for Glidden He wrote to the Buffalo Book Company offering suggestions as to how they could better market their books Thus started a correspondence between Eshbach and Tom Hadley of Buffalo and later of the Hadley Publishing Company Eshbach who was working as an ad copywriter for the Glidden Company did all of his work for Hadley as a gesture of good will with no payment He withdrew when he saw that Hadley s ventures were going nowhere and customers were growing dissatisfied with the publisher 4 While never an employee of Hadley Eshbach helped him with his marketing efforts and as a result ended up with a copy of the mailing list of Hadley s customers 5 Eshbach jokingly suggested to several of his co workers that they could probably do as well with a publishing company of their own and to his surprise the men agreed 4 With two of his co workers from Glidden A J Donnell as illustrator and Lyman H Houck as bookkeeper and one other friend of theirs Herb MacGregor shipping the books Eshbach used the mailing list to start Fantasy Press 6 He approached E E Smith to obtain the rights to Spacehounds of IPC Smith was enthusiastic 3 and Spacehounds of IPC became the first title published by the new press Eshbach had seen the success of Hadley s poorly produced Skylark of Space and knew that a well done volume of E E Smith would probably be a strong seller Spacehounds of IPC was extremely successful and sold several thousand copies Eshbach immediately went out and got contracts for other books he thought would do well Fantasy Press swiftly became the most successful and important of the fledgling science fiction small presses 4 Eshbach acquiring the stories A J Donnell as illustrator Lyman Houck an accountant friend and fellow Mason as bookkeeper and Herb MacGregor shipping the books Eshbach eventually bought out his partners and operated the press for several years on his own 3 Ultimately Fantasy Press was under capitalized and sales declined in the face of competition from the mainstream publishers Eshbach wrote his authors and reverted the rights to their books while he took a job with a religious publishing house in Myerstown Pennsylvania 3 Publication standards edit Good titles were not the only thing going for Eshbach He knew how to produce an attractive book and did so All of the Fantasy Press books featured attractive bindings and dustjackets The paper was of good quality and the typeface was clear and readable Eshbach believed in illustrated books and all of his publications featured interior illustrations At first most of the art was done by A J Donnell one of the founders of the company but after a few years Eshbach began using popular science fiction magazine artists as well Eshbach was an intelligent businessman and knew how to produce a book that would sell His choices for publication were well thought out In a brilliant stroke he contracted for the entire Lensman series by E E Smith Smith completely revised an early non related novel Triplanetary into the introductory novel of the series He then wrote an entirely new novel First Lensman to tie the first novel in with the four adventures of Kimball Kinneson which had originally made up the rest of the series The six Lensman books were among the best selling of all the Fantasy Press titles 4 Lloyd Eshbach established many features for his Fantasy Press that are accepted today as commonplace by collectors of specialty press books 7 As a way of generating pre publication capital for new titles Eshbach hatched the idea of offering special signed editions to those who placed pre publication orders for new books through the mail These special editions contained a limitation leaf a page bound or tipped in after the title page stating that only so many copies of a given book were numbered and signed by the book s author along with an inscription by or signature of the author as a reward for ordering Many fans that ordered multiple books from the same author found themselves receiving warm inscriptions as the writer came to know them by name The normal press run for a Fantasy Press title was about 3 000 copies in each edition anywhere from 250 to 500 copies would contain the limitation leaf Today these signed editions fetch two to four times or more in the case of authors like Robert Heinlein the value of an unsigned edition and are highly sought after by collectors And the practice of the limited signed edition is a standard offering among specialty publishers today Later years and demise edit Fantasy Press folded after 1955 a victim of the glut of science fiction books and magazines on the market by that time What had been a relatively empty playing field in 1946 or 1947 when many of the fan publishers began operations had become by the mid 1950s a free for all as the mainstream book publishers seeing the initial successes of the specialty houses jumped into the fray full force bringing with them considerable capitalization and extensive distribution networks with which the fan publishers could scarcely compete This period also saw the rise of inexpensive paperback publishing with titles often becoming available in paperback at one tenth the price of a hardcover before the specialty house had time to sell out its own edition Readers became wise to the fact that if they just waited for six months or a year before buying they could get the book in paperback on the cheap The collector s market by itself was simply not large enough at that time to support the specialty presses without general reader sales added in This era heralded the fall of the big three science fiction specialty houses Fantasy Press Gnome Press and Shasta Publishers although Gnome and Shasta managed to hang on for a few years more by sheer force of will Eshbach knew when to call it quits before the house totally burned to the ground and reverted rights for all of his books to his authors as he had no money to pay them with and formally retreated from the stage of fan publishing In 1955 Fantasy Press bombed with Under the Triple Suns a new novel by Stanton Coblentz Never one to give in completely Eshbach continued to experiment whenever his funding allowed In 1956 he took 500 sets of the remaining unbound sheets for three of his titles and had them bound in paper covers as part of the Fantasy Press Golden Science Fiction Library which he then marketed mostly at conventions 8 for 1 00 apiece And as a favor to Martin Greenberg over at Gnome Press Eshbach utilized his position as director of the Church Center Press in 1961 9 to assist in the production of two of the last Gnome Press titles Invaders from the Infinite by John W Campbell Jr and The Vortex Blaster by Edward E Smith both titles which Eshbach had held the rights to but had transferred to Gnome As part of his agreement with Greenberg Eshbach also produced a limited run about one hundred copies of the Campbell book and 300 of the Smith of each title on better quality book paper under the Fantasy Press logo which have since become among the most sought after titles in the Fantasy Press line Eshbach had remaining in storage as much as 20 000 unbound sheets 10 for nearly every one of his company s 46 titles excluding Polaris Press He sold small quantities of these to Martin Greenberg over at Gnome Press which Greenberg cheaply bound and sold through his Pick A Book operation But the bulk of these sheets were sold to Donald M Grant himself a publisher of mostly fantasy books who bound quantities of each of them for sale As the bindings used by both Grant and Greenberg were in most cases different from the originals this practice created a bewildering number of variants that sometimes have collectors today shaking their heads Grant was still finding unbound sheets in his warehouse twenty years later and binding them for sale so it was not unusual to see brand new copies of Fantasy Press books for sale into the mid and even late 1980s as much as thirty years after the company had ceased operations Eshbach also sold Grant a fair quantity of flat dust jackets for Fantasy Press books some of which are still available on the collector s market today Imprints editPolaris Press was a subsidiary imprint of Fantasy Press that was created in 1952 3 Eschbach created the imprint in order to publish books he felt did not quite fit under the Fantasy Press imprint 11 Ultimately only two titles were ever issued under the Polaris Press imprint 3 Works published by Fantasy Press editSpacehounds of IPC by Edward E Smith Ph D 1947 The Legion of Space by Jack Williamson 1947 The Forbidden Garden by John Taine 1947 Of Worlds Beyond edited by Lloyd Arthur Eshbach 1947 The Book of Ptath by A E van Vogt 1947 The Black Flame by Stanley G Weinbaum 1948 Triplanetary by Edward E Smith Ph D 1948 Beyond This Horizon by Robert A Heinlein 1948 Sinister Barrier by Eric Frank Russell 1948 Skylark Three by Edward E Smith Ph D 1948 Divide and Rule amp The Stolen Dormouse by L Sprague de Camp 1948 Darker Than You Think by Jack Williamson 1948 Skylark of Valeron by Edward E Smith Ph D 1949 A Martian Odyssey and Others by Stanley G Weinbaum 1949 Seven Out of Time by Arthur Leo Zagat 1949 The Incredible Planet by John W Campbell Jr 1949 First Lensman by Edward E Smith Ph D 1950 Masters of Time by A E van Vogt 1950 The Bridge of Light by A Hyatt Verrill 1950 Genus Homo by L Sprague de Camp and P Schuyler Miller 1950 The Cometeers by Jack Williamson 1950 Galactic Patrol by Edward E Smith Ph D 1950 The Moon is Hell by John W Campbell Jr 1950 Dreadful Sanctuary by Eric Frank Russell 1951 Beyond Infinity by Robert Spencer Carr 1951 Seeds of Life by John Taine 1951 Gray Lensman by Edward E Smith Ph D 1951 The Crystal Horde by John Taine 1952 The Red Peri by Stanley G Weinbaum 1952 The Legion of Time by Jack Williamson 1952 The Titan by P Schuyler Miller 1952 Second Stage Lensmen by Edward E Smith Ph D 1953 The Black Star Passes by John W Campbell Jr 1953 Man of Many Minds by E Everett Evans 1953 Assignment in Eternity by Robert A Heinlein 1953 Deep Space by Eric Frank Russell 1954 Three Thousand Years by Thomas Calvert McClary 1954 Children of the Lens by Edward E Smith Ph D 1954 Operation Outer Space by Murray Leinster 1954 G O G 666 by John Taine 1954 The Tyrant of Time by Lloyd Arthur Eshbach 1955 Under the Triple Suns by Stanton A Coblentz 1955 Alien Minds by E Everett Evans 1955 Islands of Space by John W Campbell Jr 1957 The Vortex Blaster by Edward E Smith Ph D 1960 Invaders from the Infinite by John W Campbell Jr 1961 The History of Civilization by Edward E Smith Ph D 1961 Works published by Polaris Press editThe Heads of Cerberus by Francis Stevens 1952 The Abyss of Wonders by Perley Poore Sheehan 1953 Notes edit a b Clute John Peter Nicholls 1995 The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction New York St Martin s Griffin p 411 ISBN 0 312 13486 X Chalker Jack L Mark Owings 1998 The Science Fantasy Publishers A Bibliographic History 1923 1998 Westminster MD and Baltimore Mirage Press Ltd p 235 a b c d e f Eshbach Lloyd Arthur 1983 Over My Shoulder Reflections on a Science Fiction Era Philadelphia Oswald Train pp 109 138 OCLC 10489084 a b c d Robert Weinberg Specialty Science Fiction Publishers in Hall W Hall ed Science Fiction Collections Fantasy Supernatural and Weird Tales Haworth Press 1978 p 122 Chalker Jack L Mark Owings 1998 The Science Fantasy Publishers A Bibliographic History 1923 1998 Westminster MD and Baltimore Mirage Press Ltd p 342 Lloyd Arthur Eshbach Papers Retrieved March 29 2016 Over My Shoulder Reflections On A Science Fiction Era Lloyd A Eshbach 1983 Oswald Train Publisher Lloyd Arthur Eshbach Over My Shoulder Reflections On A Science Fiction Era 1983 Oswald Train Publisher pp360 364 Lloyd Arthur Eshbach Over My Shoulder Reflections On A Science Fiction Era 1983 Oswald Train Publisher pp 218 220 Owings and Chalker The Science Fantasy Publishers 1998 Over My Shoulder Reflections On A Science Fiction Era 1983 Lloyd A Eshbach Oswald Train Publisher Chalker Jack L Mark Owings 1998 The Science Fantasy Publishers A Bibliographic History 1923 1998 Westminster MD and Baltimore Mirage Press Ltd p 524 References editChalker Jack L Mark Owings 1998 The Science Fantasy Publishers A Bibliographic History 1923 1998 Westminster MD and Baltimore Mirage Press Ltd pp 232 242 524 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fantasy Press amp oldid 1127621023, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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