![]() ![]() … In conclusion, Jules de Grandin is a pain in the neck.”Įva Margaret Neeley was born in 1911 if she was reading Weird Tales for about a decade, then she had begun reading the Unique Magazine from almost the beginning, probably picking up her first issue as a teenager of 13 or 14. … And Smith’s drawings are, I think, by far the best in the magazine. His tales have a rounded jewel-like self-containedness that is, artistically, a delight. As long as WT prints stories by Clark Ashton Smith, however, I’ll keep on reading it. There was a time when I could be made to shiver by the mention of garlic, but now it’s just something to put in salad. I hate vampire and werewolf stories-my blood refuses to congeal for any number of undead clammily hooting about. Oh, and another gripe-I dislike the blurbs you are printing at the first of the stories. ![]() He is science-fiction at its worst: all WEIRD TALES needs to make the science-fiction atmosphere perfect is a letter from Forrest J. ![]() He makes me want to scream and bite my nails-’captured thirty-six suns’ indeed! His style is nothing but exclamation marks his idea of drama is something involving a fantastic number of light-speeds he is, in the words of one of my favorite comic strip characters, flies in my soup. Clair, of Berkeley, California, writes: “I’ve been a good quiet uncomplainng reader of WEIRD TALES for about ten years-but the prospect of another story by Edmond Hamilton moves me to hysterical outcry. ![]()
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