John Russell Fearn
c. 1948
c. 1948
Born1908 (1908)
Died1960 (aged 51–52)
Pen nameVargo Statten, Thornton Ayre, Polton Cross, Geoffrey Armstrong, John Cotton, Dennis Clive, Ephriam Winiki, Astron Del Martia
OccupationWriter (novelist)
NationalityEnglish
Period20th century
GenreScience fiction, western, crime

John Russell Fearn (5 June 1908 — 18 September 1960) was a British writer, one of the first to appear in American pulp science fiction magazines. A prolific author, he published his novels also as Vargo Statten and with various pseudonyms including Thornton Ayre, Polton Cross, Geoffrey Armstrong, John Cotton, Dennis Clive, Ephriam Winiki, Astron Del Martia.

Career

Fearn was a prolific writer who wrote Westerns and crime fiction as well as science fiction. His writing appeared under numerous pseudonyms. He wrote series such as Adam Quirke, Clayton Drew, Golden Amazon, and Herbert. At times these drew on the pulp traditions of Edgar Rice Burroughs. His work received praise for its vividness, but criticism, being deemed "unpolished"[according to whom?], with Arthur C. Clarke commenting in 1939 that "we must admire the magnificent, if undisciplined, fertility of his mind".[1]

Personal life

Child of a cotton salesman and a secretary, Fearn worked initially for his father's firm, followed by work as a solicitor's clerk, fairground assistant, at a munitions factory, and as a cinema projectionist. He married writer Camilla Fegan in 1957. As well as writing he was involved in writing/acting in local plays and active in writers' groups. In 1938, he told Amazing Stories that he "likes broiling sunlight and heated rooms [and] smokes incessantly while he writes".[2] During the Second World War, Fearn was chief projectionist at the Empire Cinema in Blackpool.[3]

Bibliography

The first instalment of Fearn's novel Liners of Time took the cover of the May 1935 issue of Amazing Stories, illustrated by Leo Morey.
Fearn's novel Secret of the Buried City was the cover story of the May 1939 issue of Amazing Stories, illustrated by Robert Fuqua (real name Joseph Wirt Tillotson[4]).
Vargo Statten's novella Survivor of Mars was originally published in Two Complete Science-Adventure Books in 1953.

As himself

Golden Amazon

  1. The Golden Amazon (1939)
  2. The Amazon Fights Again (1940)
  3. The Golden Amazon Returns (1945; 1949 variant title The Deathless Amazon 1953 Canada)
  4. The Golden Amazon's Triumph (1946; 1953)
  5. The Amazon's Diamond Quest (1947 as "Diamond Quest"; 1953)
  6. Twin of the Amazon (1948; 1954)
  7. The Amazon Strikes Again (1948; 1954)
  8. Conquest of the Amazon (1949; 1973 chap)
  9. Lord of Atlantis (1949; 1991)
  10. Triangle of Power (1950)
  11. Amethyst City (1951)
  12. Daughter of Golden Amazon (1952)
  13. Quorne Returns (1952)
  14. The Central Intelligence (1953)
  15. The Cosmic Crusaders (1955)
  16. Parasite Planet (1955)
  17. World Out of Step (1956)
  18. The Shadow People (1957)
  19. Kingpin Planet (1957)
  20. World in Reverse (1958)
  21. Dwellers in Darkness (1958)
  22. World in Duplicate (1959)
  23. Lord of Creation
  24. Duel with Colossus
  25. Standstill Planet (1960)
  26. Ghost World (1961)
  27. Earth Divided (1961)
  28. Chameleon Planet (with Philip Harbottle)

Mars Quartet (Clayton Drew)

Works written under pseudonyms

Work written under the name Vargo Statten

Writing about Fearn

See also

References

  1. ^ Clarke, Arthur C. (2000) [Essay first published in New Worlds in 1939]. "Reverie". The Collected Stories. Gollancz. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-8579-8323-4.
  2. ^ "Meet the Authors", Amazing Stories, June 1938, p. 7
  3. ^ Fearn, John Russell (1 March 2001). The Best of John Russell Fearn: Outcasts of eternity and other stories. Wildside Press LLC. p. 6. ISBN 978-1-58715-326-6.
  4. ^ Saunders, David (2009). "Robert FUQUA". pulpartists.com. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  5. ^ "The Hell Fruit".