Roger Sherman Hoar

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Roger Sherman Hoar
Roger Sherman Hoar

Roger Sherman Hoar (April 8, 1887-1963) was a former state senator and assistant Attorney General, state of Massachusetts.

Contents

[edit] Overview

The Harvard-educated Hoar was the product of a remarkable New England family -- the son of Sherman Hoar, grandson of former US Attorney General Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar, great-grandson of Samuel Hoar, and great-great grandson of American founding father Roger Sherman, a signer of the Declaration of Independence -- as well as a remarkable individual in his own right. Hoar was an organizer and major force behind the enactment of the Employee Unemployment Benefits Act, served on the Commission to Compile Information & Data, 1917, taught mathematics and engineering, patented a system for aiming large guns by the stars, and authored landmark works on constitutional and patent law.

Under the pseudonym Ralph Milne Farley, Hoar wrote a considerable amount of pulp-magazine fiction during the period between the world wars, appearing in such publications as Argosy All-Story Weekly, Weird Tales, True Gang Life, and Amazing Stories, as well as occasional essays for The American Mercury, Scientific American, and science-fiction fanzines. His works include The Radio Man and its numerous sequels, chiefly interplanetary and inner-world adventure yarns in the tradition of Edgar Rice Burroughs, with whom he was friends; Hoar also wrote a number of archetypal time-travel-paradox tales, collected in book form as The Omnibus of Time, and "The House of Ecstasy," told in the second-person and frequently reprinted since its initial appearance in Weird Tales (April 1938 issue).

Upon relocating to the Midwest, where he worked as a corporate attorney for the firm of Bucyrus-Erie, Hoar joined the Milwaukee Fictioneers, whose members included Stanley G. Weinbaum, Robert Bloch, and Raymond A. Palmer. When Chicago-based Ziff-Davis Publishing Company bought the ailing Amazing Stories in 1938, Hoar was offered, but declined, the magazine's editorship and recommended Palmer, who held the position through the 1940s.

[edit] Books

[edit] As Roger Sherman Hoar

  • The Tariff Manual. Privately printed, 1912.
  • Constitutional Conventions: Their Nature, Powers, and Limitations. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1917.
  • Patents: What a Business Executive Should Know About Patents. New York: The Ronald Press Company, 1926. Revised edition: Patent Tactics and Law. 1935, 1950.
  • Conditional Sales: Law and Local Practices for Executive and Lawyer. New York: The Ronald Press Company, 1929. Revised edition: 1937.
  • Unemployment Insurance in Wisconsin. South Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Stuart Press, 1932. Revised edition: Wisconsin Unemployment Insurance, 1934.

[edit] As Ralph Milne Farley

  • Dangerous Love (stories) . London: Utopian Publications, 1946.
  • The Immortals (novel). Toronto: Popular Publications Inc., 1947.
  • The Radio Man (novel). Los Angeles: Fantasy Publishing Co., 1948. Paperback edition retitled An Earthman on Venus (Avon Books).
  • The Hidden Universe (novel). Los Angeles: Fantasy Publishing Co., 1950.
  • The Omnibus of Time (stories). Los Angeles: Fantasy Publishing Co., 1950.
  • Strange Worlds (contains The Radio Man and The Hidden Universe). Los Angeles: Fantasy Publishing Co., 1953.
  • The Radio Beasts (novel). New York: Ace Books, 1964.
  • The Radio Planet (novel). New York: Ace Books, 1964.
  • Tong War (novel, written in collaboration with E. Hoffman Price). Chertsey, England: Blue Mushroom, 2002.
  • Pe-Ra, Daughter of the Sun (novella). Rialto, California: Pulpville Press, 2005.
  • The Radio Man Returns (novel). Rialto, California: Pulpville Press, 2005.
  • The Ralph Milne Farley Collection Book 1 (stories). Rialto, California: Pulpville Press, 2005.
  • The Ralph Milne Farley Collection Book 2 (stories). Rialto, California: Pulpville Press, 2005.
  • The Golden City (novel). Rialto, California: Pulpville Press, 2006.
  • The Radio War (novel). Rialto, California: Pulpville Press, 2006.
  • The Radio Menace (novel). Rialto, California: Pulpville Press, 2008.

[edit] External links