F. Orlin Tremaine
F (rederick). Orlin Tremaine (January 7, 1899 – October 22, 1956) was an American science fiction and other magazine editor and writer. He sometimes published under the pseudonym Warner Van Lorne.
Biography
Prior to editing Astounding, Tremaine worked as an editor on several magazines, including Brain Power (1921-1924) and True Story (1924). In addition, he published short stories under the pseudonym Orlin Frederick.
Tremaine became the second editor of Astounding Science Fiction in 1933 following the magazine's purchase by Street and Smith when William Clayton went bankrupt. Tremaine remained editor until 1937, during which time he bought such important stories as H.P. Lovecraft's At the Mountains of Madness (sold by Julius Schwartz) and The Shadow Out of Time (sold by Donald Wandrei), apparently without reading them. Tremaine permitted both tales to be severely abridged and edited by copyeditors, although Lovecraft complained vociferously only about the former (it was on this occasion that he referred to Tremaine as "that god-damnn'd dung of a hyaena (Lovecraft to Robert H. Barlow, June 4, 1936 (ms, John Hay Library).[1]
Desmond Hall was his assistant at Astounding, and together they became the founding editors of Street and Smith's Mademoiselle in 1935. Tremaine edited the women's magazine as well as the SF magazine until his promotion in 1937.
Tremaine was succeeded as editor of Astounding by John W. Campbell, Jr. and at Mademoiselle by Betsy Blackwell.
In 1937, Tremaine was appointed Editorial Director of Street and Smith, a position he held for a year. He then formed his own company and produced the short-lived science fiction magazine Comet Stories.
He later became editor at Bartholomew House, which published the first paperback editions of Lovecraft, The Weird Shadow Over Innsmotuh (1944) and The Dunwich Horror (1945).[1]
During the fifty issues of the magazine he published, Tremaine set Astounding up as the pre-eminent science fiction magazine and launched the careers of authors including L. Sprague de Camp and Eric Frank Russell.
Tremaine was part of an old Cornish American family.[2]
Further reading
- Will Murray, 'The Man Who Edited Lovecraft," Crypt of Cthulhu No 48 (St Johns Eve 1987): 3-5.
References
External links
- Works by F. Orlin Tremaine at Project Gutenberg
- Works by F. Orlin Tremaine at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- F. Orlin Tremaine at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database