Authors in the April 1923 issue of Weird Tales about whom I have not written before:
Paul Suter (1884-1970)--Joseph Paul Suter was a prolific author of pulp fiction. By day he worked as an accountant and in other jobs in Youngstown, Ohio. His story "Beyond the Door" is the first in Weird Tales to rely heavily on diary entries to advance the plot and our understanding of its events. Only "The Grave" by Orville R. Emerson before it has a similar kind of approach in its storytelling. However, in that story, the written narrative is more of a manuscript than a conventional diary, which has dated entries and and is usually written in a diary book. In any case, call it another case of a found object--a letter, a note, a diary, a newspaper article--used in the telling of a weird tale. There would be another diary story in "The Bodymaster" by Harold Ward.
"Beyond the Door" is an uncle story, too. Maybe we should start thinking of that as a subtype of genre fiction. Uncle Godfrey's diary begins on June 15, for us, an anniversary just passed. After a space in the diary of removed pages, it picks up again on July 16, an anniversary as of today. There is a well in the cellar of Uncle's house, its opening covered by a large stone. That makes me think of "Pickman's Model" by H.P. Lovecraft (Weird Tales, Oct. 1927), also the movie The Ring (2002), which is already two decades old, believe it or not. Readers liked "Beyond the Door." It was reprinted in Weird Tales in May 1954.
You can read more about J. Paul Suter on a blog called Pulp Flakes, in an entry called "Author profile: J Paul Suter (Newspaper article from the Cleveland Plain Dealer, 1951)," posted on May 17, 2013, here. You will find a newspaper photograph of him there as well.
Roylston Markham (1885-1950)--Roylston Miller "Roy" Markham was the author of just one story in Weird Tales and, it appears, in all of the science fiction/fantasy/weird fiction genres. Born in Michigan, he grew up in South Dakota and worked as a newspaperman in Sioux Falls and in Chicago. In later years, he called Florida home. His story "The Tortoise Shell Comb" is brief and has many of the same elements as the stories in the first issue: a first-person narrative; suggestions of a haunting or supernatural events; infidelity, murder, revenge, and insanity; a final explanation provided by someone in the know; finally, a setting where murderers are kept, though in this case it's an insane asylum rather than a prison. I wonder what Culpeper Chunn thought of that. (Tune in to the next episode of this blog for an explanation.) Markham's tale is another of American servicemen in France during the Great War.
Paul Crumpler, M.D. (1883-1966)--"A Photographic Phantasm" is the first non-fiction item with a byline to appear in Weird Tales. It was written by another medical doctor, Paul Crumpler, M.D. (1883-1966), who practiced medicine and served as coroner in Sampson County, North Carolina, for many years. His account of a ghost-photograph is just one page long. You can read more about him and see a very small photograph of him on the website Find A Grave, here.
To be continued . . .
The obituary of Roylston Miller "Roy" Markham in the Tampa Bay Times (St. Petersburg, Florida), February 7, 1950, page 7. |
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