- Fortean Times
Infobox Magazine
title = Fortean Times
| image_size = 200px | "Fortean Times issue 200"
editor =David Sutton
previous_editor =Bob Rickard (Founder)Paul Sieveking
staff_writer = Jen Ogilvie
frequency = Monthly
(Was bi-monthly; quarterly)
category = Paranormal
company =Dennis Publishing Ltd
founded =1973
firstdate = November1973
(As "The News")
June1976
(As "Fortean Times" #16)
country =United Kingdom
language = English
website = [http://www.forteantimes.com/ Official home page]
issn = 0308-5899"Fortean Times" - "The World of Strange Phenomena" - is a British monthly
magazine devoted to the anomalous phenomena popularised byCharles Fort . Previously published byJohn Brown Publishing (from1991 to2001 ) and thenI Feel Good Publishing (2001 to2005 ), it is now published byDennis Publishing Ltd . As of August 2005, its circulation was approximately 27,000 copies per month.History
Pre-1973
The roots of the magazine that was to become "Fortean Times" can be traced back to Bob Rickard discovering the works of
Charles Fort through the second-hand method of reading science-fiction stories::"John Campbell, the editor of "Astounding Science Fiction " (as "Analog" was then titled), for example," writes Rickard "encouraged many authors to expand Fort's data and comments into imaginative stories."cite book | last=Rickard| first=Bob| authorlink = Bob Rickard| coauthors=Sieveking, Paul (ed.), et al.| format=Preface|month= June | year= 1992 | title="Yesterday's News Tomorrow": Fortean Times Issues 1-15 | edition=Fortean Tomes, 2nd edition, 1995| publisher=John Brown Publishing | id=ISBN 1-870870-26-3 ]In the mid-1960s, while Rickard was studying
Product Design at Birmingham Art College he met several like-minded science-fiction fans, particularly crediting fellow-studentPeter Weston 's fan-produced "Speculation"'zine as helping him to " [learn] the art of putting together a fanzine," some years before he created his own. Attending ascience-fiction convention in 1968, Rickard obtainedAce paperback copies of all four of Fort's books from a stall run by Derek Stokes (later to run Dark They Were, and Golden-Eyed and take a role in the day-to-day running of "The Fortean Times").After reading an advert in the underground magazine "Oz" (in 1969) for the "
International Fortean Organisation " (INFO), an American group "founded in 1966... by Paul and Ronald Willis," who had acquired material from the originalFortean Society (started in 1931, but in limbo since the 1959 death of its founderTiffany Thayer ), Rickard began to correspond with the brothers, particularly Paul. Rickard was instrumental in encouraging the Willises to publish their own Fortean journal - the "INFO Journal: Science and the Unknown" began intermittent publication in Spring, 1967 - and sent them many British newspaper clipping, although few saw print. Rickard later discovered that the production was fraught behind-the-scenes as Ronald Willis had been seriously ill, Paul thus finding it difficult to "keep up with things" on his own. Ultimately, the Willises were instrumental in inspiring Rickard to create his "own" periodical. Ron Willis succumbed to a brain tumour in March 1975. [cite news | author=Bob Rickard | title=Editorial| date=April 1975 | work=The News #9] Bearing a date of November 1973, the first issue of Rickard's self-produced and self-published "The News" was available directly from him."The News" (1973-1976)
The magazine which was to continue
Charles Fort 's work documenting the unexplained was founded by Robert JM "Bob" Rickard in 1973 as his self-published bi-monthly mail-order "hobbyish newsletter" miscellany "The News" - "A Miscellany of Fortean Curiosities". The title is said to be "a contraction taken from Samuel Butler's "The News from Nowhere", (although Rickard may be conflating/confusing Butler's "Erewhon " andWilliam Morris ' "News from Nowhere "). "The News" saw fairly-regular bi-monthly publication for 15 issues between November 1973 and April 1976. Debuting at 35p (£1.80/$4.50 for a year of 6 issues [Early advertisements promised a monthly, 12-issue subscription for the same price, but monetary and time constraints caused Rickard to move to a bi-monthly schedule, and use any 'extra' monies to merely produce a greater number of pages] ) for 20 pages, "The News" was produced on Rickard's typewriter, with headings created withLetraset , during (as Rickard says in #2) the late-70sblackout s. The first issue featured a cover (which would become briefly the unofficial logo of "The News") drawn by Rickard from aSelfridges advert originally created byBernard Partridge . [cite news | author=Bob Rickard | title=Editorial| date=November 1973| work=The News #1] From the second issue, pictures and photographs from various newspapers were interpolated within the text. The price was raised slightly for #6 - which also saw the page count upped to 24pg - due in large part to rising postal and paper costs.Helping behind-the-scenes was Steve Moore, a kindred-spirit whom Rickard met at a comics convention when the latter was a sub-editor at
IPC . The two found they had much in common - including a love of Chinese mysticism - and Moore helped inspire Rickard to publish "The News". The early issues featured some articles by different individuals, but were "largely the work of Bob Rickard, who typed them himself with some help from Steve Moore."cite book | last=Sieveking | first=Paul| authorlink = Paul Sieveking | coauthors=Rickard, Bob, Moore, Steve et al.| format=Preface|year=1991 | title="Diary of a Mad Planet": Fortean Times Issues 16-25 | edition=2nd ed. 1995| publisher=John Brown Publishing | id=ISBN 1-870021-25-8 ]Key "News"-people
Moore and "
Paul Screeton (then editor of "The Ley Hunter"), both urged on the first few uncertain issues" and Moore would frequently join Rickard to "stuff envelopes and hand-write a few hundred addresses" to disseminate the early issues. Rickard also highlights amongst the key early "Fortean Times" advocates and supporters: Ion Will, who discovered "The News" in 1974 and became a "constant [source] of valuable clippings, books, postcards and entertaining letters"; Janet and Colin Bord, later authors of "Mysterious Britain" (Janet also wrote for "Flying Saucer Review" andLionel Beer 's "Spacelink", while it was Colin's Fortean article in "Gandalf's Garden " that is particularly cited by Rickard as bringing him/them to his attention); Phil Ledger, a "peripatetic marine biologist ", and "The News"' "first enthusiastic fan"; Ken Campbell, Forteanplaywright ;John Michell ; Richard Adams and Dick Gwynn, who both helped with the evolving layout and typesetting of later issues; Chris Squire, who helped organise the first subscription database; Canadian "Mr. X"; Mike Dash and cartoonistHunt Emerson . Emerson was introduced to Rickard in late 1974, when after seven issues, he "wanted to improve the graphics", which Emerson certainly did, providing around 30 headings for use in issues #8 onwards. (Emerson's still-on-going monthly "Phenomenomix" strip in "FT" had it's prototype in #11's three-page "Fortean Funnies").Notable "News" content
Other early contributors included writer and researcher
Nigel Watson (Chairman of theScunthorpe UFO Research Society 'SUFORS'), who wrote "Mysterious Moon" for "The News" #2. Watson would later write a regular column of UFO commentary entitled "Enigma Variations" (from #29), and articles on the subject ofUFO -related murders and stories of sexual assault by aliens. Phil Grant wrote aboutLey lines for #3 andMary Caine who revised an earlier article (from "Gandalf's Garden ") on The Glastonbury Zodiac for issue #4, which also saw the debut of the "Reviews" section, beginning with comments on a book byJohn Michell , the Sphere reprint ofCharles Fort 's "New Lands" andJohn Sladek 's "The New Apocrypha".Issues #2 and #3 noted that "The News" was published "with an arrangement with INFO", this was revised from #4 to it being "affiliated to" theInternational Fortean Organisation ". From #5, Mark A. Hall produced a section entitled "Fortean USA", continuing on from his earlier, discontinued, newsletter "From My Files"; issue #5 also saw William Porter's article onLlandrillo printed, after being delayed from #4 for space constraints. Janet Bord contributed "Some Fortean Ramblings" alongsideWilliam R. Corliss 's "The Evolution of the Fortean Sourcebooks" for #7, and issue #8 was the first issue of Vol. 2, after Rickard decided to end Volume 1 with #7 (not #6 as fully bi-monthly titles do), since that issue was dated November '74, thereby attempting to keep each Volume aligned with a year. [cite news | author=Bob Rickard | title=Editorial| date=July 1974| work=The News #5]Issue #8 (or, Volume 2, issue #1) saw the special "Christmas present" of headings by
Hunt Emerson , after Rickard was introduced to Emerson by Carol and Nick Moore as Hunt was working on "Large Cow Comix ". Described by Rickard as "as much a disciple of [George Herriman|George[ Herriman] ] ... and my [Rickard's] favourite artists from "Mad" (Bill Elder andWally Wood )" as Rickard was of Charles Fort, the two got on well, with Emerson producing not only a series of headings, but later strips and covers for issues right up to the present day. The death of INFO co-founder Ronald J Willis was announced in #9, which described itself as providing "bi-monthly notes on Fortean phenomena", and an index to the first year's issues (#1-7) became available. Colin Bord penned "Amazing Menagerie" for issue #10, whilePaul Devereux and Andrew York x=compiled an exhaustive study ofLeicestershire in "Portrait of a Fault Area", serialised in #11-12. Issue #11 featured Rickard and Emerson's first "Fortean Funnies" cartoon, while #12 saw a price rise to 50p/$1.25, a logo change (from Selfridges' herald-on-horseback to the more descriptive Fort's face-encircled) and a tweaking of its tagline to "bi-monthly "news &" notes on Fortean phenomena." Issue #14 first mentioned Rickard and Michell's then-in-production book "Phenomena!", which would be more actively trailed from #18. Issue #15 - now with 28 pages - announced that Rickard had decided to bow to popular opinion and retitle his miscellany with a more descriptive title. Thus, with a subtitle of "Portents & Prodigies", "Fortean Times" was born. [cite news | author=Bob Rickard | title=Editorial| date=April 1976| work=The News #15]"Fortean Times" (1976-present)
After fifteen issues of "The News", issue #16 (
1976 ) saw the magazine renamed "Fortean Times", which "new title emerged from correspondence between Bob Rickard and Paul Willis" - the two having talked of creating a Fortean version of The Times newspaper, "full of weird and wonderful news and read by millions worldwide". It's cover bore the descriptive text "Strange phenomena - curiosities - prodigies - portents - mysteries," while the inside cover kept the 'Fort face' logo from later issues of "The News" but bore the revised legend "A Contemporary Record of Strange Phenomena". [cite news | author=Bob Rickard | title=Editorial| date=June 1976| work=The Fortean Times #16] Included within was an offer for a "4-coloursilk-screen ed poster" created by Hunt Emerson for this landmark issue. From the start, this new format compounded earlier financial difficulties for Rickard, following on from #14's plea: "we need more subscribers or we die!". [cite news | author=Bob Rickard | title=Editorial| date=January 1976| work=The News #14] ("Fortean Times" issues #16-18 - as "The News" #1-15 before them - were solely edited, published and in large part written & typed by Rickard himself. Even by passing on rising postal and paper costs to the readership - which Rickard constantly reiterates that he is loathe to do, the early "Fortean Times" was constantly facing an uphill financial battle.) Early editorials of the new "FT", therefore (in fact beginning with "The News" #15) featured a notification of donations received, naming and thanking the hardcore readership (which included many current and future-contributors) for monies received, which aided the move towards higher production values. With donations helping to offset costs, the price was held at 50p up until issue #20, whereupon the magazine dropped to a quarterly schedule from Spring 1977 (Issue #21) - but raised the page count (and price) to continue producing the same amount of material for the same yearly fee (40pg, 75p ea. or £3/year).Issue #18 saw a new semi-regular feature entitled "Forteana Corrigenda," aimed at correcting "errors in the literature" that had crept into various Fortean works through misquotation or other difficulties. After 18 more-or-less solo-produced issues, long-term supporter and helper Steve Moore was credited as assistant editor for issues #19-21, becoming co-contributing editor (with Phil Ledger, Stan Nichols and Paul J Willis) on issues #22-26 and 'associate editor' from issue #27. He was joined by contributing editor David Fideler, and subsequently (also as co-associate editor) by
Paul Sieveking (#28-) and Valerie Thomas (#31-32). Issue #20 announced thatKay Thompson (a staff member of "Ley Hunter" magazine, then under the editorship ofPaul Devereux , with whom "FT" shared an address for several issues) would be helping to type parts of subsequent issues to further delegate the burden from Rickard. He, Moore and Sieveking were also later joined editorially by authorMike Dash (who is mentioned as particularly overseeing the publication of scholarly occasional papers), before Moore moved from full editorial to largely correspondent duties for a dozen issues after #42, returning as a contributing editor in Autumn 1990 (#55). The four - Rickard, Sieveking, Dash and Moore - are often collectively referred to as "The Gang of Fort," after the Gang of "Four".Issue #21 saw the debut of "FT" semi-regular column "Strange Deaths" (later descriptively subtitled "Unusual ways of shuffling off this mortal coil"), while issue #22 updated "FT"
' s to include (Ivan T. Sanderson 's)The Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained (SITU), alongside INFO. Issue #23 featured an article byRobert Anton Wilson on, aptly, "The 23 Phenomenon" [http://forteantimes.com/features/commentary/396/the_23_phenomenon.html] , made available a second Index (1975, to "The News" #8-13) and included a 12-page 'Review Supplement', issued as a separately bound supplement since the-then printers had difficulty binding more than 40 pages. With #24, the printers were changed toWindhorse Press to overcome this difficulty, and "FT" became officially 52-pages in length, the changes cemented in issue #25 with a new font for the title and a change of address - c/o London-based "SF and cosmic" bookshop "Dark They Were, and Golden-Eyed", run by Derek Stokes (who had sold Rickard the four Fort books ten years previously). The same issue ran an obituary forEric Frank Russell , of whom Rickard was a considerable fan. He writes that Russell turned down an invitation to contribute material to "The News" back in 1973, having "earned his rest" after 40 years as an active Fortean. Rickard further states that Russell was one of the key Fortean-fiction writers he read in Campbell's "Astounding Science Fiction " and "Analog", and the author of "the first Fortean book I [Rickard] ever read": Russell's "Great World Mysteries". [cite news | author=Bob Rickard | title=Obituaries cont.| date=Spring 1978| work=Fortean Times #25, p. 43] Issue #26 trailed "a special series of 'Occasional Papers' in Fortean subjects" to be edited by Steve Moore, and #27 - the 5th Anniversary issue - welcomed Michigan-nativeDavid Fideler (whose "Anomaly Research Bulletin " was then due to cease publication, although its subscribers, "FT" promised, would be absorbed by them) as "FT"' s "man in the New World".Paul Sieveking and "FT"
' s format changeIn 1978, mutual friend Ion Will introduced Rickard to
Paul Sieveking , who recalls that "the Forteans used to meet every Tuesday afternoon above the science-fiction bookshop Dark They Were And Golden-Eyed in Soho, a shop run by Derek Stokes, to open post and interact. (Indeed, this was the semi-official address of "FT" until that shop closed. With #35, Summer '81 the address was changed.) Sieveking joined the "FT" team with #28 as co-associate editor, and writes, highlighting the intrinsic early difficulties in printing "FT" that that issue "was printed by an Israeli entrepreneur in northern Greece and shipped to London." [cite book | last=Sieveking | first=Paul| authorlink = Paul Sieveking | coauthors=Rickard, Bob, Moore, Steve et al.| format=Preface|month=April | year=1990 | title="Seeing Out the Seventies": Fortean Times Issues 26-30 | edition=Fortean Tomes 1990| publisher=John Brown Publishing | id=ISBN 1-870021-20-7 ] That issue (#28), bearing a cover blurb of "Strange Phenomena", featured an early advert for the bookshop Dark They Were And Golden-Eyed, drawn byBryan Talbot , while the editorial promised that the "next" issue would not only see the availability of Index 1976, but be in a "larger and more professional format, typeset throughout, [with] better graphics, layout and legibility." [cite news | author=Bob Rickard | title=Editorial| date=Winter 1979 | work=Fortean Times #28]Indeed #29, under a cover by Hunt Emerson, [The cover would later be used for the "Yesterday's News Tomorrow" collection of "The News" issues #1-15.] was printed fully typeset in A4 (thanks to art director Richard Adams of AdCo and, according to Rickard's preface to "Yesterday's News Tomorrow", Dick Gwynn) and even distributed on a limited basis through
WH Smiths . The move away from production on Rickard's typewriter gave "The "Journal" of Strange Phenomena," (as it was now subtitled) greater ability to produce longer, better laid-out articles. These opened with a seven-page guide to "Charles Fort and Fortean Times" by Bob Rickard, explaining the background and philosophy of "FT" as well as outlining the influence of Fort "who", writes Rickard, "is still largely unknown" [cite news | author=Bob Rickard | title=Charles Fort and Fortean Times| date=Summer 1979 | work=Fortean Times #29] , and also included the first of Nigel Watson's "Enigma Variations" columns andLoren Coleman 's "Devil Names and Fortean Places" article sat alongside comments by Colin Bord,Tim Dinsdale , VGW Harrison and Rickard onAnthony 'Doc' Shiels ' 1977 "Nessie" photographs. The magazine itself dropped the description 'non-profitmaking' from its publication information, and ceased to name its stated-affiliations to INFO and SITU and 'other Fortean journals' in favour the more general aim to be a "friend to all groups and magazines continuing the work of Charles Fort". [cite news | author=Bob Rickard | title=Editorial| date=Summer 1979 | work=Fortean Times #29] It also contained a considerably higher number of adverts, including both inside covers - making the page count slightly higher than previous issues, which had previously counted the cover as page 1 - and an early advert byBrian Bolland for Forbidden Planet (which would ironically begin to take off only after the closure of Stokes' Dark They Were And Golden-Eyed).Issue #30 announced that while "over the last couple of issues [the] subscriber list... nearly doubled," so too had the "printing, production and postage bill," necessitating a price rise to 95p/$2.50 - albeit softened by another length increase, to 68 pages. Now published not merely by Rickard, but by 'Fortean Times Ltd', it was typeset by
Warpsmith Graphics and printed byBija Press . The cover was painted byUna Woodruff (whose "Inventorum Natura" was reviewed within) to illustrateJohn Michell 's article on "Spontaneous Images andAcheropites ," drawing on his 1979Thames & Hudson book dealing with - and titled - "Simulacra ". Bob Rickard produced an article on one "Clemente Dominguez : Pope,Heretic , Stigmatic;" Michael Hoffman speculated on the occult aspects of a serial killer in "The Sun of Sam;" Robert Schadewald wrote about "The Great Fish Fall of 1859" whileHunt Emerson produced the first cartoon strip under the title "Phenomenomix".Sieveking took over full editorial duties from Rickard with #43, helming the subsequent four quarterly issues (to #46) to give Rickard a chance to "revitalize", [cite news | author=Bob Rickard | title=Editorial| date=Autumn 1984 | work=The Fortean Times #42] which he did, returning with #46 to the position of co-editor. Moore, Dash and
Ian Simmons (and others) variously edited the magazine for the next 18+ years, and although main editorship passed from Rickard and Sieveking toDavid Sutton in2002 , they both continue to contribute - Sieveking focuses his editorial efforts largely on the letters page as well as some specialist topics (while Sieveking's wife edits the "Reviews" section).During the 30 years of its publication, "Fortean Times" has changed both format and publishers on a couple of occasions. Early issues (particularly of "The News") were produced in black & white (for ease of photocopying), and the whole was largely produced by
typewriter until #29. Colour, professional printing (and wider distribution) followed and a 6.5 x 4.5in size held sway for several years before the magazine settled into it's "normal" A4 (magazine) size in the 1980s, after which glossy covers followed. Several changes of logo and font have occurred throughout its life.General content
The identification of correct original sources by contributors is a defining feature of the magazine, as it was for Charles Fort himself. However, the "objective reality" of these reports is not as important. The magazine "maintains a position of benevolent scepticism towards both the orthodox and the unorthodox" and "toes no party line". The range of subject matter is extremely broad, including but not limited to the following:
* General
Forteana
* Anomalous phenomena
*Apparition s
* Bizarre deaths
* Conspiracy theories
*Crop circle s
*Cryptozoology
* Cults and would-beMessiah s
*Fringe science
*Hoax es
*Mutant s (human and animal)
*Parapsychology
* Religious phenomena (stigmata , appearances and simulacra andmiracles , etc.)
* Natural simulacra
* UFOs
*Urban legend sCurrent content
The magazine's current regular contents includes:
* Three or four feature articles
* Strange Days, a wide-ranging overview of odd and interesting stories mostly culled from the world's newspapers. Some feature in particular sections, including:
** "Science ",
** "Archaeology " (usually by Pauls Sieveking and Devereux),
**Ghosts , in a column titled "Ghostwatch"
** "Alien Zoo", Dr.Karl Shuker 's regular discussion of cryptozoological matters
** "Necrolog", obituaries of Fortean-relevant individuals
** "Strange deaths", a long-running round-up of the odd manners in which some people meet their ends
** "The UFO Files": "Flying Saucery", is Andy Roberts and Dr.David Clarke 's "regular survey of the latest fads and flaps from the world ofufology "; "UFOcal Points" isJenny Randles ' "round-up of sightings and hot-spots from around the world":"Clippings for most of Strange Days' stories are requested from, and supplied by, the readers of" FT
* Mythconceptions, whichdebunk s modernmyth s,Old wives' tale s, etc. (in a similar manner to, among others [http://www.snopes.com Snopes.com] )
* Classical Corner, in which Barry Baldwin reviews Fortean events from ancient times
* Fortean Bureau of Investigation, which typically revisits and reassesses older Fortean cases
* Forum, featuring three or four shorter articles on diverse topics
* Reviews ofFortean ,science fiction /fantasy and relatedBook s,film s andcomputer game s
* A letters page, incorporating:
**"Simulacra Corner",photographs submitted by readers of (typically) naturally-occurring objects which appear to be in the shape of something else
**"it happened to me...", readers stories of strange personal occurrences
* Fortean Traveller, a guide to various sites of interest to the travelling Fortean
* Phenomenomix, acomic strip byHunt Emerson Praise and criticism
Most of the articles in "Fortean Times" are written in the style of objective journalism, but this is not a mandatory requirement and some articles focus on a specific theory or point of view. Although such articles are presented as the opinion of the author and not the editors (who claim to have no opinions), this has occasionally led to controversy. One of the most famous examples occurred in January 1997, when the magazine ran an article by
David Percy under the screaming headline "FAKE! Did NASA hoax the moon landing photos?". The article outraged many readers and led to the magazine's "most vigorous postbag" up to that time. If the Percy article upset the "skeptics" among "FT"'s readership, it was the turn of the "believers" in August 2000, when the magazine's cover boasted what must have seemed to them at first sight a very promising headline: "UFO? The shocking truth about the first flying saucers". However, the article in question, byJames Easton , proposed an extremely mundane explanation forKenneth Arnold 's sighting —American White Pelican s. This suggestion so outraged ufolgists that many of them still use the term "pelican" or "pelicanist" as a pejorative term for adebunker . [http://www.magonia.demon.co.uk/arc/90/pelicanindex.htm]Praise from within the various Fortean communities almost goes without saying, and most Fortean researchers contribute articles, criticism and/or letters to the magazine. It has also attracted more widespread coverage and praise at times, however, too. "Fortean Times" #69 claims that "extracts from "FT" have featured in at least three publications used for teaching English as a foreign language," perhaps in part because (as the editors also quote) Lynn Barber of
The Independent on Sunday newspaper calls "FT"::"a model of elegant English." [cite news | author=Bob Rickard, Paul Sieveking | title=Editorial| date=June/July 1993| work=Fortean Times #69, p.4] [cite news | author=Lynn Barber | title= [Unknown] | date=25 April 1993 | work=The Independent on Sunday |publisher=| url=|accessdate = ]Related projects
Most years, the magazine has held an annual convention in
London called the Fortean Times UnConvention (UnCon ). The first convention was held on the 18-19 June 1994 ."Fortean Studies", the magazines more-academic sister-publication published yearly volumes in the late 1990s, and is still nominally on-going, although when future volumes might see print is unknown. Publication stalled after the sale of "FT" in 2000. [As per comment by Mike Dash]
Its official [http://www.forteantimes.com/ website] tracks Fortean news stories, holds a small archive of articles and photographs, and supports a busy forum for discussion of Fortean topics.
The magazine has also occasionally published both academic and light-hearted books on various aspects of Forteana (see below).
Collections and spin-off books
Many of the earliest issues of "FT" were collected in book format in the early 1990s. In recent years, the print volumes have been overtaken by digital files, available on CD. In addition, several smaller collections have been compiled on various themes and sold, or given away as 'free gifts' with the magazine. A more academic journal ("Fortean Studies") has also seen print, and is still technically an on-going venture.
Fortean Tomes (Chronological collections)
Starting in the very early 1990s, "Fortean Times" produced a number of facsimile editions collecting - in their entirety, adverts and all - the earliest issues of the magazine. These collections, prepared and edited for print by Paul Sieveking (including hand-corrections to early typographic errors) are now out-of-print. It further appears that although demand was such to warrant reprints of several volumes, after collecting up to #77 it was decided that the previous volumes had not sold well enough to continue completely up to date. (Concern over the likely cost of reprinting issues in the new full colour format led to a publishing decision to stockpile 500 unbound run-on copies of each number to provide the basis of future reprint editions, and this project resulted in one further collection - "Snakes Alive!", collecting #93-97 - but the in-between issues #78-92 have not yet been collected in trade format.)
"(The early collections, like the earliest magazines, were published in smaller, 6.5 x 4.5in format)"
*"Yesterday's News Tomorrow: Fortean Times Issues 1-15" (John Brown Publishing , 1992 2nd ed. 1995) ISBN 1-870870-26-3
*"Diary of a Mad Planet: Fortean Times Issues 16-25" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 2nd ed. 1995) ISBN 1-870021-25-8
*"Seeing Out the Seventies: Fortean Times Issues 26-30" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1990 [Copyright and Introduction date information imply that this was the first book to see publication, possibly followed by "Diary of a Mad Planet", and "then" "Yesterday's News Tomorrow".] ) ISBN 1-870021-20-7
*"Gateways to Mystery: Fortean Times Issues 31-36" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1993) ISBN 1-870870-37-9
*"Heaven's Reprimands: Fortean Times Issues 37-41" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1994) ISBN 1-870870-52-2
*"If Pigs Could Fly: Fortean Times Issues 42-46" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1994) ISBN 1-870870-47-6
*"Fishy Yarns [Published as a hardback] : Fortean Times Issues 47-51" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1994) ISBN 1-870870-48-4
*"Bonfire of the Oddities: Fortean Times Issues 52-56" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1995) ISBN 1-870870-61-1
*"Strange Attractors: Fortean Times Issues 57-62" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1996) ISBN 1-870870-73-5"(The later collections were of a larger - A4 - size)"
*"Plumber from Lhasa: Fortean Times Issues 63-67" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1996) ISBN 1-870870-79-4
*"Memories of Hell: Fortean Times Issues 68-72" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1997) ISBN 1-870870-90-5
*"Mouthful of Mysteries: Fortean Times Issues 73-77" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1998) ISBN 1-870870-66-2
*"Snakes Alive!: Fortean Times Issues 93-97" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1998) ISBN 1-902212-04-5**"Fortean Times" Index" by Steve Moore (John Brown Publishing Ltd, Oct 1997) ISBN 1-870870-68-9
CDs
In the mid 2000s, "FT" began to release a series of digital archives. Beginning with more recent issues (presumably for reasons of ease - more recent issues would be more readily available as digital files), they have also begun to re-release the earliest issues - it appears that the digital archive CD format has taken over from print collections.
*Issues 1-15 CD "(The complete" The News")"
*Issues 16-25 CD
*Issues 26-30 CD
**Issues 1-30 3CD Boxset*2001 CD Archive "(Issues 142-153)"
*2002 CD Archive "(Issues 154-165)"
*2003 CD Archive "(Issues 166-178)"
*2004 CD Archive "(Issues 179-191)"
*2005 CD Archive "(Issues 192-204)"
*2006 CD Archive "(Issues 205-217)"
**2002 - 2005 4CD ArchiveFortean Studies
A sister-publication "Fortean Studies" began in the mid-1990s, and was edited by Steve Moore. In the words of frequent-contributor
Neil Nixon , it "compiled serious research and opinion on a range of paranormal and conspiracy related issues," as was a more academic counterpart to "FT".
* Rickard, Bob (producer) & Moore, Steve (ed.) "Fortean Studies: Volume 1" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1994) ISBN 1-870870-55-7
* Rickard, Bob (producer) & Moore, Steve (ed.) "Fortean Studies: Volume 2" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1995) ISBN 1-870870-70-0
* Rickard, Bob (producer) & Moore, Steve (ed.) "Fortean Studies: Volume 3" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1996) ISBN 1-870870-82-4
* Rickard, Bob (producer) & Moore, Steve (ed.) "Fortean Studies: Volume 4" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1998) ISBN 1-870870-96-4
* Rickard, Bob (producer) & Moore, Steve (ed.) "Fortean Studies: Volume 5" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1998) ISBN 1-902212-14-2)
* Rickard, Bob (producer) & Moore, Steve (ed.) "Fortean Studies: Volume 6" (John Brown Publishing Ltd, 1998) ISBN 1-902212-20-7)Other titles
*"The World's Most Incredible Stories: The Best of Fortean Times" by
Adam Sisman andHunt Emerson (May 1992)
*"Fortean Times 1993 Diary" byPaul Sieveking (Dec 1992)*"Fortean Times" Book of Strange Deaths" compiled by Steve Moore, illustrated by Etienne (John Brown Publishing Ltd 1994) ISBN 1-870870-50-6
**US edition: "The Comedian Who Choked to Death on a Pie-- and the Man Who Quit Smoking at 116: A Collection of Incredible Lives and Unbelievable Deaths" (Nov 1996)
*"Fortean Times" Book of Weird Sex" (Sep 1995)
*"Fortean Times" Book of Life's Losers" byIan Stuart Simmons , illustrated byGeoff Coupland (Oct 1996)
*"Fortean Times" Book of Inept Crime" compiled by Steve Moore, illustrated byGeoff Coupland (Oct 1996)
**US edition: "The World's Stupidest Criminals" (Jun 1998)
*"Fortean Times" Book of Exploding Pigs and Other Strange Animal Stories" byIan Stuart Simmons (Oct 1997)
*"Fortean Times" Book of Bizarre Behaviour" byIan Simmons (Oct 1998)
*"Fortean Times" Book of More Strange Deaths" byPaul Sieveking (Oct 1998)
*"Fortean Times" Book of Unconventional Wisdom" (1999)
*"Fortean Times" Book of Close Shaves" by Steve Moore (John Brown Publishing Ltd Oct 1999) ISBN 1-902212-18-5
*"Fortean Times" Book of Medical Mayhem" byPaul Sieveking andIan Stuart Simmons (Oct 1999)
*"Fortean Times" Book of the Millennium" byKevin McClure (Sep 1996)
*"Fortean Times" Presents UFO: 1947-1997 - 50 Years of Flying Saucers" byDennis Stacy andHilary Evans (May 1997)
*"Aliens Ate My Trousers: Crazy Comics from the Pages of "Fortean Times" byHunt Emerson (Mar 1998)*"Weird Year 1996: The Best of Strange Days" by
James Wallis and Joe McNally (Nov 1995)
*"Weird World 1999" by Mark Pilkington and Joe McNally (Nov 1998)**("Barmy Sutra" by
David Sutton - "planned for 2001; unpublished")ee also
*
List of magazines of anomalous phenomena
*Mystery References & footnotes
External links
* [http://www.forteantimes.com/ Official home page]
* [http://www.frogboy.freeuk.com/iwfs1.html A Fortean Society site]
* [http://www.blather.net/blather/2006/05/fortean_times_uncon_2006.html Blather.net on Uncon 2006]
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