The Fantasy Fan, Volume 2, Number 5, January 1935 / The Fan's Own Magazine
You will notice that this is the Special Weird Poetry Number.
The next issue will be the Special Short Story Number,
and the March issue will be dedicated to Weird Tales. By the way, F. Lee Baldwin, the author of our well-liked department, Within the Circle, has compiled an excellent biography of H. P. Lovecraft which will appear in the Weird Tales number with a special wood-cut of the famed writer by Duane W. Rimel. Coming up is also volumes of material from Seabury Quinn, H. P. Lovecraft, Clark Ashton Smith, Robert E. Howard, R. H. Barlow, Robert Nelson, and all your other favorite writers.
Upon suggestions from many of our readers, we are dropping Our Readers Say department with this issue. As H. Koenig points, continuous repetition of I liked this and I liked that does not make very interesting reading. Therefore, Our Readers Say will be replaced by this Forward each month besides fan articles made from the most interesting of our readers' communications.
Due to the huge influx of contributions, we find it very difficult to oblige all of our contributors by placing their material in print promptly. We intend to use the best material first and must ask the patience of all those who have sent us articles. Please remember our limited space.
I have just had an opportunity to check up on Blackwood's The Wolves of God, (writes H. Koenig). The book was written by Blackwood and Wilson as I indicated in my last letter. I find, however, that the only story credited directly to Blackwood was the last story in the book entitled Vengeance is Mine and not the title story. Hence, if you should publish my earlier letter, please make the correction. Incidentally, it may be well that Blackwood had a hand in the other stories. But if so, the Table of Contents does not so indicate.
You will remember that in our editorial for the November, 1934, number, we stated casually that the average intelligence of the general public was that of a moron. We have received a post-card containing the following from One of the 'General Public', post-marked Newark, N. J.: