British Fantasy Society

British Fantasy Society logo (circa 2008)

The British Fantasy Society (BFS) began in 1971 as the British Weird Fantasy Society, an offshoot of the British Science Fiction Association.[1] The society is dedicated to promoting the best in the fantasy, science fiction and horror genres.

In 2000, the BFS won the Special Award: Non-Professional at the World Fantasy Awards.[2] The society also has its own awards, the annual British Fantasy Awards, created in 1971 at the suggestion of its president, the author Ramsey Campbell. It held its first Fantasycon in 1975.[3]

The current British Fantasy Society has no direct connection with the earlier science fiction group using the same name from 1942 to 1946.

Publications

The BFS currently publishes two magazines, Horizons, its fiction publication; and the Journal, its non-fiction & academic publication. Each has two issues a year, with alternating schedules. These are available in both print and electronically. It also produces a monthly members only email, which rounds up news, reviews and usually includes an exclusive short story. Previous publications include Prism, which featured news, reviews and columns, Dark Horizons, which featured fiction, non-fiction and poetry, and enjoyed the patronage of many established authors, artists, critics and journalists, and New Horizons, issued twice a year from 2008 to 2010, which published fiction and articles, but not poetry. There was also Shelflings, an ezine collecting reviews from the BFS website.

The society continues to produce a remarkable series of publications, including numbered chapbooks of works by William Hope Hodgson, Michael Moorcock, Ramsey Campbell, Peter Tremayne, August Derleth, and M. R. James.[4] Magazines previously published include Winter Chills (later renamed Chills), edited by Peter Coleborn, and Mystique: Tales Of Wonder, edited by Mike Chinn. Both these magazines were independent publications, but linked to the BFS, and in the case of Mystique, absorbed into Dark Horizons after a few issues. Paperback titles include Clive Barker: Mythmaker for the Millennium by Suzanne J. Barbieri, and Annabel Says, a modern ghost story by Simon Clark and Stephen Laws. In 2007 it published HP Lovecraft in Britain: a Monograph, written by Stephen Jones and illustrated by Les Edwards.

Dark Horizons

Dark Horizons, the journal of the British Fantasy Society, was published from 1971 to 2010, before being folded into the British Fantasy Society Journal. Its contents and subject matter varied, according to the tastes of the editors and the contents of the other magazines being published by the BFS at the same time, but generally included some combination of fantasy, science-fiction and horror-related fiction, articles, poetry and artwork.

Its editors included:

Members

Another notable member of the British Fantasy Society is the author Stephen Gallagher.

References

Sources
  • Peter Roberts, "British Fantasy Society", The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, ed. by John Clute and Peter Nicholls (New York: St Martin's Press, 1995), p. 159
  • David A Sutton, “When Dark Horizons Turned Magenta”, Dark Horizons 50 (2007), pp. 4–5
  • Debbie Bennett, “21st Century Horizons”, Dark Horizons 50 (2007), p. 72
  • Mike Chinn, “From Dinosaurs to Disks: Fifty Issues of Dark Horizons”, Dark Horizons 50 (2007), pp. 88–89, 2007

External links

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