Carl Swanson with his wife, Evelyn |
Lovecraft
commented on Swanson in several of his letters to Robert Barlow, starting in January
1932: “I am told that a new weird magazine is about to be started by one Carl
Swanson of Washburn, North Dakota. I’ve sent in ‘The Nameless City’ &
‘Beyond the Wall of Sleep,’ but am doubtful about their acceptance” (21). Later
that month, he added that he had “just heard from Swanson—the new magazine man.
He has accepted both ‘The Nameless City’ & ‘Beyond the Wall of Sleep’”
(22).
In
March 1932, Lovecraft provided more information. “Swanson’s plans are slowly
taking form. The new periodical will be called Galaxy, & Derleth understands that the rate of pay will be
about ¼ (cent) per word. The magazine will sell for 10 (cents), or $1.00 per
year. Wright of W.T. is rather
worried about the coming competition, & tends to resent the sale of
reprinting rights to Swanson by his authors” (25).
This
would come up again in March 1935, when, speaking of Wright and reprint rights
from Weird Tales, Lovecraft says,
“The only smallness he ever displayed in a matter of reprinting was some years
ago, when Swanson of Dakota intended to found a magazine of second appearances” (217). Also in March, Howard
wrote to his friend Tevis Clyde Smith that “a man named Swanson is publishing a
magazine in one of the Dakotas, on the weird order. I’ve neglected my chances,
until I wonder if the thing’s about up ten years ahead. Lovecraft wrote me that
he’d placed a couple of yarns, and evidently the old weird tale buccaneers have
descended on it like a horde of vultures” (315).