J. Francis McComas

{{Short description|American science fiction editor}}

{{Inline|date=February 2024}}

{{Infobox writer

| name = J. Francis McComas

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| image = Jfrancismccomas1954.jpg

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| caption = J. Francis McComas circa 1954

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| pseudonym = Webb Marlowe

| birth_name = Jesse Francis McComas

| birth_date = {{birth date|1911|6|9}}

| birth_place = Kansas City, Missouri, U.S.

| death_date = {{death date and age|1978|4|19|1911|6|9}}

| death_place = Fremont, California, U.S.

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| occupation = Writer, editor

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Jesse Francis McComas (June 9, 1911 – April 19, 1978) was an American science fiction editor. McComas wrote several stories on his own in the 1950s using both his own name and the pseudonym Webb Marlowe.

He entered publishing in 1941 as a salesman and editorial representative, spending two years in New York with Random House. He returned to California in 1944, working as the Pacific Coast editorial representative for Henry Holt and Company. For Simon & Schuster he became their Northern California sales manager and general editorial representative.{{cn|date=February 2024}}

McComas was the co-editor, with Raymond J. Healy, of one of the first major American anthologies of science fiction, Adventures in Time and Space (1946). Within a few years, he was the co-founding editor, with Anthony Boucher, of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. He edited the magazine from its inception in 1949 as The Magazine of Fantasy. In the fall of 1954 he left the magazine as an active editor but continued in the role of advisory editor until 1962.[https://sfpl.org/locations/main-library/general-collections/j-francis-mccomas-science-fiction-collection#:~:text=Jesse%20Francis%20McComas%20was%20the,of%20stories%20from%20the%20magazine. Biography], sfpl.org. Accessed February 26, 2024.

During the 1950s, McComas reviewed science fiction for The New York Times.Maria E. Alonzo, [http://www.sfsite.com/fsf/2011/jfm1105.htm "Jesse Francis McComas: The Traveler Returns], F&SF, May–June 2011

He left to the San Francisco Public Library his collection of 3,000 volumes of fiction and 92 science fiction magazines dating from the 1920s.

References

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