Jean B. Hubb
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Fan | |
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Name: | Jean B. Hubb |
Alias(es): | Jean Hubb |
Type: | fan writer, fan artist |
Fandoms: | Blake's 7 |
Communities: | |
Other: | |
URL: | |
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Jean B. Hubb was a fan writer and fan artist in Blake's 7 fandom. She was active in the late 1980s to the early 2000s.
Fanworks include:
- several stories and artwork for issues of Raising Hell (1987-1994)
- several stories and artwork for issues of Gambit (1987-1996)
- "The Weapons Fair" for Avon the Terrible (1990)
- art and fiction for the anthology Liberation (1990-1991)
- "The Examined Life" for Destiny (1991)
- "The Sensible Thing to Do" and art for Roads Not Taken (1991)
- "An Evening with Friends" and art for Songs of Experience (1994)
- "Alarms and Excursions" for Eleventh Sector #2 (1989), later reprinted in Rebel Destinies #1 (1994)
- "The Songs That Bind" for Rebel Destinies #2 (1995)
- "A Free Man" for Avon's Seven (1996)
- story for What On Earth Happened to You? (1997)
- "It's About Time" and "Grey Scale" for The Way Forward: Crusades of Blake (2001)
Reviews
- 'Grey Scale' ... retells an incident from the Second World War. For its original setting, plausible characters and realistic moral dilemma, this story was my pick of the zine. (Tavia)[1]
- Jean Hubb's fine story, 'It's About Time', allows the reader a glimpse of Blake's suppressed desire to give up fighting and withdraw to a world abounding in natural beauties. Blake's dilemma is here represented in terms of choosing between two notions of time: mythological time - suggesting a life in harmony with Nature and its cycles; and historical time - which implies living in a man-made world, with the full awareness of one's responsibility in constructing and revising this world. The attraction 'mythological time' holds for Blake and his final decision to opt for 'historical time' are wonderfully compressed in just a few sentences. (Natasa Tucev)[2]
References
- ^ Hermit: The Way Forward: Crusades of Blake: Review by Tavia (June 2001) (accessed 10 May 2012)
- ^ Hermit: The Way Forward: Crusades of Blake: Review by Natasa Tucev (2 September 2001) (accessed 10 May 2012)