Pierre Versins
Pierre Versins (born
Jacques Chamson; January 12, 1923 in Strasbourg – April 19, 2001 in Avignon) was a French Science Fiction collector and
scholar. From 1957-62, he published a critical fanzine, ''Ailleurs''. He published four science fiction novels between 1951 and 1971, including ''En avant, Mars'', ''Les etoiles ne s'en foutent pas'', ''Leprofesseur'', and ''Les transhumains''. His ex-wife,
Martine Thome, is credited on the short story "Ceux d'Argos".
Versins always specified that Thome's name appears on this particular short story because it was initially her idea ("One cent idea"), yet written entirely by Versins himself, in his personal style.
Versins published ''Encyclopedie de Utopie et de la sf'', which won a special award at
Torcon II, the 1973
Worldcon and he won a
Pilgrim Award from the
Science Fiction Research Association in 1991. In 1975, he founded the
Maison d'Ailleurs, a museum of science fiction, utopia and extraordinary journey in
Yverdon-les-Bains, (Switzerland). During
World War II, Versins was incarcerated in
Auschwitz.
Provided by Wikipedia