F. Orlin Tremaine


Frederick Orlin Tremaine was an American science fiction magazine editor, most notably of the influential Astounding Stories. He edited a number of other magazines, headed several publishing companies, and sporadically wrote fiction.

Biography

F. Orlin Tremaine was part of an old Cornish American family.
He was a veteran of World War I.
In 1921, he graduated with a B.O. degree from the College of Arts and Sciences, Valparaiso University, Indiana. At Valparaiso, he was active in his fraternity, participated in drama, and worked on the weekly school newspaper, The Torch.
He was a member of the Mystery Writers of America, the Washington Press Club and of the Sons of the American Revolution.
He died at Westmount Sanatorium, Glen Falls, New York, after a long illness, age 57, survived by two brothers and a sister.

Writing, editing, and publishing career

During his junior year at Valparaiso, in the spring term, 1920, Tremaine was News Editor of the weekly school newspaper, The Torch. He served as Editor-in-Chief during his senior year of 1920-21.
His first job, post-graduation, was on the staff of a New York City newspaper. In late 1922, he was associate editor for The Eastern Underwriter in NYC.
He moved on to the Macfadden magazine conglomerate. In May 1923, he was the managing editor of Macfadden's Brain Power and Beautiful Womanhood. On June 1, 1923, he became editor of the prestigious Metropolitan Magazine. In early 1924, he became editor of the flagship title True Story Magazine. He also claimed credit for laying out the first issues of True Romances, True Detective, and True Experiences. Tremaine later credited John R. Coryell as a strong influence: "Coryell, approaching eighty of years of age, was fiction or story editor of the Macfadden Publications a quarter of a century ago when I first became an editor of a national magazine, and he taught me more about stories, simplicity of approach, and the technique of modern writing than any other person, before or since."
Later in 1924, he departed to become editor of The Smart Set, a tenure that lasted until mid-1926.
A sporadic fiction writer, his first known published story, One Burning Minute, received serialized newspaper syndication in August-October, 1926. Soon after, his first known pulp story, "The Throwback," appeared in Weird Tales under the pseudonym Orlin Frederick.
In 1927, Tremaine become president of a trust that attempted to take control of the Phelps Publishing Company, publisher of New England Homestead and other magazines. The deal collapsed when financing fell through. Tremaine rebounded with another group in incorporating the Crossroads Publishing Company. A year later, he was involved in yet another publishing enterprise, the Perennial Publishing Company.
In early 1928, he was slated to be editor of a new Christian magazine, Crossroads. No issues are known of.
Later in 1929, he joined the Clayton pulp publishing chain. He edited Miss 1929, soon renamed Miss 1930. After four issues, Miss 1930 was sold to Tremaine's Perennial Publishing Company, presumably part of Tremaine's departure from Clayton. Tremaine intended to continue editing Miss 1930, but there are no known issues for Perennial.
In late 1931, Alfred A. Cohen, publisher of Screenland and Silver Screen, purchased Everybody's Magazine from Butterick and attempted to revive it with Tremaine as editor. No known issues were produced and the magazine was soon declared discontinued.
Tremaine returned to Clayton, editing the humor magazine Bunk, and My Love Story Magazine .
In 1933, Clayton went bankrupt and some of its assets were purchased by publisher Street & Smith. Tremaine joined Street & Smith to initially edit three of the former Clayton titles: Astounding Stories, Clues, and Cowboy Stories. At his peak, Tremaine was responsible for seven Street & Smith pulps:
Tremaine and Desmond Hall founded Street & Smith's slick Mademoiselle in 1935. Hall was the listed editor.
In the December 1933 issue of Astounding, Tremaine's third as editor, his editorial "Thought Variant" encouraged contributing authors to seek new ideas for science fiction stories. According to Alva Rogers, "the thought variant policy was largely responsible for the rapid rise of Astounding to top position in the science fiction field." During the fifty issues of the magazine he edited, Tremaine launched the careers of authors L. Sprague de Camp, Eric Frank Russell, and others.
As editor of Astounding, Tremaine bought such stories as H.P. Lovecraft's At the Mountains of Madness and The Shadow Out of Time, apparently without reading them. Tremaine permitted both tales to be severely abridged and edited by copyeditors, although Lovecraft complained vociferously only about the former On June 23, 1941, an associate editor of the firm, William M. Gibson, was convicted of extortion. He and Prince Ludovic Pignatelli of Italy had threatened the prince's cousin, Prince Guido Pignatelli, with publishing a book that would challenge Guido's right to his title unless they were paid $50,000. The timing roughly corresponds with the last-known publications of the Orlin Tremaine Co., but it is unknown whether the two events are related.
Simultaneous to his publishing ventures, Tremaine produced the science fiction pulp Comet, which ran five issues from December 1940 to July 1941. Also, from late 1939 through early 1940, Tremaine published four stories in pulps as diverse as Thrilling Wonder Stories and South Sea Stories.
During World War II, Tremaine edited the magazine Plus, distributed to war industries, and edited government manuals for the armed forces. At roughly this time, Tremaine had his most productive period as a fiction writer, contributing numerous stories to detective pulps. A series for Detective Tales featured a character named Easy Bart.
When the war ended, Tremaine became an editor for Bartholomew House, which published the first paperback editions of Lovecraft, The Weird Shadow Over Innsmouth and The Dunwich Horror. He also published a revision of T. C. McClary's novel Rebirth while at Bartholomew House. In less than a year, he was describing himself as a "free lance writer." The current record does not indicate much success as a writer. His next known publications appeared in late 1948 and early 1949.
In 1949, he became editor of a new magazine, Southerner, and published a book, Short Story Writing. He claimed, at this time, to have published over one hundred stories.
In May 1950, Tremaine described himself as the managing editor of Macfadden Publications.
In the early 1950s, under the name Arthur Lane, Tremaine was an editorial associate for the pulp Marvel Science Stories.
His greatest success appears to have been with Street & Smith, and his most lasting contribution his editorship of Astounding. The rest of his career illustrates the vicissitudes of the publishing business.

Published fiction