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F. M. "Buz" Busby, the award-winning publisher and author of more than 20 novels and collections, died Feb. 17 at Health and Rehabilitation of Seattle, where he was moved following several weeks of surgery and treatment at Swedish Hospital of Seattle, the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America announced. He was 83.
Busby's most prominent works include The Singularity Project, Cage a Man and the Rissa Kerguelen series. He was also a well-known publisher of SF fanzines, including Polarity and Cry of the Nameless, for which he won the Best Fanzine Hugo Ward in 1959 and 1960. Busby chaired Westercon 12 in 1959 and was a guest of honor or special guest at many conventions. He was Toastmaster of IguanaCon II, the 1978 World Science Fiction Convention.
Busby survived by his wife, Eleanor Busby.
Busby's most prominent works include The Singularity Project, Cage a Man and the Rissa Kerguelen series. He was also a well-known publisher of SF fanzines, including Polarity and Cry of the Nameless, for which he won the Best Fanzine Hugo Ward in 1959 and 1960. Busby chaired Westercon 12 in 1959 and was a guest of honor or special guest at many conventions. He was Toastmaster of IguanaCon II, the 1978 World Science Fiction Convention.
Busby survived by his wife, Eleanor Busby.
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Wishes to his wife and family from all of us here.