Tony Lewis (1941-2025)

Tony Lewis at the 2019 Boskone. Photo by and (c) Andrew Porter.

“Dr. Tony Lewis, one of the last surviving founders of NESFA, Chairman of Noreascon, and longtime Press Czar of NESFA Press passed away yesterday at home,” announced Gay Ellen Dennett on Facebook on February 12. “Both Suford and Alice [his wife and daughter] were by his side.”

Anthony R. Lewis, called Tony, was a leader who helped organize and grow Boston sf fandom in the Sixties. While earning a Ph.D. in Nuclear Physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology he joined MITSFS. Although the science fiction club had formed in 1949, more than a decade passed before the club finally became actively connected with fandom – their motto was “We’re not fans, we just read the stuff.” They read a lot more of it after Tony Lewis became the club librarian in 1961: within a few years their library grew to over 10,000 volumes. He also served as MITSFS’ Onseck, and he was known as the Evil Dr. Lewis, a title he relished.

Fancyclopedia 3’s entry adds this story about his MIT years:

When he was in grad school, he witnessed a test nuclear explosion in New Mexico (he told the story that he was possibly the only fan injured by an atomic bomb: he stood up too quickly after the blast and was knocked on his rear by the ground shock.) He spent most of his career in a “safer” industry, computers, as a technical writer then technical writing manager for Prime Computer.

Boston fandom’s growth was seen in the Sixties at the first Boskones, and in a joint attempt by BoSFS (which ran the con), MITSFS, and the University of Massachusetts Science Fiction Society to bid for the 1967 Worldcon. Although they lost, local fans were energized to create a group to supersede BoSFS, named the New England Science Fiction Association (NESFA). In 1967 Tony Lewis became the first President of NESFA. Among the officers was the editor of Instant Message, NESFA Clerk Susan Hereford. She became Susan Hereford Lewis in April 1968 when she married Tony — which Instant Message phrased: “ARL announced that to consolidate power he will annex the Clerk on April 7th.” By the beginning of 1969, Susan became known in fandom as Suford Lewis.

The ambition to bring a Worldcon to Boston continued to burn in a few hearts. In 1968 Charlie Brown, Ed Meskys and Dave Vanderwerf created Locus to promote the (ultimately successful) Boston in ’71 Worldcon bid. The first trial issue was scheduled for May of 1968; it featured news of Suford Lewis’ auto accident – 10 days after her marriage to Tony. That first issue was run off in the Lewis’s living room in Belmont, MA on Tony’s AB Dick mimeograph.

Tony Lewis in the 1970s. Photo by and (c) Andrew Porter.

While continuing as NESFA President and chair of Noreascon, the 1971 Boston Worldcon, Tony somehow found time to launch himself as a professional sf writer. His first published story, “Request for Proposal”, appeared in the November 1972 Analog. It is written in the form of interoffice memos about using nuclear warheads for slum clearance and urban renewal. The story’s dry political satire was so successful that it has been reprinted in five collections.  In future years Tony had stories in themed anthologies edited by Martin H. Greenberg and Mike Resnick. Also, for over thirty years he contributed a calendar of upcoming events, such as sf conventions, to every issue of Analog. He was an active member of SFWA.

At the 1997 Worldcon, Mike Resnick’s panel of contributors to his Alternate Worldcons anthology (published 1994), Tony reminisced about the basis for his story “Keep Watching the Skies” — an actual Highmore, SD bid with one co-chair, Richard Harter, who gave a “speech.” Asked, “Would you like to say anything?”, Harter answered, “No.” Also, George Flynn, wearing a paper bag over his head, came up and read a piece in Frisian, which is why nobody realized it was in foul lan­guage.

Tony Lewis was active for many years in compiling the NESFA Index to Science Fiction Magazines. He invented the term “recursive SF” (any sf story that refers to sf) and wrote An Annotated Bibliography of Recursive Science Fiction (NESFA Press).

He was twice a Hugo finalist, for Space Travel by Ben Bova and Anthony R. Lewis from Writer’s Digest Books, nominated for the 1998 Best Non-Fiction Book Hugo, and Concordance to Cordwainer Smith, Third Edition by Anthony R. Lewis from NESFA Press was nominated for the 2001 Best Related Book Hugo.

Among his many talents he was a well-known (and skilled) auctioneer. 

Tony and his daughter Alice Lewis as a toddler. Photo by and (c) Andrew Porter.

Lewis is generally credited with coming up with the name of the NASFiC (the North American Science Fiction Convention run when the Worldcon is outside North America).

“I was on the committee that made the report to the business meeting that set it up and I named the damn thing to keep George Nims Rayben from calling it the USCon,” he said.

Appropriately, Tony and Suford Lewis were the Fan GoHs at the Buffalo 2024 NASFiC. Prior to that they were GoHs at Conebulus (1978), and Windycon VI (1979). Tony was GoH at Lunacon 42 (1999), and Arisia ’03 (2003).

Suford and Tony Lewis at the Buffalo 2024 NASFiC. Photo by Rich Lynch.

Tony did not put himself forward as a fan humorist, being someone who always appeared wrapped in a certain amount of dignity, but he could surprise with his readiness to “unwrap” if there was an opening for a good line.

I remember at Magicon (1992) the highlight of “The Spanish Inquisition” panel of worldcon bidders was an exchange between NESFAns. Tony Lewis said a 1998 worldcon in Boston “is not going to be Noreascon 3 mark 2.” Anne Broomhead agreed, “Mark wouldn’t stand for it.” Deb Geisler said, “We won’t make the same mistakes.” Tony Lewis enthusiastically agreed, “We’ll make a whole new lot of mistakes, in new areas. We’re going to be the first people to make mistakes in these areas.”

Someone planning to kick off his new music blog by interviewing Paul Kantner of Jefferson Starship, whose Blows Against the Empire was a Hugo nominee in 1971, asked Tony Lewis, that year’s Worldcon chair and Hugo administrator, about the relationship between fandom and rock at the time. Tony provided this insight: “I was never really into rock myself, preferring baroque and bagpipe music.”

And when the Outer Space Treaty declared that the Moon belongs to all mankind, science fiction fandom did not take this lying down. At a December 1970 meeting of the New England Science Fiction Association, “[Tony Lewis] showed the moon map from the Nov 1970 issue of Sky and Telescope. Hugo Gernsback crater was identified, as were Wiener, Ley, Verne, Wells, etc. As a result of this increase in cultural knowledge it was [moved, seconded and passed] that the Moon be designated NESFA’s Moon and that the Aerospace Cadets protect it.” NESFAn Harry Stubbs, then a Lt. Col. in the Air Force, was named commander of the Aerospace Cadets, holding the title “Lord of the Wings.”

NESFA has kept a close eye on its property ever since. When there was a total eclipse of the Moon in July 1982, Tony Lewis wrote a letter protesting the unauthorized use of NESFA’s Moon. The club voted him responsibility for preventing the occurrence of any further unauthorized eclipses.

A visitor to NESFA wrote a 2007 article for Bostonist about slowly realizing that Tony was kidding them:  

…The jokes can get more complicated. Wednesday, as NESFA members collated the “Instant Message” newsletter by hand (a process involving a continuous procession around a table), a visitor asked about the “Fanzine Control Number” (71-58837 791) printed at the bottom of each page. Nobody had a clue, and the matter was referred to Tony Lewis, a founding member.

“I can’t remember which President it was,” he explained, “but in the fifties there was widespread worry about the proliferation of fanzines and fanzine material. The Fanzine Control Number was introduced to limit the spread of fanzines.”

The visitor, looking for the Fanzine Control Number on his copy of Science-Fiction Five-Yearly, finally realized that Lewis was putting him on….

Andrew Porter, Suford Lewis, Tony Lewis at the 2019 Boskone. Photo by Daniel P. Dern.

Thanks to YouTube it’s possible to hear Tony tell about Boston fanhistory in his own words. There’s a recording of a 1997 FanHistoriCon panel “From MITSFS to NESFA to MCFI – Meskys, Harter, Lewis and Clement”. And last year Fanac.org recorded a two-part Zoom panel – “Boston in the 60s (Pt 1 of 2): Tony Lewis, Leslie Turek and Mike Ward, moderated by Mark Olson” followed by Part 2 of 2.

However, Tony’s significance as a friend and mentor extended beyond Boston. When File 770 ran its 20th Anniversary Poll in 1998, one of the questions asked people “to name three fans who had the most influence on your fanac.” Lewis was named by four people – which was substantial given that seven was the highest number received by anyone.

His home club, where people got to see and work with him regularly, gave him their highest honors. He received the Skylark Award in 2021, given by NESFA to “some person, who, in the opinion of the membership, has contributed significantly to science fiction, both through work in the field and by exemplifying the personal qualities which made the late E. E. “Doc” Smith well-loved by those who knew him.” It is “an award for being both a pro and a ‘good guy’”.

Also, the editors of the NESFA Press book Ingathering dedicated it, “To Tony Lewis who created NESFA in his own image.”

During the 1993 Worldcon at “The Asimov Memorial Panel” Robert Silverberg offered many warm reminiscences of Isaac. Tony Lewis asked Silverberg, “Will you say nice things about me at my memorial?” Silverberg agreed, “Certainly, but don’t make it too soon. It’ll take a long time to think up nice things.” That was a humorously-meant exchange, of course, however, today everyone is finding it easy to think of nice things to say about Tony Lewis, especially on Facebook – on his personal page, the Boskone page, and individual tributes by David Gerrold and Michael A. Burstein.


Discover more from File 770

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

11 thoughts on “Tony Lewis (1941-2025)

  1. Thank you for the lovely tribute. When Mark H and I first joined NESFA, Tony was delighted to have a new audience for his stories. He was a brilliant man who somehow made a career doing what he loved, rather than what he’d gone to school for, and he taught me that job happiness is more important than anything. I’m sorry he didn’t get the accolades in fandom that he deserved. I’m glad we had Tony and Suford as fan guests at the NASFiC, at least. MCFI has now lost two Noreascon chairs in a year, and Boston fandom, three important members. It will be a difficult Boskone.

  2. Thanks for providing so much information about him. I was somewhat acquainted with him for many years, but this tells a lot more than I knew.

  3. Pingback: AMAZING NEWS: Day 28 Post Apocalypse Edition - Amazing Stories

  4. Just reading this, Mike. Published while I was en route to this year’s Boskone. Glad you were able to use my photos.

    I, and I think many others, always felt that Tony should have been named a Fan Guest of Honor at some Worldcon. But, sadly, he never was. His GoHship at the Buffalo NASFiC was, perhaps, a consolation prize. I regret it came so late in his fannish life.

    I remember Tony’s look of anguish when, at the end of the 2013 Worldcon in San Antonio, we all learned of Fred Pohl’s death. And now, years later, I feel the same anguish about Tony’s death. I’d known him since the competition for the 1967 Worldcon. Another old friend, sigh, going to that great convention in the sky.

  5. Thank you so much for this lovely long and detailed tribute to my father (with photos!). I learned many things I hadn’t known about his fandom activities. I can’t tell you how much it’s appreciated.

    (And another thank you to the kind commenters)

  6. So sad that he has passed. The world will miss him. He was always very kind to me and we all owe him for his incredible contribution to science fiction fandom.My condolences to his family.

  7. Hearing about George Flynn speaking in Frisian brought a laugh to me after all these years. I was active in APANESFA back in the day, and I named my piece The Militant Frisian Nationalist, and after the fact found there were such things. That then triggered George to start learning Frisian words and phrases in Frisian, at collation parties and so I started learning some as well. Over the years (Christ, has it been 50?), I’ll always look up various tidbits about Frisia to amuse myself at this point.

    St. Paul, Minnesota

  8. Hello,
    I want to extend my deepest condolences to you. Mr. Lewis was kind enough to correspond with my wife Jane and I several years ago. Jane is a Doniger descendant. Her grandfather’s mother was was Rachel Doniger. Mr. Lewis had provided me with a hard copy of the Doniger lineage several year ago. Would it be possible to obtain a copy please.
    Sincerely,
    Philip McCarthy

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.