Jack Snow
Writer, Author
1907 – 1956
Who was Jack Snow?
John Frederick "Jack" Snow, born Piqua, Ohio was an American radio writer, writer of ghost stories, and scholar, primarily of the works of L. Frank Baum. When Baum died in 1919, the twelve-year-old Snow offered to be the next Royal Historian of Oz, but was politely turned down by a staffer at Baum's publisher, Reilly & Lee. Snow eventually wrote two Oz books: The Magical Mimics in Oz and The Shaggy Man of Oz, as well as Who's Who in Oz, a thorough guide to the Oz characters, all of which Reilly & Lee published.
In his second year in high school, the precocious Snow created the first radio review column in American journalism, in The Cincinnati Enquirer. After graduation, Snow pursued a career in print journalism and primarily in radio, with periods in teachers college and the U. S. Army. He named the Ohio radio station WING, and spent seven years with the National Broadcasting Company in New York. In 1944, he attempted to get NBC to produce a radio series based on the stories of fellow Weird Tales author Ray Bradbury.
Snow published five stories in Weird Tales over the space of two decades: "Night Wings,"; "Poison,"; "Second Childhood,"; "Seed,"; and "Midnight,".
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