W. Paul Cook (1880 – January 22, 1948) was a writer, printer and publisher. He wrote under his own name and the pseudonym Willis T. Crossman and was a leading figure in the hobbyist tradition of amateur journalism. He lived and wrote mostly in Vermont and Massachusetts.
Cook was born in Mount Tabor, Vermont. His mother died giving birth and he was raised by his aunt and uncle. He attended Dartmouth but did not graduate.
Among his works are a memoir about H. P. Lovecraft and stories about Vermont. He met Lovecraft through the National Amateur Press Association, and quickly became a champion of his weird fiction, some of which was first published in Cook's journal, The Vagrant. Cook also broadened Lovecraft's familiarity with supernatural literature by loaning him books and encouraging a systematic study of the field that resulted in Lovecraft's famous essay, "Supernatural Horror in Literature," which was first published in Cook's The Recluse (1927).
In addition to the various journals he published, including The Vagrant, The Recluse, The Revenant, "The Ghost", and Monadnock, Cook published books under the Recluse Press imprint. Some of them were by members of the Lovecraft Circle, like Samuel Loveman, Frank B. Long Jr., Donald Wandrei, Walter J. Coates, and Lovecraft himself.
Leland Hawes and Sean Donnelly edited a collection of regional stories that Cook wrote under a pseudonym, Willis T. Crossman's Vermont: Stories by W. Paul Cook (published by the University of Tampa Press). Donnelly also edited a companion volume, W. Paul Cook: The Wandering Life of a Yankee Printer, collecting writings by and about Cook, to which he contributed a long biography of Cook and a bibliography of his numerous publications. It was published by Derrick Hussey's Hippocampus Press.