Magazine Data Page 34 |
The Argonaut [1877]Country: USTotal Issues: 4211
The fiction was often the lead item; published Ambrose Bierce, Emma Frances Dawson. Issues & Index Sources
PublishersFrank Pixley & Frederick Somers at outsetEditorsFormats16-page tabloid (15"x11.5") on cheap stockPrices10cFrequency |
The Argonaut [1977]Country: USTotal Issues: 20
Initially a fanzine, it changed format dramatically with the fifth issue. Issues & Index Sources
PublishersEditorsMichael E. AmbrosePrices |
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Argonaut [1993]Country: US
Publishers: Argonaut Press (Warren Hinckle) Editors: Warren Hinckle Frequency: quarterly |
ArgosCountry: USTotal Issues: 3
Semi-professional magazine.
Editors: Ross Emry Formats: digest Prices: $2.50 |
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The Argosy [1865]Country: UKTotal Issues: 431+9=440
Intended as a serious monthly magazine "of tales, travels, essays and
poems" like The Cornhill, but its early serialization of the sensation
novel "Griffith Gaunt" by Charles Reade (about bigamy) made it a racier
magazine than planned. Under Mrs Wood it continued this trend. It
published her "Johnny Ludlow" stories. Issues & Index Sources
PublishersEditorsFormats5.5" x 8.5" (in 1884 - 1891)standard, modelled on Belgravia Prices6d (in 1891)Pagecounts88pp (in 1891)FrequencymonthlyMentioned in: The Age of the Storytellers Online SourcesOnline Books |
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The Argosy [1882]Country: USTotal Issues: 312+299+1543+411+4+5+3+1+1=2579
Started as a boys' magazine; in 1888 widened its areas of interest but
was still basically juvenile. In Oct-1896 became an all-fiction magazine.
Remained one of the leading fiction pulps until 1943 when it changed to
a men's adventure magazine. Circulation peaked at 500,000 in 1907. Issues & Index Sources
Website: www.steegerbooks.com/product-category/altus-press-products/pulp-magazines/ PublishersEditorsFormatsPricesinitially 5cPagecountsFrequencyTitle ChangesRelated SitesThe Pulp Magazines ProjectMagazineArt Science Fiction Encyclopedia Mentioned in: The Adventure House Guide to the Pulps, Ultimate Guide to the Pulps, It's a Man's World, Dime Novel Bibliography Online SourcesOnline Books |
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Argosy (Canada)Country: Canada
Canadian reprint edition of Argosy, with some stories from elsewhere.
Mentioned in: The Pulpster #11, 2001 |
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The Argosy [1926]Country: UKTotal Issues: 164+407=571
Predominantly a reprint magazine of the world's best short stories, much in the
style of the US Golden Book, in later years it frequently published new
fiction, notably "Bianca's Hands" by Theodore Sturgeon. Issues & Index Sources
PublishersEditorsFormatsPricesPagecountsFrequencymonthly (but no issue for Aug-1959 and double issue for Jan/Feb-1971)Mentioned in: The Age of the Storytellers |
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Argosy [2013]Country: UKTotal Issues: 3
"Revival of the classic pulp format for the digital age, publishing low-cost, quality pulp fiction in ebook format".
Publishers: Argosy Magazine, Herons Rise, Andover, Kent Editors: Daniel Bazinga Formats: paperback (#1-#2); ebook (#3) |
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ArielCountry: UK
Frequency: weekly? |
Ariel LibraryCountry: USTotal Issues: 29?
Formats: Paperback Prices: 25c Pagecounts: 350 Frequency: quarterly Mentioned in: Dime Novel Bibliography |
Ariel Library SeriesCountry: US
A successor to the earlier Ariel Library which has a similar title but different contents.
Prices: 50c Frequency: quarterly Mentioned in: Dime Novel Bibliography |
Ariel: A Quarterly Review of Arts and Letters in IsraelCountry: Israel
Formats: trade paperback |
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Ariel: The Book of FantasyCountry: USTotal Issues: 4
Emphasis on artwork and graphics. Attracted good writers but fiction took a back seat. Authors include Michael Moorcock, Harlan Ellison, Roger Zelazny, Larry Niven. Issues & Index Sources
PublishersEditorsThomas DurwoodFormatslarge size (122 x 9")PricesPagecounts80pp (96pp last two)FrequencyirregularRelated SitesScience Fiction Encyclopedia |
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AriochCountry: US
Fanzine that featured a Roger Zelazny story in the first issue.
Editors: Doug Lovenstein |
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ArionCountry: US
Classics journal that occasionally publishes fiction.
Publishers: @University of Texas (1962-1972); Boston University (1970s - present); Editors: Herbert Golder (in 2018) Related Sites: Wikipedia |
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