Magazine Data Page 192 |
Fantascience DigestCountry: USTotal Issues: 14
Fanzine, publishing some fiction.
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Fantasia [1941]Country: USTotal Issues: 3
Amateur magazine. Each issue had 3 stories, 3 poems, 3 articles and an editorial.
Editors: Lou Goldstone Pagecounts: 24pp |
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Fantasia [1945]Country: UK
Poetry, fiction, short episodes in form of drama. Issues & Index Sources
Publishersin 11 North Ave., West Worthing, SussexPrices1/-Frequencyquarterly |
Fantasia [1951]Country: USTotal Issues: 2?
Amateur magazine. First issue was mainly fiction; second issue had some fiction but was mainly aimed at Nolacon for 1951.
Editors: Ray C. Higgs |
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Fantasia Divinity MagazineCountry: USTotal Issues: 25
Publishers: Fantasia Divinity Magazine Editors: Madeline L. Stout & Amber M. Simpson |
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The FantasistCountry: USTotal Issues: 10
Online SF magazine, subtitled "A Magazine of Fantasy Novellas".
Editors: Will Waller & Evan Adams |
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FantasiteCountry: USTotal Issues: 12
Fanzine.
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FantasmagoriaCountry: USTotal Issues: 5
Amateur magazine including fiction by Henry Kuttner and non-fiction by Robert Bloch & Manly Wade Wellman.
Editors: John J Weir |
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FantasqueCountry: USTotal Issues: 9
"We welcome stories of no more than 2,500 words in the fantasy/science
fiction/horror genres, or any combination of such. We strive for a range
of styles: gothic, contemporary, surreal, and experimental horror; high
and low, light and dark, as well as slipstream fantasy; and soft or hard
science fiction. A blend of any of the genres is most welcome."
Editors: Pam Chillemi-Yeager & John Davies Formats: octavo Prices: $4.50 Pagecounts: 64pp Frequency: mainly quarterly |
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The FantastCountry: UKTotal Issues: 14
Fanzine, publishing early fiction and poetry by C.S. Youd, Arthur C. Clarke, Charles Eric Maine and others. Issues & Index Sources
PublishersEditors |
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Fantastic [1952]Country: USTotal Issues: 208
Begun in 1952 by editor Howard Browne and publishers Ziff Davis (Z-D) as
an attempt at a sophisticated and handsome digest-sized magazine,
Fantastic was initially a success, and became even more so by its third
issue, which featured a story attributed to the enormously popular crime
fiction writer Mickey Spillane (although it was actually written by Browne. Issues & Index Sources
PublishersEditorsFormatsdigestPrices35c at outsetPagecounts128ppFrequencyTitle ChangesRelated SitesWikipediaScience Fiction Encyclopedia Mentioned in: Ultimate Guide to the Pulps |
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Fantastic (UK)Country: UKTotal Issues: 8
British reprint edition of Fantastic.
Pagecounts: 128pp |
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Fantastic AdventuresCountry: USTotal Issues: 129
Fantastic Adventures was founded by editor Raymond A. Palmer in 1939
as a companion to Amazing Stories and was initially published in a large
size format to emulate the early Amazing Stories magazines. The
magazine was published by the Ziff-Davis Publishing Company, then
headquartered in Chicago, Illinois. Issues & Index Sources
PublishersZiff-Davis Publishing Co., Chicago (moved to NY in 1950)EditorsFormatsbedsheet to May-1940; then pulpFrequencymostly bimonthlyRelated SitesWikipediaScience Fiction Encyclopedia Mentioned in: The Adventure House Guide to the Pulps, Ultimate Guide to the Pulps Online SourcesOnline Books |
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Fantastic Adventures QuarterlyCountry: USTotal Issues: 21
Each issue rebound three unsold issues of Fantastic Adventures with a new cover.
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Fantastic Adventure StoriesCountry: USTotal Issues: 2
Publishers: Pulp Tales Press Formats: digest Prices: $10.95 Pagecounts: 80pp |
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Fantastic Adventures (UK) [1946]Country: UKTotal Issues: 2
#1 carried the front cover and the lead story from the US July 1946 issue, as well as the Frank Paul back cover from the same date. #2 had the cover and lead story from US June 1942 and it, too carried a Frank Paul back cover, but this one from the original US issue from December 1945. These two issues were only 32 pages in length and the remaining stories they contained were drawn from various earlier numbers from the 1942-45 period. SFI gives 1947 as the date for these, but IdxBSF dates them as July and September 1946, which are the dates used here.
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