Three magazine issues, with blue covers. Why care about these first 1969 issues (even the January issue of F&SF would've been on the stands for Xmas '68) from these titles? Some impressive writers whose names you might be able to, and definitely cannot, make out on these covers:
Fantastic: Among the contributors of new fiction, Fritz Leiber, of course, but also James Sallis, Jody Scott, Pg Wyal (his first story), Robert Hoskins and others.
F&SF: Josephine Saxton, but also Gary Jennings (before the best-sellers such as Aztec), Samuel Delany (at this point the film columnist, even as the books are handled by Judith Merril and a set of Gahan Wilson's occasional horror/dark fantasy reviews, along with Wilson's cartoon and Asimov's pop-science essay), a recent translation of Yevgeny Zamyatin and another reprint, from (eventually) mostly tv-writer/producer Larry Brody.
SMS: The magazine which "discovered" Stephen King and F. Paul Wilson features in this issue original work by Ramsey Campbell, along with debut stories by the not so prolific Donna Gould Welk and Ken Porter, interspersed with reprints.
There were more fantasy-fiction magazines publishing in the US than usual in 1969, not least because Sol Cohen, who'd left the Galaxy Magazine Group to buy Fantastic and Amazing from Ziff-Davis in 1965, and with the magazines he'd bought the unlimited serial (magazine) reprint rights to all the stories Ziff-Davis had purchased as a default for their magazine fiction since the late 1930s...as well as the legacy copyrights from earlier publishers of Amazing...Cohen was at the height of his issuing reprint magazines filled with fiction he didn't legally need to pay any royalties for, and a few of those titles he slanted toward fantasy fiction. Strange Fantasy was the first and the best of these (bettered only by a much later one-shot Sword and Sorcery Annual), and took over the volume and issue numbering for two years from Science Fiction Classics beginning in '69. Robert A. W. Lowndes added Weird Terror Tales to his growing line of no-budget, mostly-reprint magazines in '69 (Bizarre Fantasy Tales would begin its brief run in 1970); Arthur Landis got his new digest Coven 13 onto some newsstands, and while Joseph Payne Brennan produced no issue of his boutique project Macabre in '69 (and Lester del Rey's fully professional Worlds of Fantasy offered one issue each in 1968 and 1970 but none in '69), there was a second issue of W. Paul Ganley's Weirdbook among the little or semipro magazines, even if no others offering as impressive a set of contributors of fiction. But aside from Lowndes's Magazine of Horror, the elder sibling to the more psychic-detective- and borderline horror/suspense-oriented SMS, whose March 1969 issue I don't have to hand (it does contain a new R. A. Lafferty story, however) and which doesn't even have a blue cover (the nerve), the three most visible US fantasy-fiction magazines in early '69 were the three I discuss below.
Barry Malzberg was never too happy during his short term as editor of the Cohen/Ultimate Publications versions of Fantastic and Amazing, though he had managed to get his last issue of Fantastic, this February issue, about half full of original fiction (and the balance an odd mix of relatively random 1950s reprints, including one story each from Clifford Simak, Kendell Crossen and the house
the third issue; contents below |
Edward Ferman and his family business (his father, Joseph Ferman, would still be publishing the magazine for the next few years) were readying themselves for the release of the revival of Venture Science Fiction, which would begin with an issue cover-dated May 1969. (Another, shorter-lived project, a magazine about proto-New Age matters, Inner Space, would soon follow.) However unkind fate might be to their other publications, F&SF continued to steadily appear on a monthly basis, and while it didn't have the kind of financial support Analog (as a publication of Condé Nast) had, it faced less instability than any of the other magazines in the fantastic-fiction field; the monetary inflation of the Nixon era, very much including that faced by publishers specifically in terms of paper and postage among other expenses, helped doom both the other titles, however. This is a solid issue of the magazine, featuring a lead novella by the somewhat underrated James Schmitz, who nonetheless had allowed his fiction to fall into a bit of a rut by this point in his career, and featuring such F&SF frequent or at least repeat contributors as Gary Jennings, who published a string of short stories with the magazine in the 1960s and '70s well before becoming a bestselling novelist and for a while after; that only his series of Crispin Mobey stories from the magazine have
been collected (and they published under a pseudonym in book form as if a novel) is an odd sort of oversight, even if they might not appeal so readily to his novels' larger audience, and Vance Aandahl, Josephine Saxton, Doris Pitkin Buck (with a rather slight bit of verse, not one of the stronger poems she'd publish with the magazine), and Patrick Meadows (who like Schmitz came to F&SF from Analog, but Meadows only published a single story in John Campbell's magazine before placing a handful with Ferman over a short period). F&SF, like Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine on which it was modeled, was never afraid to include interesting reprints, and this issue includes two from rather different sources: television writer Larry Brody provides a fantasticated spy story, reprinted from 1967 first issue of the comics fanzine Gosh! Wow! (both the story and the fanzine won Alley Awards for that year, then the comics equivalent of a Hugo Award)(Ferman notes a weakness for this kind of thing, and the previous Xmas issue had featured Harlan Ellison's send-up "Santa Claus vs. S.P.I.D.E.R."; Delany's review column is devoted to the film of Barbarella), and the enormously influential Soviet dissident writer Yevgeny Zamyatin's 1920 story "The Cave" is offered in a 1968 translation by consistent 1960s translator Mirra Ginsburg, with an introduction by Sam Moskowitz. It's notable that both Fritz Leiber, in the
Maybe the best # of this Ultimate title, thanks to the Bloch reprint. |
If Fantastic in those years had relatively randomly-selected reprints, and F&SF rather more carefully-chosen ones that usually ran to relatively recent but (to most fantasy/sf readers, probably) obscure sources, Robert A. W. Lowndes's magazines for the very marginal Health Knowledge Publications managed to get by through Lowndes combing through his collection of pulps and anthologies and collections of fantasy and other sorts of fiction, looking for public-domain items of various sorts and checking with the Copyright Office for records of renewals on the pulp items, often taken from such orphaned magazines as Strange Tales.
The Magazine of Horror was the first of the fiction magazines Lowndes was able to launch at HK, which was mostly in the business of publishing imitations of the magazine Sexology and the like (after HK collapsed in 1971, Lowndes would be hired at that magazine, at Gernsback Publications). Startling Mystery Stories and Famous Science Fiction followed, and a small slew of others followed those, before the collapse...what distinguished SMS from its elder sibling, as noted above, was that it was devoted more to psychic detective stories, such as those of Seabury Quinn, once the most popular contributor to Weird Tales (outpacing the likes of H. P. Lovecraft and Clark Ashton Smith and Edmond Hamilton by some distance during Farnsworth Wright's editorship), who retained quite a following among the more nostalgic readership of the MOH; SMS not only served as outlet for Quinn stories, so that not so many need appear in the elder magazine, but also served as a place to run stories by horror fiction aspirants whose work wasn't Quite what Lowndes wanted
Lowndes's '69 3rd fantasy title. |
The ISFDB indices to these issues, slightly corrected:
- Publication: Fantastic, February 1969
(View All Issues) (View Issue Grid) - Editor: Barry N. Malzberg
- Year: 1969-02-00
- Publisher: Ultimate Publishing Co., Inc.
- Price: $0.50
- Pages: 148
- Binding: digest
- Type: MAGAZINE
- Title Reference: Fantastic - 1969
- Cover: Wm. Baker (aka Bill Baker, as below)
- 4 • Editorial: Diversity in Science Fiction • essay by Robert Silverberg
- 6 • Richmond, Late September • short story by Fritz Leiber (variant of Richmond, Late September, 1849)
- 7 • Richmond, Late September • interior artwork by Bill Baker
- 17 • Any Heads at Home • short story by David R. Bunch
- 20 • Bathe Your Bearings in Blood! • (1950) • short story by Clifford D. Simak (variant of Skirmish) Amazing Stories Dec 1950
- 20 • Bathe Your Bearings in Blood! • (1950) • interior artwork by Leo Summers
- 36 • All in the Game • short story by Edward Y. Breese
- 42 • The Castle on the Crag • short story by Pg Wyal [as by P. G. Wyal]
- 45 • The Major Incitement to Riot • short story by Barry N. Malzberg [as by K. M. O'Donnell]
- 49 • The Life of the Stripe • short story by Piers Anthony
- 52 • Slice of Universe • short story by James Sallis [as by James R. Sallis ]
- 55 • Reason for Honor • short story by Robert Hoskins
- 59 • The Closed Door • (1953) • short story by Kendell Foster Crossen [as by Kendall Foster Crossen] Amazing Stories Aug/Sep 1953
- 63 • The Closed Door • (1953) • interior artwork by uncredited
- 77 • The Origin of Species • short story by Jody Scott [as by Jody Scott Wood]
- 78 • Grounds for Divorce • short story by Robert S. Phillips
- 81 • This Planet for Sale • (1952) • novelette by Ralph Sholto Fantastic Adventures Jul 1952
- 81 • This Planet for Sale • (1952) • interior artwork by Paul Lundy
- 109 • The Day After Eternity • (1955) • novelette by unknown [as by Lawrence Chandler] Fantastic Feb 1955
- 110 • The Day After Eternity • (1955) • interior artwork by Ernie Barth
- 142 • Fantasy Books (Fantastic, February 1969) • [Fantasy Books (Fantastic)] • essay by Fritz Leiber
- 142 • Review: The Goblin Reservation by Clifford D. Simak • review by Fritz Leiber
- 143 • Review: The Crystal World by J. G. Ballard • review by Fritz Leiber
- 143 • Review: October the First Is Too Late by Fred Hoyle • review by Fritz Leiber
- 144 • Review: Restoree by Anne McCaffrey • review by Margo Skinner
- 145 • Review: Pity About Earth by Ernest Hill • review by Margo Skinner
the first issue, 1969 |
- Publication: The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, February 1969
(View All Issues) (View Issue Grid) - Editor: Edward L. Ferman
- Year: 1969-02-00
- Publisher: Mercury Press, Inc.
- Price: $0.50
- Pages: 132
- Binding: digest
- Type: MAGAZINE
- Title Reference: The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction - 1969
- Cover: Russell FitzGerald
- 5 • Attitudes • [The Hub] • novelette by James H. Schmitz
- 22 • Books (F&SF, February 1969) • [Books (F&SF)] • essay by Judith Merril and Gahan Wilson
- 22 • Review: Stand on Zanzibar by John Brunner • review by Judith Merril
- 22 • Review: The Two-Timers by Bob Shaw • review by Judith Merril
- 22 • Review: Isle of the Dead by Roger Zelazny • review by Judith Merril
- 23 • Review: The Goblin Reservation by Clifford D. Simak • review by Judith Merril
- 26 • Review: Selected Letters, 1911-1924 by H. P. Lovecraft • review by Gahan Wilson
- 26 • Review: Selected Letters, 1925-1929 by H. P. Lovecraft • review by Gahan Wilson
- 27 • Review: Ghosts in Irish Houses by James Reynolds • review by Gahan Wilson
- 28 • Cartoon: "In Here." • interior artwork by Gahan Wilson
- 29 • The Cave (Introduction) • essay by Sam Moskowitz
- 31 • The Cave • short story by Yevgeny Zamyatin (trans. of Пещера 1920 by Mirra Ginsburg) reprinted from The Dragon, Random House 1968; translated from the Russian (1922) [note date discrepancy between ISFDB and the FictionMags Index]
- 40 • Nightwalker • (Gosh! Wow! #1 1967) • short story by Larry Brody
- 53 • Films: Barbarella • [Films (F&SF)] • essay by Samuel R. Delany
- 54 • Dormant Soul • short story by Josephine Saxton
- 70 • Drool • shor tstory by Vance Aandahl
- 73 • Twin Sisters • poem by Doris Pitkin Buck
- 74 • Pater One Pater Two • novelette by Patrick Meadows
- 104 • Uncertain, Coy, and Hard to Please • [Asimov's Essays: F&SF] • essay by Isaac Asimov
- 116 • After All the Dreaming Ends • short story by Gary Jennings
the 2nd, and only 1969, issue |
- Publication: Startling Mystery Stories, Summer 1969
(View All Issues) (View Issue Grid) - Editor: Robert A. W. Lowndes
- Year: 1969-00-00
- Publisher: Health Knowledge, Inc.
- Price: $0.50
- Pages: 134
- Binding: digest
- Type: MAGAZINE
- Title Reference: Startling Mystery Stories - 1969
- Cover: Richard Schmand
- 4 • The Editor's Page (Startling Mystery Stories, Summer 1969) • essay by Robert A. W. Lowndes
- 8 • The Gray Killer • (Weird Tales, November 1929) • novelette by Everil Worrell
- 31 • The Scar • short story by Ramsey Campbell [as by J. Ramsey Campbell ]
- 46 • Where There's Smoke • short story by Donna Gould Welk
- 52 • Ancient Fires • [Jules de Grandin] • (Weird Tales, September 1926) • novelette by Seabury Quinn
- 76 • The Cases of Jules de Grandin: A Chronological Listing, Part 1 • essay by Robert A. W. Lowndes
- 84 • The Hansom Cab • short story by Ken Porter
- 90 • Inquisitions (Startling Mystery Stories, Summer 1969) • essay by Robert A. W. Lowndes
- 90 • Review: Mr. Fairlee's Final Journey by August Derleth (Mycroft & Moran 1968) • review by Robert A. W. Lowndes
- 91 • Review: The Man with the Watches and The Lost Special by Arthur Conan Doyle (Luther Norris 1969?) • review by Robert A. W. Lowndes
- 92 • Review: The Baker Street Journal edited by Julian Wolff • review by Robert A. W. Lowndes
- 92 • Review: The Armchair Detective edited by Allen J. Hubin • review by Robert A. W. Lowndes
- 93 • Review: The Rohmer Review edited by Douglas Rossman • review by Robert A. W. Lowndes
- 94 • The Veil of Tanit • (Strange Tales, March 1932) • novelette by Eugene de Reszke [as by Eugene de Rezske ]
- 113 • The Cauldron (Startling Mystery Stories, Summer 1969) • letter co;umm by various (Stuart David Schiff, Luther Norris, Roger Vanous and others)
For more of today's (actual) books, please see Patti Abbott's blog.
And...the contents of the third Strange Fantasy, "#10", pictured above (courtesy the FictionMags Index):
And...the contents of the third Strange Fantasy, "#10", pictured above (courtesy the FictionMags Index):
- Strange Fantasy [#10, Fall 1969] (50¢, 132pp, digest)
- fc. · [front cover] · Robert Fuqua & H. W. McCauley · cv Fantastic Adventures Feb 1942
- 4 · The Girl Who Played Wolf · Gordon Dickson · nv Fantastic Aug 1958
- 22 · Giants of the Earth · Lee Owens · ms Fantastic Adventures Aug 1951
- 23 · Satan’s Footprints [from Great World Mysteries] · Eric Frank Russell · ar Dobson 1957
- 39 · The Mind Spider · Fritz Leiber · ss Fantastic Nov 1959
- 54 · Egyptian Festival for Ares · Kay Bennett · ms Fantastic Adventures Jan 1948
- 55 · The Gift · Ray Bradbury · vi Esquire Dec 1952
- 57 · And the Rains Came... · Dan Corliss · vi Fantastic Adventures May 1950
- 58 · Candlesticks · Dean Evans · ss Fantastic Nov/Dec 1952
- 76 · The Odyssey of Henry Thistle · Vern Fearing · nv Fantastic Jan/Feb 1954
- 97 · April in Paris · Ursula K. Le Guin · ss Fantastic Sep 1962
- 108 · Sacred Crocodile · Pete Bogg · ms Fantastic Adventures Feb 1949
- 109 · The House · Fredric Brown · vi Fantastic Aug 1960
- 112 · The Devil’s Due · Donald Moffitt · ss Fantastic May 1960
- 120 · Miranda · John Jakes · ss Fantastic May 1965
11 comments:
Great stuff!
Thanks! I wanted to review more of the stories, etc., by this morning, but haven't had the full time nor attention to do so...
Sheer wonderment - well done Todd, this must have taken such a long time to put together - thank you.
I remember The Magazine of Horror fondly and still have my copies of the early issues. They introduced me to some great writers. Thanks for posting!
Thanks, Sergio...not as long as all that, though of course double-checking a few factual matters, and determining the source of the Brody story (since the Fermans were a bit coy about that...interesting to learn about the Alley Awards, though) took a scrap of time, as did correcting the ISFDB citations particularly to include the items Lowndes reviewed...atop all else, this did cut into my reading time...even if only this morning...
Jim, glad to reactivate some good memories...interesting also the writers such as Anna Hunger and Stefan Aletti who rarely if ever published other than in the Magazine of Horror...and those such as Janet Fox who went on to do excellent work published elsewhere but haven't gotten the attention they deserve...
Very nice post. What does FFM stand for?
A great post as always, Todd. It also reminded me of a question I've been wondering about for years: Why hasn't anyone brought out a collection of Vance Aandahl's stories?
Man, love this stuff! Thanks for a great post Todd! Keep 'em coming!
Thanks, Jack. FAMOUS FANTASTIC MYSTERIES in most relevant contexts, of course, but in this case Friday's "Forgotten" Magazines...
Jerry, he's yet another whose output has been just sporadic enough to not create a coterie audience...and I don't believe he has ever worked at fiction as more than an avocation, so he probably hasn't felt the need to shop one around...and thank you, too. There are way too many about which this can be asked...I'll occasionally ask it about the likes of Daphne Castell, David Redd, R. Faraday Nelson...and Gary Jennings, above, with the one odd exception.
Well, Richard...thanks! You'll find this kind of thing rather frequently among the posts on this blog...
I remember many of these digests well. I read them and owned them. Nothing like these great publications exist today.
George, you keep saying such things, but in fact there are still even some newsstand items, such as CEMETERY DANCE, which are still coming out, and abroad BLACK STATIC and INTERZONE are still getting newsstand presence, not to mention all the littles such the revived WEIRDBOOK and LADY CHURCHILL and ON SPEC and all...take heart. Clearly I need to start reviewing some more new material, not least to help dispel some melancholia...Walker Martin, talk to George!
I'n certainly looking forward also to Liz Hand's upcoming issue of CONJUNCTIONS. Helps soften the blow a little from losing BLACK CLOCK.
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