Galaxy Science Fiction

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David Stone's cover for the first issue of Galaxy Time Quarry 5Simak novel) - Galaxy Science Fiction Novels .jpg
David Stone's cover for the first issue of Galaxy

Galaxy Science Fiction was an American digest-size science fiction magazine, published in Boston from 1950 to 1980. [1] It was founded by a French-Italian company, World Editions, which was looking to break into the American market. World Editions hired as editor H. L. Gold, who rapidly made Galaxy the leading science fiction magazine of its time, focusing on stories about social issues rather than technology.

Contents

Gold published many notable stories during his tenure, including Ray Bradbury's "The Fireman", later expanded as Fahrenheit 451 ; Robert A. Heinlein's The Puppet Masters ; and Alfred Bester's The Demolished Man . In 1952, the magazine was acquired by Robert Guinn, its printer. By the late 1950s, Frederik Pohl was helping Gold with most aspects of the magazine's production. When Gold's health worsened, Pohl took over as editor, starting officially at the end of 1961, though he had been doing the majority of the production work for some time.

Under Pohl Galaxy had continued success, regularly publishing fiction by writers such as Cordwainer Smith, Jack Vance, Harlan Ellison, and Robert Silverberg. Pohl never won the annual Hugo Award for his stewardship of Galaxy, winning three Hugos instead for its sister magazine, If . In 1969 Guinn sold Galaxy to Universal Publishing and Distribution Corporation (UPD) and Pohl resigned, to be replaced by Ejler Jakobsson. Under Jakobsson the magazine declined in quality. It recovered under James Baen, who took over in mid-1974, but when he left at the end of 1977 the deterioration resumed, and there were financial problems—writers were not paid on time and the schedule became erratic. By the end of the 1970s, the gaps between issues were lengthening, and the title was finally sold to Galileo publisher Vincent McCaffrey, who brought out only a single issue in 1980. A brief revival as a semi-professional magazine followed in 1994, edited by H. L. Gold's son, E. J. Gold; this lasted for eight bimonthly issues.

At its peak, Galaxy greatly influenced the science fiction genre. It was regarded as one of the leading science fiction magazines almost from the start, and its influence did not wane until Pohl's departure in 1969. Gold brought a "sophisticated intellectual subtlety" to magazine science fiction according to Pohl, who added that "after Galaxy it was impossible to go on being naive." [2] SF historian David Kyle agreed, commenting that "of all the editors in and out of the post-war scene, the most influential beyond any doubt was H. L. Gold". [3] Kyle suggested that the new direction Gold set "inevitably" led to the experimental New Wave, the defining science fiction literary movement of the 1960s.

Publication history

The first science fiction (sf) magazine, Amazing Stories , appeared in 1926. By the end of the 1930s, the genre was flourishing in the United States, [4] [5] but World War II and its resulting paper shortages led to the demise of several magazines. In the late 1940s, the market began to recover. [5] From a low of eight active US magazines in 1946, the field expanded to 20 just four years later. [6] Galaxy's appearance in 1950 was part of this boom. According to sf historian and critic Mike Ashley, its success was the main reason for a subsequent flood of new releases: 22 more science fiction magazines appeared by 1954, when the market dipped again as a side effect of US Senate hearings into the putative connection between comic books and juvenile delinquency. [6] [7]

Origins and 1950s

JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
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19511/41/51/62/12/22/32/42/52/63/13/23/3
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195815/315/415/515/616/116/216/316/416/516/617/117/2
195917/317/417/517/618/118/2
Issues of Galaxy from 1950 to 1959, showing volume/issue number. H. L. Gold
was editor throughout the 1950s. [8]

H. L. Gold, Galaxy's first editor, had worked at Standard Magazines in the early 1940s as an assistant editor, reading for Standard's three science fiction pulps: Startling Stories , Thrilling Wonder , and Captain Future . [9] With the advent of the war, Gold left publishing and went into the army, but in late 1949 he was approached by Vera Cerutti, who had once worked for him. Cerutti was now working for a French-Italian publisher, Éditions Mondiales Del Duca founded by Cino Del Duca, [10] that had opened an office in New York as World Editions. [9] She initially asked Gold for guidance on how to produce a magazine, which he provided. World Editions took a heavy loss on Fascination, its first attempt to launch a US magazine, and Cerutti returned to Gold asking for recommendations for new titles. [5] [8] [11] Gold knew about The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction , a digest launched in the fall of 1949, but felt that there was still room in the market for another serious science fiction magazine. [9] He sent a prospectus to World Editions that included a proposal for a series of paperback sf novels as well as a periodical, [12] [13] and proposed paying three cents a word, an impressively high rate, given that most competing magazines were paying only one cent a word. World Editions agreed, hired Gold as the editor, and the first issue appeared in October 1950. [9] The novel series subsequently appeared as Galaxy Science Fiction Novels . [12]

Gold initially suggested two titles for the magazine, If and Galaxy. Gold's art director, Washington Irving van der Poel, mocked up multiple layouts and Gold invited hundreds of writers, editors, artists, and fans to view them and vote for their favorite; the vote was strongly for Galaxy as the title. [12] [notes 1] For the first issue, Gold obtained stories by several well-known authors, including Isaac Asimov, Fritz Leiber, and Theodore Sturgeon, as well as part one of Time Quarry by Clifford D. Simak (later published in book form as Time and Again). Along with an essay by Gold, Galaxy's premiere issue introduced a book review column by anthologist Groff Conklin, which ran until 1955, and a Willy Ley science column. Gold sought to implement high-quality printing techniques, though the quality of the available paper was insufficient for the full benefits to be seen. [8] Within months, the outbreak of the Korean War led to paper shortages that forced Gold to find a new printer, Robert M. Guinn. The new paper was of even lower quality, a disappointment to Gold. [notes 2] [14] According to Gold, the magazine was profitable within five issues: an "incredible" achievement, in his words. [15]

In the summer of 1951, disagreements within World Editions led to attempts to disrupt Galaxy's distribution. [16] According to Gold, the circulation director and the head of the American office stockpiled many issues instead of distributing them, and made sure that the ones that did get distributed went to areas of the United States, such as the South, where there was little or no audience for the magazine. [notes 3] The head of the French office of World Editions came to the United States to find out what the problem was, and recommended that the magazine be sold to the two Americans, for $3,000—a very low price. They tried to recruit Gold, but he contacted the Italian office, which rejected the sale and eventually agreed to sell Galaxy to the printer, Robert M. Guinn. It was only after the sale was complete that the sabotaged distribution came to light; World Editions wanted to buy back the magazine, but Guinn quoted a price four times as high as he had paid. In Gold's words, "he, Guinn, knew what he was buying, whereas World Editions hadn't known what they were selling". [18]

Guinn's new company was named Galaxy Publishing Corporation, and it took over beginning with the October 1951 issue. Gold remained as editor, but lost the assistance of staff at World Editions, relying instead on help from Jerome Bixby, Algis Budrys, Theodore Sturgeon, and Gold's wife, Evelyn Paige. Science fiction author Frederik Pohl, then working as a literary agent, was also helpful in connecting writers with Gold. [16]

By the late 1950s, the science fiction magazine boom was over, and the relatively low circulation of the magazines did not endear them to distributors, the middlemen who transported magazines from the publishers to the newsstands and other outlets. Gold changed the title from Galaxy Science Fiction to Galaxy Magazine with the September 1958 issue, commenting that the term science fiction "scares many people away from buying". Galaxy's circulation, at about 90,000, was the highest of the science fiction magazines, but Guinn decided to cut costs, and in 1959 raised the cover price and changed the magazine to a bimonthly schedule, while increasing the page count. Guinn also cut the rates paid to authors from three (and occasionally four) cents a word to one and a half cents a word. These changes saved Galaxy over $12,000 a year. The result was a fall in circulation to about 80,000 within two years, but this was sustainable because of the savings from the fiction budget. [19] [notes 4]

1960s

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196119/319/419/519/620/120/2
196220/320/420/520/621/121/2
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196725/325/425/525/626/126/2
196826/326/426/526/627/127/227/327/427/5
196927/628/128/228/328/428/5128/6129/1129/2129/329/4
Issues of Galaxy from 1960 to 1969, showing volume/issue number. Issues are
color-coded to show when each editor was in charge; the editorship passed from
H.L. Gold to Frederik Pohl and then to Ejler Jakobsson during the 1960s. [8] Note
that the apparent error in volume numbering in late 1969 is in fact correct.

Guinn acquired If , another science fiction magazine, in 1959, and gave it to Gold to edit as well. The July 1959 issue of If was the first under Gold's editorship. Galaxy's shift to a bimonthly schedule had been intended to help reduce the workload on Gold, who was not in good health; he was able to take on If as well because the two magazines alternated months of publication. [21] Towards the end of the 1950s Frederik Pohl began to help Gold, occasionally to the extent of performing all the editorial duties, including writing the editorials and blurbs and working with the printer. Gold, who was agoraphobic, was making efforts at this time to leave his apartment, but in 1960 he was seriously injured in a taxi accident, and proved unable to continue as editor. Pohl took over at some point in early 1961, though he was not listed on the masthead as editor until the December 1961 issue. [22] [23]

Pohl attempted to persuade Guinn to double the pay rate of one and a half cents a word back to the former level of three. Guinn refused, but Pohl was able to find enough material that he could purchase at a low rate to allow him to offer some authors three cents per word. The strategy was successful in improving circulation, and Guinn eventually acceded to the rate increase. [24]

Pohl also tried hard to persuade Guinn and Sol Cohen, whom Guinn had hired to help with the publishing duties, to switch both Galaxy and If to monthly schedules. In late 1962, they agreed, but soon changed their minds and decided to start a third science fiction magazine instead. This was Worlds of Tomorrow , which was launched in April 1963 and lasted until mid-1967 (it was briefly revived in 1970–71). [25] [26] Another companion magazine, International Science Fiction , was tried in late 1967, but lasted only two issues; it showcased stories translated from other languages, and sales were very weak. [27] Finally, in 1968 Guinn launched Worlds of Fantasy , edited initially by Lester del Rey, Galaxy's managing editor; only four issues appeared. [28] In the middle of 1968, Galaxy was restored to a monthly schedule. [8]

1970s and after

In 1969, Guinn sold Galaxy to Universal Publishing and Distribution Corporation (UPD). Pohl was in Rio de Janeiro at a World Science Fiction Symposium when the sale went through; he heard the news when he returned to the Galaxy office afterwards and within a few days decided to resign. [notes 5] He remained on the masthead as "editor emeritus", a post invented to keep Pohl from moving to one of the other sf magazines, and went back to his writing career. [29] His place was taken by Ejler Jakobsson, who was working in UPD's book department. Lester del Rey stayed on as features editor, and Judy-Lynn Benjamin took his place as managing editor. [30] Jack Gaughan was made art editor. [31]

Galaxy's circulation had held relatively steady in the mid-1960s, ranging between 73,000 and 78,000, but the UPD acquisition coincided with a precipitous drop—from 75,300 for the year ended October 1968, circulation fell to 51,479 just one year later. Difficulties with distribution also cut into income, and Arnold Abramson, UPD's owner, decided to cut costs and maximize profits. Galaxy went bimonthly in August 1970, ending a two-year spell of monthly scheduling (though a couple of months had been missed). The page count, which had been cut from 196 to 160 when UPD bought it, was increased again, and the price was raised from 60 cents to 75 cents. A British edition began in May 1972, published by Tandem Books, which was owned by UPD. The net effect of all these changes was a substantial increase in profitability. Circulation in 1972 also rose by about 6,000 issues, though it is possible that this was solely due to the new British edition. [32]

JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
197029/529/630/130/230/330/430/530/631/1
197131/231/331/431/531/632/132/232/3
197232/432/532/633/133/233/3
197333/433/533/634/734/834/134/234/3
197434/434/534/634/735/535/635/735/835/935/1035/1135/12
197536/136/236/336/436/536/636/736/836/9
197637/137/237/337/437/537/637/737/837/9
197738/138/238/338/438/538/638/738/838/939/1
197839/239/339/439/539/639/739/8
197939/939/1039/11
198040/1
19941/11/21/31/41/51/6
19952/12/2
Issues of Galaxy from 1970 to the last issue, including the revival in 1994, showing
volume/issue number; the apparent errors at July and September 1973, and the odd
numbering of volume 35, are in fact correctly shown. The editors, in sequence, were
Ejler Jakobsson, James Baen, J.J. Pierce, Hank Stine, Floyd Kemske, and E.J. Gold. [8]

UPD began to have financial difficulties in the early 1970s, and when Judy-Lynn del Rey (formerly Judy-Lynn Benjamin) left in May 1973 to work at Ballantine Books, Jakobsson's workload increased greatly. He resigned less than a year later, citing overwork and other issues, and was replaced by James Baen, who took over with the June 1974 issue after Pohl declined the post. [33] Baen also took over the editorship of If, but rising paper costs forced the closure of If at the end of 1974, and the title was merged with Galaxy. [34] The magazine had returned to a monthly schedule in September 1973, but it was only patchily adhered to, with at least a couple of issues missed every year except 1974. Baen was successful at increasing circulation again, bringing it from 47,789 when he took over to 81,035 when he left. The magazine was profitable for UPD, but the financial pressure on the parent company took its toll and Baen left in late 1977 to work for Ace Books—the October issue was his last. [8] [35]

Baen was replaced by John J. Pierce, but the situation only worsened. Pierce resigned within a year: the company was in increasing debt, and his office assistant recalls that the office appeared inefficiently run, though he commented that Pierce "clearly loved what he did and knew what he was talking about". Pierce's replacement was Hank Stine, who took over in late 1978, though because of Galaxy's irregular schedule Pierce's last issue was March–April 1979. Stine managed to produce only two more issues, June–July 1979 and September–October 1979, before UPD's financial problems spelled the end. Rights to the title were transferred to a new company, Galaxy Magazine, Inc., owned by Vincent McCaffrey, proprietor of Avenue Victor Hugo, a second-hand book store in Boston; UPD retained a ten percent interest in order to receive income from future sales to pay off their debts. Stine had compiled two more issues, but neither ever appeared; McCaffrey, who had also launched a separate magazine, Galileo, had cash-flow problems that prevented him from distributing the magazine as he had planned. One more issue did finally appear from McCaffrey, in July 1980, in a large format; it was edited by Floyd Kemske. A subsequent issue, to be dated October 1980, was assembled, but never distributed. [36] [37]

The last few years of Galaxy's life were marked by stories of unpaid contributors. John Varley, for example, reported that he was still owed money for his stories five years after they appeared. Submissions from well-known writers fell away, and the lack of financial support from UPD meant that the pay rate was an unattractive one cent per word. Higher postal rates, higher paper costs, and continuing competition from the paperback science fiction market all added to the pressure on Galaxy. These problems were not resolved by the sale to McCaffrey, who did not even have enough money to pay for circulation postage, with the result that not every Galaxy subscriber received a copy of the final issue. [8] Frederik Pohl places the blame for Galaxy's demise on Arnie Abramson, who, Pohl contends, "simply did not perform [the] basic functions of a publisher": paying the authors, ensuring subscribers received copies, and meeting other obligations. [38]

In 1994, the magazine reappeared briefly as a semi-professional publication under the editorship of E. J. Gold, son of H. L. Gold. E. J. Gold produced eight issues on a regular bimonthly schedule, starting with the January–February 1994 issue, and ending with March–April 1995. [17] [39]

Contents and reception

Early years

Gold intended Galaxy to publish stories of sufficient literary quality to attract readers of the slick magazines, as well as those who came to Galaxy already familiar with genre science fiction. [40] His editorial policy was broader than that of John W. Campbell, the editor of the leading magazine in the field, Astounding Science Fiction : Gold was interested in sociology, psychology, and other "soft" sciences, and was also willing to publish humorous and satirical stories. [41] Gold managed to persuade the publisher to let him offer three to four cents a word, which exceeded the highest rates paid in the field at that time. [41] [notes 6] In addition to the high rates, Galaxy was an attractive market for writers because Gold bought only first magazine rights, unlike the other leading magazines. [13] Galaxy was quickly established as one of the three leading science fiction magazines, along with Campbell's Astounding and The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (usually abbreviated to F&SF). [8] Campbell had been enormously influential over the previous decade, but the appearance of Galaxy and F&SF, launched just a year before, marked the end of his dominance of the genre. [44]

Rear cover of first issue GalaxyOct50rearcover.jpg
Rear cover of first issue

The cover for the first issue was by David Stone, depicting a scene from Simak's Time Quarry. The image was muted, in contrast to the sensational art typically found on the covers of the sf pulps; the intention was that Galaxy should look like an sf magazine, but one "that you were not embarrassed to hold", in the words of Mike Ashley. [42] The early artwork was generally unremarkable, though Ed Emshwiller's humorous cover for the June 1951 issue, his first professional sale as an artist, was a positive sign. "Emsh", as he was known to science fiction readers, soon became a regular contributor. [41] [45] The relatively expensive production processes that Gold had insisted on enabled more sophisticated internal artwork, which could be integrated with type in ways not possible with cheaper letterpress printing. [46]

On the rear cover of the first issue, Gold ran a feature called "You'll Never See It In Galaxy!", with two paragraphs side by sideone a parody of the introduction to a space western, the other the same story translated to become a true western, with spaceships replaced by horses. A sample: "He cut out his super-hyper-drive for the landing ... and at that point, a tall, lean spaceman stepped out of the tail assembly, proton gun-blaster in a space-tanned hand" became "He spurred hard for a low overhang of rimrock ... and at that point a tall, lean wrangler stepped out from behind a high boulder, six-shooter in a sun-tanned hand". [17] The feature drew much attention, though James Blish commented that Galaxy did not always avoid printing the kind of fiction it parodied. [47] [48]

In the first issue, Gold asked for reader feedback on what should be included in the magazine—letters, editorials, book reviews, or other features. The response was against a letter column, [notes 7] but the readers wanted editorials, and short book reviews with recommendations that would help them identify what books to buy, as opposed to in-depth criticism. [49] Gold was also concerned that harsh critical reviews would scare away new authors who might otherwise submit their work. [50] Groff Conklin began a book review column, called "Galaxy's Five Star Shelf", in the first issue; [notes 8] [51] Floyd Gale took it over with the November 1955 issue—Gale was in fact Gold's brother, using a slightly modified surname. [52] The inaugural issue also included a competition for readers to explain UFOs in under 200 words, the first of many contests Gold would run. [53]

The first six issues contained stories by well-known authors, including some that became highly regarded such as Fritz Leiber's "Coming Attraction", Damon Knight's "To Serve Man", and Ray Bradbury's "The Fireman", later expanded as Fahrenheit 451 . [41] Gold considered these early issues exploratory, and some of the material by major names was clearly lesser work. [54] With its second volume, beginning in April 1951, Galaxy achieved consistently high quality, with virtually every issue featuring a story that would have a lasting reputation, including C. M. Kornbluth's "The Marching Morons", Wyman Guin's "Beyond Bedlam", and Robert Heinlein's The Puppet Masters , whose serialization overlapped volumes 2 and 3. [41] [54] [55] Early feedback from readers had been opposed to serialized novels, but here Gold did not follow their opinion, and Galaxy is remembered for featuring some very successful serials. [56] A contemporary anthology of science fiction stories, E. F. Bleiler and T. E. Dikty's The Best Science Fiction Stories: 1951, commented in an editorial that Gold's work "will succeed in placing science-fiction on an equal basis with any other field of modern literature". [57] With a circulation of over 100,000 in its second year, Galaxy surpassed Astounding. [58]

Mid- and late 1950s

Gold maintained Galaxy's high standards for most of the 1950s. Alfred Bester's The Demolished Man —according to critic Peter Nicholls, "among the few genuine classics of genre sf"—was serialized in early 1952. [59] Pohl and Kornbluth's The Space Merchants followed a few months later, serialized as Gravy Planet; Brian Aldiss, in his critical genre study Trillion Year Spree , calls it "one of the most famous books in SF". [60] James Blish's "Surface Tension" and Theodore Sturgeon's "Baby is Three", both widely acclaimed, also appeared in 1952. [61] [62] Readers had expressed support for science articles, and in March 1952, Willy Ley, who had contributed occasional essays since the first issue, began a column, "For Your Information", in which he replied to readers' scientific questions. Running uninterrupted until Ley's death in 1969, [41] [51] [56] Frederik Pohl describes it as "the most popular single feature Galaxy ever had". [63] The Hugo Awards were inaugurated the following year: The Demolished Man won the first Hugo for Best Novel and Galaxy shared the first Hugo for Best Magazine with Astounding. [41]

Gold published a wide range of material, and Galaxy became known for irony and satire; the work of authors able to adopt the wry style he favored, such as Knight and Robert Sheckley, appeared regularly in the magazine [41] and were obvious commentaries on contemporary society. [64] In 1953, with McCarthyism at its height, Gold refused to publish "The Liberation of Earth", a story by William Tenn satirizing both the Russian and American sides in the Korean War. Tenn quotes Gold, an ex-radical, as saying the idea made him "sweat green", though the year before he had published Isaac Asimov's "The Martian Way", a thinly veiled anti-McCarthy story. [65] [66]

L. Sprague de Camp commented that Gold "sets an extremely high standard of literary excellence for his writers", and observed that he often demanded multiple revisions and rewrites. [43] Gold was also infamous for making sweeping changes to the stories he printed. [56] [notes 9] In meetings and in phone calls he became well known as a difficult editor whose determination to achieve perfection sometimes alienated his writers. [49] [notes 10] He was unapologetic, declaring, "I worked hard with writers, and they didn't always enjoy it". [15] The results were often very positive: some successful stories are said to have begun with an idea he provided to one of his authors. In the case of The Demolished Man, his involvement extended almost to the point of collaboration. [notes 11] [59] [74] Gold was agoraphobic and rarely left his apartment, but writers often visited him, [49] and he held regular parties and weekly poker games; in addition to the members of the science fiction community, the avant-garde composer John Cage often attended. [75]

In March 1953 Gold announced a novel-writing contest, but it failed to attract any usable submissions. He asked Pohl and Kornbluth if they would allow him to print Gladiator-at-Law, which they had just completed, under a pseudonym, so he could claim that the contest had found a new talent. They refused, but shortly afterwards Pohl and Lester del Rey agreed to let Gold take their recently completed novel Preferred Risk and publish it as the winner under the pseudonym Edson McCann. [41] [76] Pohl and del Rey constructed a fake identity for McCann, but the news leaked out and Gold never ran another fiction competition. [77] In July 1953, he launched a companion magazine, Beyond Fantasy Fiction , dedicated to fantasy material, which Galaxy's editorial policy did not favor. It lasted for ten bimonthly issues, with the final one appearing in January 1955. [41] After it failed, Gold opened Galaxy to more fantasy, publishing writers such as Cordwainer Smith. [78]

The ABC radio series Tales of Tomorrow , which began in 1952 as an offshoot of the TV series of the same name, used stories from Galaxy; the connection was announced at the start of each of its fifteen episodes. On April 24, 1955, another radio series, NBC's X Minus One , started a much longer run of 125 episodes, lasting until January 1958. From February 1956 onwards the scripts were adapted exclusively from stories in Galaxy, and from the April 1956 issue Galaxy ran advertisements for the series, which included work by Pohl, Sturgeon, and Philip K. Dick. [79]

Through the 1950s, Galaxy's contributors routinely dominated the Hugo ballots, but neither the magazine nor the fiction it published won many awards, despite what sf historian Donald Lawler describes as its "deserved reputation for excellence". [8] After several years of being shut out of the Hugos, Galaxy published two works in 1958 that won the honor: Fritz Leiber's novel The Big Time and Avram Davidson's short story "Or All the Seas with Oysters". [80]

1960s

Paid Circulation per Year
Year        Issues sold
1960
91,000
1961
91,000
1962
92,000
1963
77,677
1964
73,536
1965
73,610
1966
73,400
1967
74,700
1968
75,300
1969
51,479
1970
46,091
1971
45,598
1972
51,602
1973
54,524
1974
47,789
1975
56,361
1976
52,831
1977
81,035

When Pohl took over as editor in 1961, he broadened the magazine's scope, including more fantasy material. Regular contributors in the 1960s included Jack Vance, Larry Niven, Frank Herbert, Robert Silverberg, and Cordwainer Smith. Galaxy stories from this era that won awards include Vance's The Dragon Masters and "The Last Castle"; Clifford Simak's Way Station, serialized as Here Gather the Stars; Harlan Ellison's "'Repent, Harlequin,' Said the Ticktockman" and "The Beast That Shouted Love at the Heart of the World"; and Silverberg's "Nightwings". Pohl never succeeded in winning a Hugo Award as editor of Galaxy, although he won the award three consecutive times from 1966 to 1968 as editor of If , Galaxy's sister magazine, and in theory the junior of the two publications. [41] [81]

The quality of fiction in Galaxy had dipped towards the end of Gold's editorship, and Pohl worked hard to restore the magazine's high standards. Gold's difficult editorial personality had driven away some of his contributors, but Pohl, who had worked as an agent in the 1950s, was a central figure in the sf community and was able to attract submissions from the star writers of his day. [81] In the case of one of these stars, he offered an unusual arrangement: Robert Silverberg could write whatever he wished and Pohl promised that he would almost invariably buy it. Silverberg, who had been a high-volume producer of competent but unremarkable science fiction, began writing more ambitious work as a result, much of which was published in Galaxy throughout the 1960s. [82]

In February 1965, Pohl brought in Algis Budrys as book reviewer, after a year in which no review column had appeared. Budrys's insightful reviews drew much praise, and editor David Hartwell has ranked him as one of the best sf critics of his generation. [83] [84] [85] [notes 12]

The difference between Pohl's approach and Gold's was apparent in the editorials Pohl wrote, which were informal, entertaining, and rooted in his deep familiarity with the genre. [86] With Pohl at the helm, Galaxy moved back toward the knowledgeable science fiction fan, and away from the mainstream market that Gold had targeted. [87] Pohl said that he tried to "cover the full spectrum of science fiction", however, unlike Gold's "specialist magazine" of the 1950s; his Galaxy published both Sheckley's "Mindswap" and Herbert's "Do I Wake or Dream?" when Gold would not have purchased the latter, Pohl said. [88]

1970s

Ejler Jakobsson's tenure began with a large backlog of stories that Pohl had acquired, but within a year or two substantial changes were apparent. [87] In the early 1970s, Jakobsson attempted to update Galaxy's image, adding a comic strip, "Sunpot", by Vaughn Bodé, for example. [41] Theodore Sturgeon took over from Budrys as the regular book reviewer in January 1972 and held the post until mid-1975. [89] Jakobsson did not manage to give Galaxy a new and distinctive character: "Sunpot" lasted only four issues, Sturgeon's reviews were undistinguished, and many of the new authors he published have been, in the words of Mike Ashley, "mercifully unknown ever since". [41] [89] The paper quality and printing quality also dropped, and early cover designs were very weak. Jakobsson initially printed guest editorials rather than writing his own; when he took over the editorial page his work was unremarkable. He managed to attract some of the new writers who were becoming well known in the sf scene, including George R.R. Martin, Joe Haldeman, and Joanna Russ. Three novels published in Jakobsson's Galaxy won awards: Isaac Asimov's The Gods Themselves and Arthur C. Clarke's Rendezvous with Rama each won both the Hugo and Nebula awards, in 1972 and 1973 respectively, and Robert Silverberg's A Time of Changes won the Nebula in 1971. Sturgeon's short story "Slow Sculpture" won both the Hugo and the Nebula in 1970. [89]

A letter column was added at the end of 1971; this was the first time Galaxy had published reader's letters. Galaxy's long-time science columnist, Willy Ley, died in 1969, and was replaced by Donald Menzel. He was replaced in turn by Jerry Pournelle in April 1974. [90]

Jakobsson's successor, James Baen, was able to publish some high-quality fiction, including material by Roger Zelazny, John Varley, Larry Niven, and Pohl, whose novel, Gateway, won both the Hugo and Nebula awards. [41] Baen raised the level of the magazine substantially, and Ashley refers to his editorship as Galaxy's "Indian summer". [91] Under Baen the review columnist was Spider Robinson, who won a Locus Award in 1977, primarily for his work in Galaxy. [41] Baen also published a series of essays by authors discussing their own work. Apart from Gateway, Baen published only one award-winning story: Ursula K. Le Guin's "The Day Before the Revolution", which appeared in August 1974 and won the Nebula. [91]

Baen's successors, Pierce, Stine, and Kemske, were unable to maintain his standard. Pohl remained loyal to the magazine, but the serialization of his novel Jem exemplified Galaxy's growing problems. Due to the magazine's increasingly erratic schedule, the serialization stretched from the last issue of 1978 into 1980, well after it had appeared in book form. [41] In November 1977, Paul Walker took over the book column from Spider Robinson, and Jerry Pournelle left the science column at the end of 1978. [17] The artwork quality dropped to an amateurish level, and despite the appearance of a few successful stories and novels, such as C. J. Cherryh's The Faded Sun: Kesrith, the overall quality was dramatically worse than it had been under Baen. [92] Galaxy's deterioration was largely due to the financial troubles of the publisher, Arnold Abramson, who reduced the pay rate (at a time of high inflation) to a penny a word. Even that low rate did not guarantee timely disbursement, and many writers stopped submitting because of Galaxy's reputation for paying slowly, if at all. Costs were increasing for paper, postage, and production, and the paperback anthology market was booming, adding to the competition that Galaxy faced. [92] Floyd Kemske's only issue never received newsstand distribution, doomed by the financial troubles of the magazine's publisher, Vincent McCaffrey. [93]

Cover layout and artwork

Nine issues of Galaxy, showing the major variations in cover design over the magazine's lifetime Galaxy cover layouts.jpg
Nine issues of Galaxy, showing the major variations in cover design over the magazine's lifetime

Galaxy had a characteristic cover style in the 1950s with an inverted white "L" shape (Greek gamma) framing the cover art; this style was copied by several magazines, including Authentic Science Fiction and Startling Stories . [notes 13] [58] When Astounding followed suit in late 1951, Gold commented sarcastically in an editorial that Galaxy "would like to know when we may have it [the format] back again". [94] The first variation came with the September 1956 issue, which widened the left hand strip of white to allow room to print story titles and author names. The December 1961 issue was the first to eliminate the strip on the left, and until July 1969 the magazine varied between this layout, the inverted "L", and a version with no white at all, first used on the August 1965 issue. Another change visible in that issue is the reversal of the title coloring to white lettering on a block of red; this was used from August 1963 to December 1965. In August 1969 the title was enlarged to fill the width of the magazine; this issue had the white inverted "L", but it was the last one to do so till 1980. After August 1969 the cover paintings spanned the entire cover, though with some minor variations in layout such as can be seen in the October 1976 issue. Then in September 1978 (undated on the cover, but numbered vol. 39 no. 7) the original typeface for "Galaxy" was abandoned for the last few issues. The final issue, edited by Kemske, returned to the previous layout and typeface, although with a magazine twice the size of the original digest. When E. J. Gold revived Galaxy in 1994, he restored the inverted "L" and employed a predominantly black-and-white look for the eight issues he published. [17]

Notable artists who contributed regularly to Galaxy included Ed Emshwiller, who won several Hugo Awards for his work, [95] [96] Hugo nominee Wallace Wood, [97] and Jack Gaughan, who won three Hugos in the late 1960s, partly for his work in Galaxy. [31] Gaughan was commissioned by Pohl to provide the cover and interior art for Jack Vance's The Dragon Masters in 1962; the resulting illustrations made Gaughan immediately famous in the science fiction field. [98] In the 1950s and 1960s, Galaxy retained the original artwork sent in by its artists, though Emshwiller, much of whose best color work appeared there, was able to negotiate an exception to this rule, retaining the art for his portfolios. [99] [100] In 1972 much of this artwork—including both interior and cover illustrations—was sold off by Robert Guinn, who had kept it when he sold Galaxy to UPD in 1969. [99] [101]

Influence on the field

Isaac Asimov, in his memoirs, recalled being deeply impressed by the first issue of Galaxy, and that many fans, including himself, believed that the magazine became the field's leader almost immediately. [102] In critic John Clute's assessment, Galaxy indeed swiftly supplanted Astounding and remained the leading magazine in the field until Pohl resigned as editor in 1969. [103] Science fiction historian and critic Mike Ashley regarded Galaxy's success as the main reason for the subsequent boom in science fiction magazines, [58] commenting that it "revolutionized the field overnight". [42] Under Gold Galaxy provided a market for social science fiction stories that might not have been accepted by Astounding and Fantasy & Science Fiction, the other leading magazines. [93] [104]

Pohl stated in 1965 that almost every major science fiction writer whose career began after 1950 primarily wrote for Galaxy, and that others closely imitated Gold's magazine. [88] He described Galaxy as where "the stunning new kinds of science fiction ... flowered, and changed everything in science fiction". [2] In his opinion, Gold's innovation was to ask writers to consider not just new technology, but the subsequent impact of that technology on society. He adds, "What Galaxy brought to magazine science fiction was a kind of sophisticated intellectual subtlety. ... After Galaxy it was impossible to go on being naive." [2] Science fiction author Brian Stableford argues that Galaxy quickly usurped Astounding's position as "pioneer of hardcore sf's progress" because it "embraced and gleefully pursued a new series of challenges to moral orthodoxy." [105]

SF historian David Kyle ascribes Galaxy's influence specifically to Gold, saying that "of all the editors in and out of the post-war scene, the most influential beyond any doubt was H. L. Gold" and that the new direction he set led, "inevitably", to the New Wave, the celebrated science fiction literary movement of the 1960s. [3] Kyle's assessment of Gold is echoed by writer Barry N. Malzberg, who calls Gold "perhaps the greatest editor in the history of all fields for the first half of his tenure". SF authors and historians Brian Aldiss and David Wingrove summarize Galaxy's history by saying that it lasted for "thirty mainly glorious years": [106] it "brought into the sunlight a number of excellent satirists, comedians and ironists" [107] and, through the influence of its reduced focus on technology, played an important role in attracting women to write science fiction. [108]

Publication details

Editors

The list below, and the charts above, follow the mastheads in the magazines. Because of Gold's poor health, Pohl was acting as editor for some time before he officially took over the role at the end of 1961. [8] [17]

Overseas editions

Galaxy had multiple foreign editions. This was in part because the original publisher, World Editions, had a European base, which Gold had planned to take advantage of when the magazine launched. Overseas editions included: [8] [42] [109] [110]

Other bibliographic details

The following table shows which issues appeared from which publisher. [8] [17]

DatesPublisher
October 1950 – September 1951World Editions, Inc., New York
October 1951 – May 1969Galaxy Publishing Corp., New York
July 1969 – March 1977UPD Corp., New York
May 1977 – September–October 1979UPD, Scarsdale, New York
Summer 1980Avenue Victor Hugo

The title changed multiple times, and was frequently inconsistently given between the cover, spine, indicia, and masthead. [8]

Start monthEnd monthCoverSpineIndiciaMastheadNumber of issues
Oct–50Aug–58Galaxy Science FictionGalaxy Science FictionGalaxy Science FictionGalaxy Science Fiction94
Sep–58Oct–62Galaxy MagazineGalaxy MagazineGalaxy MagazineGalaxy Magazine27
Dec–62Dec–65GalaxyGalaxy19
Feb–66Sep–6818
Oct–68Oct–69Galaxy Science Fiction Magazine12
Nov–69Jan–72Galaxy Science Fiction Magazine20
Mar–72Mar–72Galaxy Magazine1
May/Jun–72Jan–73Galaxy Science FictionGalaxy Science Fiction5
Mar/Apr–73Mar/Apr–73GalaxyGalaxy Science Fiction Magazine1
May/Jun–73Nov–73GalaxyGalaxyGalaxy Science Fiction5
Dec–73Dec–73Galaxy Science FictionGalaxy Science Fiction Magazine1
Jan–74Jan–75Galaxy13
Feb–75Jan–76Galaxy Incorporating Worlds of If9
Feb–76Oct–77Galaxy Science FictionGalaxy Science FictionGalaxy Science Fiction16
Nov–77Dec-77/Jan–78GalaxyGalaxyGalaxy2
Feb–78Oct–79Galaxy Science FictionGalaxy Science FictionGalaxy Science Fiction10
Summer–80Summer–80GalaxyGalaxyGalaxyGalaxy1

Galaxy remained a digest-sized magazine from the beginning until 1979; the very last issue was published in pulp format, as were the semi-professional issues produced by E. J. Gold. The page count began at 160; it dropped to 144 in January 1955, but went up to 192 in February 1959. In July 1969 the count went back down to 160; it returned to 192 pages with the August–September 1970 issue and stayed there till May–June 1971, when it dropped to 176. From June 1974 to June–July 1979 it was back at 160 pages, and then went to 128 pages for the final digest issue, September–October 1979. The single 1980 issue was 72 pages long. [8] The eight issues published in the 1990s all had 96 pages, except the first, January–February 1994, which had 56 pages. [17] The initial price was 25 cents. Price changes were as follows: 35 cents from May 1958; 50 cents from February 1959; 60 cents from December 1964; 75 cents from August–September 1970; $1.00 from April 1975; 79 cents for the August 1975 issue; 95 cents from September 1975; $1.00 from May 1976; $1.25 from June 1977, and $1.50 for the final professional issue in 1980. [8]

Derivative anthologies

Several anthologies of stories from Galaxy have been published. The following list does not include reprint editions though in some cases these varied in contents, as for example with the UK editions of some of the early volumes. [8] [113]

YearEditorTitlePublisher
1952H. L. GoldGalaxy Reader of Science FictionCrown: New York
1954H. L. GoldSecond Galaxy Reader of Science FictionCrown: New York
1958H. L. GoldThird Galaxy Reader of Science FictionDoubleday: New York
1958H. L. GoldFive Galaxy Short NovelsDoubleday: New York
1959H. L. GoldThe World That Couldn't Be and Eight Other Novelets From GalaxyDoubleday: New York
1959H. L. GoldThe Fourth Galaxy Reader of Science FictionDoubleday: New York
1960H. L. GoldThe Bodyguard and Four Other Short Novels From GalaxyDoubleday: New York
1961H. L. GoldThe Mind Partner and Eight Other Novelets From GalaxyDoubleday: New York
1961H. L. GoldThe Fifth Galaxy Reader of Science FictionDoubleday: New York
1962H. L. GoldThe Sixth Galaxy Reader of Science FictionDoubleday: New York
1962Frederik PohlTime Waits for Winthrop and Four Other Short Novels From GalaxyDoubleday: New York
1964Frederik PohlThe Seventh Galaxy ReaderDoubleday: New York
1965Frederik PohlThe Eighth Galaxy ReaderDoubleday: New York
1966Frederik PohlThe Ninth Galaxy ReaderDoubleday: New York
1967Frederik PohlThe Tenth Galaxy ReaderDoubleday: New York
1969Frederik PohlThe Eleventh Galaxy ReaderDoubleday: New York
1972"The Editors of Galaxy"The Best From Galaxy, Volume IAward Books: New York
1974"The Editors of Galaxy"The Best From Galaxy, Volume IIAward Books: New York
1975Jim BaenThe Best From Galaxy, Volume IIIAward Books: New York
1976Jim BaenThe Best From Galaxy, Volume IVAward Books: New York
1980Jim BaenGalaxy: The Best of My YearsAce: New York
1980Frederik Pohl, Martin H. Greenberg, and Joseph D. OlanderGalaxy Magazine: Thirty Years of Innovative Science FictionPlayboy Press: Chicago

Two series of companion novels were issued by the publishers. The first series, Galaxy Science Fiction Novels , began in 1950 with Eric Frank Russell's Sinister Barrier; seven titles were released by World Editions, and a further twenty-eight by Guinn's Galaxy Publishing Corporation. The books were initially in digest format but this was changed to a standard paperback format for the last four titles. In 1959 the line was sold to Beacon Books, which produced another 11 volumes. Beacon specialized in softcore pornography, and changed the titles of most of the books they published to be more suggestive. The last title, Sin in Space (originally Outpost Mars), by Cyril Judd (a pseudonym for Cyril Kornbluth and Judith Merril) appeared in 1961. Two years later a second series, Galaxy Magabooks, appeared; each of these consisted of two short novels, both by the same author, published in a single volume. Only three were released; the last, And My Fear Is Great/Baby Is Three by Theodore Sturgeon, appeared in 1964. [114] [notes 16]

Notes

  1. The distinctive cover lettering was designed by Frank Conley, the first husband of Gold's wife, Nicky. [12]
  2. Gold's recollections of the change include a comment that only one issue was missed in making the switch to Guinn; this is presumably an error on his part, as Galaxy did not miss an issue till 1955. [14]
  3. Gold does not name the two men involved, but according to Galaxy's masthead during this period the president of World Editions was George A. Gogniat, and the circulation director (who was listed only from June through September 1951) was Frederick Allardt. [17]
  4. According to critic and author Kingsley Amis, in his survey of science fiction published in 1960, Galaxy had a circulation of 125,000 at the time he was writing, which does not match Ashley's figures. Amis gives no source for his number. [20]
  5. Pohl reports in his autobiography that his final decision to resign was precipitated by hearing that the new publisher, Arnie Abramson, insisted that the magazine's editor be in the office from nine to five every day. [29]
  6. Initially the rate was three cents on acceptance; Astounding sometimes paid three cents a word, but only as a bonus rate. By 1953 the rate went as high as four cents a word for writers who appeared regularly. [42] [43] Astounding soon matched Galaxy's rates. [13]
  7. According to Gold, there were 6,000 letters from readers, 85 percent of which were against a letter column. [15]
  8. Conklin's column appeared in every issue until October 1955 except those of March 1951 and April and August 1955. [17]
  9. Damon Knight described this habit of Gold's who, he wrote, "can no more keep from interfering with another man's story, once he owns it, than a saucer-eyed kid with a jam jar". [67] William Tenn relates that Sturgeon became so annoyed by Gold's changes that he took to writing "STET" in the margin of every page of his manuscripts. [68] Pohl and Kornbluth once took revenge on Gold for this habit by extensively changing, to the point of parody, a manuscript of Gold's for a book they were editing, and returning it to him as if that were the version to be published. [69] However, Lester del Rey records that Gold agreed not to edit his stories without discussing the changes first, and that the agreement was kept. [70]
  10. Isaac Asimov, in his memoirs, describes Gold as becoming "crankier as time went on", with his rejections "becoming increasingly personal and vilifying". [71] James Gunn, in his history of science fiction, says that Gold's rejection letters were "long [and] savage", and that over time his tone became even more acid: "it was not enough to reject, the author had to be punished so that he would never sin again". [72]
  11. Gold spent four hours on the phone with Bester every week for a year and a half talking about the book; Bester took only three months to write it at the end of the process. [73]
  12. The reviews were later collected in book form as Benchmarks (1985). [85]
  13. Other magazines that adopted this style were Science Fiction Adventures , Space Science Fiction , Orbit Science Fiction , and EC Comics' Weird Science-Fantasy . [58]
  14. Tuck states that there were four issues; according to Lawler there were five. [110] [111]
  15. The first 71 issues were drawn from the July 1952 to December 1958 US issues, but the British reprint did not always exactly match the content sequence of the original US version, and seven issues—August 1952, March, April, and December 1954, April and May 1955, and December 1955—were not reprinted at all. [112] Note Lawler mistakenly gives September 1954 to March 1955 as the range for issues 11 to 29; it should be September 1953.
  16. The other two were The Sky Is Falling/Badge of Infamy by Lester del Rey and The Legion of Time/After World's End by Jack Williamson. [115]

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of US science fiction and fantasy magazines to 1950</span> Science-fiction and fantasy magazine history

Science-fiction and fantasy magazines began to be published in the United States in the 1920s. Stories with science-fiction themes had been appearing for decades in pulp magazines such as Argosy, but there were no magazines that specialized in a single genre until 1915, when Street & Smith, one of the major pulp publishers, brought out Detective Story Magazine. The first magazine to focus solely on fantasy and horror was Weird Tales, which was launched in 1923, and established itself as the leading weird fiction magazine over the next two decades; writers such as H.P. Lovecraft, Clark Ashton Smith and Robert E. Howard became regular contributors. In 1926 Weird Tales was joined by Amazing Stories, published by Hugo Gernsback; Amazing printed only science fiction, and no fantasy. Gernsback included a letter column in Amazing Stories, and this led to the creation of organized science-fiction fandom, as fans contacted each other using the addresses published with the letters. Gernsback wanted the fiction he printed to be scientifically accurate, and educational, as well as entertaining, but found it difficult to obtain stories that met his goals; he printed "The Moon Pool" by Abraham Merritt in 1927, despite it being completely unscientific. Gernsback lost control of Amazing Stories in 1929, but quickly started several new magazines. Wonder Stories, one of Gernsback's titles, was edited by David Lasser, who worked to improve the quality of the fiction he received. Another early competitor was Astounding Stories of Super-Science, which appeared in 1930, edited by Harry Bates, but Bates printed only the most basic adventure stories with minimal scientific content, and little of the material from his era is now remembered.

<i>Fantasy Book</i> American science fiction magazine (1947–1951)

Fantasy Book was a semi-professional American science fiction magazine that published eight issues between 1947 and 1951. The editor was William Crawford, and the publisher was Crawford's Fantasy Publishing Company, Inc. Crawford had problems distributing the magazine, and his budget limited the quality of the paper he could afford and the artwork he was able to buy, but he attracted submissions from some well-known writers, including Isaac Asimov, Frederik Pohl, A. E. van Vogt, Robert Bloch, and L. Ron Hubbard. The best-known story to appear in the magazine was Cordwainer Smith's first sale, "Scanners Live in Vain", which was later included in the first Science Fiction Hall of Fame anthology, and is now regarded as one of Smith's finest works. Jack Gaughan, later an award-winning science fiction artist, made his first professional sale to Fantasy Book, for the cover illustrating Smith's story.

References

  1. H. W. Hall, ed. (1983). The Science Fiction Magazine Checklist (PDF). Bryan, TX. p. 41. ISBN   0-935064-10-9. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 23, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. 1 2 3 Frederik Pohl, "Introduction", in Pohl, Greenberg & Olander, Galaxy: Thirty Years of Innovative Science Fiction, p. xii.
  3. 1 2 Kyle, A Pictorial History of Science Fiction, pp. 119–120.
  4. Brian Stableford, "Amazing Stories" in Clute & Nicholls, Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (1993), p. 25.
  5. 1 2 3 Malcolm Edwards & Peter Nicholls, "SF Magazines" in Clute & Nicholls, Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (1993), p. 1068.
  6. 1 2 Magazine publishing dates for the period are tabulated in Ashley, History of the Science Fiction Magazine Vol. 3, pp. 323–325.
  7. Ashley, Transformations, pp. 24, 72–73.
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  13. 1 2 3 Tymn & Ashley, Science Fiction, Fantasy and Weird Fiction Magazines, p. 293
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  15. 1 2 3 H. L. Gold, "Gold on Galaxy", in Pohl, Greenberg & Olander, Galaxy: Thirty Years of Innovative Science Fiction, p. 5.
  16. 1 2 Ashley, Transformations, p. 32.
  17. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 See the individual issues. For convenience, an online index is available at "Magazine:Galaxy Science Fiction – ISFDB". Texas A&M University. Retrieved 20 May 2008.
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  19. Ashley, Transformations, pp. 198–200.
  20. Amis, New Maps of Hell, p. 48.
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  22. Ashley, Transformations, p. 205.
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  34. Ashley, Gateways to Forever, pp. 59–62.
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  36. Ashley, Gateways to Forever, p. 309.
  37. Ashley, Gateways to Forever, pp. 317–322.
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  39. "Galaxy Checklist". Stephen G. Miller and William T. Contento. Retrieved 20 February 2008.
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  41. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Malcolm Edwards & Peter Nicholls, "Galaxy Science Fiction", in Clute & Nicholls, Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (1993), pp. 462–464
  42. 1 2 3 4 Ashley, Transformations, p. 24.
  43. 1 2 de Camp, Science-Fiction Handbook, p. 115.
  44. Malcolm Edwards, "John Wood Campbell, Jr.", in Clute & Nicholls, Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (1993), pp. 187–188
  45. Ortiz, Emshwiller, p. 31
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  48. Blish, More Issues At Hand, p. 111.
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  58. 1 2 3 4 Ashley, Transformations, pp. 32–33.
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  67. Knight, In Search of Wonder, p. 259.
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  69. Pohl, The Way the Future Was, pp. 162–163.
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  71. Asimov, In Memory Yet Green, p. 651.
  72. Gunn, Alternate Worlds, p. 219.
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  80. Franson & DeVore, A History of the Hugo, Nebula, and International Fantasy Awards, p. 16.
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  82. Robert Silverberg, "Sounding Brass, Tinkling Cymbal", in Aldiss and Harrison, "Hell's Cartographers", p. 28.
  83. Tymn & Ashley, Science Fiction, Fantasy and Weird Fiction Magazines, p. 298.
  84. John Clute, "Algis Budrys" in Clute & Nicholls, Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (1993), p. 170.
  85. 1 2 David Hartwell, "Algis Budrys", in Hartwell, The Science Fiction Century, Vol. 1, p. 245.
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  94. Quoted in Rosheim, Galaxy Magazine, p. 33.
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  96. Ashley, Transformations, p. 31.
  97. Hugo Award for Best Professional Artist
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  101. Robert Guinn, advertisement, Galaxy, January 1972, p. 157.
  102. Asimov, In Memory Yet Green, p. 602.
  103. Clute, SF: The Illustrated Encyclopedia, p. 102.
  104. James Gunn, quoted in Rosheim, Galaxy Magazine, p. 10.
  105. Stableford, Heterocosms, p. 47.
  106. Aldiss & Wingrove, Trillion Year Spree , p. 228.
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  108. Aldiss & Wingrove, Trillion Year Spree , p. 259.
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  110. 1 2 Tuck, Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy, Vol. 3, pp. 564–567.
  111. Tymn & Ashley, Science Fiction, Fantasy and Weird Fiction Magazines, p. 857
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Sources