Editor | Robert H. Davis |
---|---|
Categories | Pulp magazine |
Publisher | Frank Munsey |
First issue | January 1905 |
Final issue | July 17, 1920 |
Country | USA |
The All-Story Magazine was a pulp magazine founded in 1905 and published by Frank Munsey. The editor was Robert H. Davis; Thomas Newell Metcalf also worked as a managing editor [note 1] for the magazine. It was published monthly until March 1914, and then switched to a weekly schedule. Munsey merged it with TheCavalier, another of his pulp magazines, in May 1914, and the title changed to All-Story Cavalier Weekly for a year. In 1920 it was merged with Munsey's Argosy ; the combined magazine was retitled Argosy All-Story Weekly.
Many well-known writers appeared in All-Story, including the mystery writer Mary Roberts Rinehart and the Western writer Max Brand. The most famous contributor to the magazine was Edgar Rice Burroughs, whose first sale, Under the Moons of Mars , appeared in All-Story in 1911. This was the start of his Barsoom science fiction series set on Mars; the next three novels in the series also appeared in All-Story. In 1912 All-Story printed Burroughs's Tarzan of the Apes , and more stories of Tarzan followed, along with two instalments of another of Burroughs's series, about Pellucidar, a land inside the Earth. The first appearance of Zorro, the vigilante, was in All-Story in 1919, in Johnston McCulley's novel The Curse of Capistrano . Many other science fiction and fantasy stories appeared over the life of the magazine. Starting in 1939 some of the stories from All-Story were included in Famous Fantastic Mysteries and Fantastic Novels , both of which were created as vehicles for reprints from the Munsey magazines.
Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | ||
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1905 | 1/1 | 1/2 | 1/3 | 1/4 | 2/1 | 2/2 | 2/3 | 2/4 | 3/1 | 3/2 | 3/3 | 3/4 | |
1906 | 4/1 | 4/2 | 4/3 | 4/4 | 5/1 | 5/2 | 5/3 | 5/4 | 6/1 | 6/2 | 6/3 | 6/4 | |
1907 | 7/1 | 7/2 | 7/3 | 7/4 | 8/1 | 8/2 | 8/3 | 8/4 | 9/1 | 9/2 | 9/3 | 9/4 | |
1908 | 10/1 | 10/2 | 10/3 | 10/4 | 11/1 | 11/2 | 11/3 | 11/4 | 12/1 | 12/2 | 12/3 | 12/4 | |
1909 | 13/1 | 13/2 | 13/3 | 13/4 | 14/1 | 14/2 | 14/3 | 14/4 | 15/1 | 15/2 | 15/3 | 15/4 | |
1910 | 16/1 | 16/2 | 16/3 | 16/4 | 17/1 | 17/2 | 17/3 | 17/4 | 18/1 | 18/2 | 18/3 | 18/4 | |
1911 | 19/1 | 19/2 | 19/3 | 19/4 | 20/1 | 20/2 | 20/3 | 20/4 | 21/1 | 21/2 | 21/3 | 21/4 | |
1912 | 22/1 | 22/2 | 22/3 | 22/4 | 23/1 | 23/2 | 23/3 | 23/4 | 24/1 | 24/2 | 24/3 | 24/4 | |
1913 | 25/1 | 25/2 | 25/3 | 25/4 | 26/1 | 26/2 | 26/3 | 26/4 | 27/1 | 27/2 | 27/3 | 27/4 | |
1914 | 28/1 | 28/2 | 28/3 | ||||||||||
Bob Davis |
In 1882, Frank Munsey launched The Golden Argosy , a children's weekly magazine. The title changed to just The Argosy in 1888, and in 1896 Munsey switched to using coarse pulp paper, and printing only fiction, thus launching the first pulp magazine. It was immediately successful. Other publishers brought out competing magazines, such as Street & Smith's The Popular Magazine in 1903, and Story-Press's The Monthly Story Magazine in 1905. As the competition grew, Munsey decided to add another pulp title. [3]
Munsey launched The All-Story Magazine in January 1905 on a monthly schedule with Robert H. Davis as the editor, and Davis hired Thomas Newell Metcalf to work for him as managing editor. [4] [5] [note 1] Munsey had hired Davis early in 1904 to work on the New York Sunday News , but sold it in April of that year, and Davis had been fiction editor of Munsey's Magazine since then. [4] [6]
In March 1914 All-Story's schedule switched to weekly, and in May of that year it was combined with another Munsey pulp, The Cavalier , under the title All-Story Cavalier Weekly. [5] Davis and Metcalf had each dealt with some All-Story contributors up to that point, but thereafter Davis took over working with the writers who had been Metcalf's responsibility. [7] [8] The following year the "Cavalier" was dropped, and it continued as All-Story Weekly again until 1920, when it was merged into The Argosy. [5] The combined magazine was retitled Argosy All-Story Weekly, and retained that name until 1929. [3]
January | February | March | April | May | June | July | August | September | October | November | December | ||
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1914 | Dates: | 7,14,21,28 | 4,11,18,25 | 2,9,16,23,30 | 6,13,20,27 | 4,11,18,25 | 1,8,15,22,29 | 5,12,19,26 | 3,10,17,24,31 | 7,14,21,28 | 5,12,19,26 | ||
Volume: | 29/1 to 29/4 | 30/1 to 30/4 | 31/1 to 32/3 | 32/4 to 33/3 | 33/4 to 34/3 | 34/4 to 35/4 | 36/1 to 36/4 | 37/1 to 38/1 | 38/2 to 39/1 | 39/2 to 40/1 | |||
1915 | Dates: | 2,9,16,23,30 | 6,13,20,27 | 6,13,20,27 | 3,10,17,24 | 1,8,15,22,29 | 5,12,19,26 | 3,10,17,24,31 | 7,14,21,28 | 4,11,18,25 | 2,9,16,23,30 | 6,13,20,27 | 4,11,18,25 |
Volume: | 40/2 to 41/2 | 41/3 to 42/2 | 42/3 to 43/2 | 43/3 to 44/2 | 44/3 to 45/3 | 45/4 to 46/3 | 46/4 to 47/4 | 48/1 to 48/4 | 49/1 to 49/4 | 50/1 to 51/1 | 51/2 to 52/1 | 52/2 to 53/1 | |
1916 | Dates: | 1,8,15,22,29 | 5,12,19,26 | 4,11,18,25 | 1,8,15,22,29 | 6,13,20,27 | 3,10,17,24 | 1,8,15,22,29 | 5,12,19,26 | 2,9,16,23,30 | 7,14,21,28 | 4,11,18,25 | 2,9,16,23,30 |
Volume: | 53/2 to 54/2 | 54/3 to 55/2 | 55/3 to 56/2 | 56/3 to 27/3 | 57/4 to 58/3 | 58/4 to 59/3 | 59/4 to 60/4 | 61/1 to 61/4 | 62/1 to 63/1 | 63/2 to 64/1 | 64/2 to 65/1 | 65/2 to 66/2 | |
1917 | Dates: | 6,13,20,27 | 3,10,17,24 | 3,10,17,24,31 | 7,14,21,28 | 5,12,19,26 | 2,9,16,23,30 | 7,14,21,28 | 4,11,18,25 | 1,8,15,22,29 | 6,13,20,27 | 3,10,17,24 | 1,8,15,22,29 |
Volume: | 66/3 to 67/2 | 67/3 to 68/2 | 68/3 to 69/3 | 69/4 to 70/3 | 70/4 to 71/3 | 71/4 to 72/4 | 73/1 to 73/4 | 74/1 to 74/4 | 75/1 to 76/1 | 76/2 to 77/1 | 77/2 to 78/1 | 78/2 to 79/2 | |
1918 | Dates: | 5,12,19,26 | 2,9,16,23 | 2,9,16,23,30 | 6,13,20,27 | 4,11,18,25 | 1,8,15,22,29 | 6,13,20,27 | 3,10,17,24,31 | 7,14,21,28 | 5,12,19,26 | 2,9,16,23,30 | 7,14,21,28 |
Volume: | 79/3 to 80/2 | 80/3 to 81/2 | 81/3 to 82/3 | 82/4 to 83/3 | 83/4 to 84/3 | 84/4 to 85/4 | 86/1 to 86/4 | 87/1 to 88/1 | 88/2 to 89/1 | 89/2 to 90/1 | 90/2 to 91/2 | 91/3 to 92/2 | |
1919 | Dates: | 4,11,18,25 | 1,8,15,22 | 1,8,15,22,29 | 5,12,19,26 | 3,10,17,24,31 | 7,14,21,28 | 5,12,19,26 | 2,9,16,23,30 | 6,13,20,27 | 4,11,18,25 | 1,8,15,22,29 | 6,13,20,27 |
Volume: | 92/3 to 93/2 | 93/3 to 94/2 | 94/3 to 95/3 | 95/4 to 96/3 | 96/4 to 97/4 | 98/1 to 98/4 | 99/1 to 99/4 | 100/1 to 101/1 | 101/2 to 102/1 | 102/2 to 103/1 | 103/2 to 104/2 | 104/3 to 105/2 | |
1920 | Dates: | 3,10,17,24,31 | 7,14,21,28 | 6,13,20,27 | 3,10,17,24 | 1,8,15,22,29 | 5,12,19,26 | 3,10,17 | |||||
Volume: | 105/3 to 106/3 | 106/4 to 107/3 | 107/4 to 108/3 | 108/4 to 109/3 | 109/4 to 110/4 | 111/1 to 111/4 | 112/1 to 112/3 | ||||||
Robert H. Davis |
The first issue included the first instalments of five novels, including W. Bert Foster's When Time Slipped a Cog, about a man who discovers a year of his life has passed that he cannot remember. Two of the short stories were science fiction as well: Howard R. Garis's "The Ghost at Box 13", and Margaret Prescott Montague's "The Great Sleep Tanks". [4] The May issue reprinted Garrett P. Serviss's short novel The Moon Metal (originally published in book form in 1900), about a new fiscal standard that replaced gold with a metal from the moon. [9] [10] Serviss also appeared in 1909 with A Columbus of Space, serialized in the January to June issues, which science fiction historian Sam Moskowitz commented "caused some to class Serviss as the equal of Jules Verne". [11]
Mary Roberts Rinehart's first story, "A Gasoline Road Agent", appeared in the April 1905 issue. Davis encouraged her efforts, and her first novel, The Circular Staircase , was serialized in All-Story from November 1906 to March 1907. In book form the novel later became the first major success of her career. [10] [12] Max Brand, one of the most prolific of all pulp writers, sold his first Western novel, The Untamed, to All-Story; it was serialized starting in the December 1918 issue. [13] Ray Cummings, another prolific pulp author, began his career with "The Girl in the Golden Atom" in the March 15, 1919, issue of All-Story; it was one of the most popular stories he ever wrote. [3] Other All-Story writers included Rex Stout, later a well-known mystery writer; Western writer Raymond S. Spears; [14] science fiction writer Murray Leinster; [3] horror and fantasy writers Tod Robbins and Perley Poore Sheehan, [14] and W. Adolphe Roberts, a Jamaican writer who later became a leader of Jamaica's independence movement. [15] All-Story also published poetry, including work by Djuna Barnes, later known as an important figure in modernist and lesbian literature. [16] [17] [18] Eldred Kurtz Means's "Tickfall" stories, about black Americans in Louisiana, began in Cavalier and moved to All-Story when the two magazines merged. [19] Johnston McCulley's Zorro series began with the serialization of The Curse of Capistrano in August and September 1919, and continued in Argosy after the magazines merged in 1920. [20] Edwin Baird, later the founding editor of Weird Tales , made his first sale to All-Story in 1906, and contributed several more over the life of the magazine. [21] [22]
The first issue's cover printed the words "Something New" in a script font on a red background. A picture of two cowboys appeared on the next issue. The third issue took over the cover for a declaration that the magazine had reached a circulation of 200,000, but thereafter artwork was used on every cover. Artists included Valentine Sandberg and F. X. Chamberlain. The cover illustrations did not at first have any relationship to the stories in the magazine. [4]
John Clute, discussing the American pulp magazines in the first two decades of the twentieth century, has described All-Story and its companion, Argosy, as "the most important pulps of their era." [23]
The most important author discovered by All-Story was Edgar Rice Burroughs. [9] Burroughs was thirty-five years old in the summer of 1911, and unsuccessful in business. He began writing a novel in July of that year, "very surreptitiously" as he later recalled: "I was very much ashamed of my new vocation ... It seemed a foolish thing for a full grown man to be doing". By August he had completed enough of the story to send it to All-Story under the title "Dejah Thoris, Martian Princess", adding in his covering letter that the completed story would be three times the length of the 43,000 words he was submitting. Metcalf replied with guarded enthusiasm, asking for some cuts, and a total length of no more than 70,000 words. Metcalf bought the rewritten story in November for $400 (equivalent to $13,000 in 2023); given the manuscript had taken four months of work, Burroughs was unimpressed at the pay rate. [25] The story was serialized in All-Story from February to July 1912, titled Under the Moons of Mars . This was the first of Burroughs's Barsoom stories ("Barsoom" being the name of the planet Mars in the series), an early and influential planetary romance. [26] Darkness and Dawn, by George Allan England, had been serialized in another Munsey magazine, The Cavalier, starting in January that year, and science fiction historian Sam Moskowitz regards the appearance of these two stories as signalling the start of an era of popular science fiction love stories. [27] Burroughs had intended the story to be printed under the pseudonym "Normal Bean", to indicate he was an ordinary person despite the fantastic nature of the story. [28] The typesetter assumed it was an error and the story appeared as by "Norman Bean", leading Burroughs to give up the pseudonym and publish his subsequent work under his real name. [29] [note 2]
Burroughs's next submission to Metcalf was rejected, [31] but in March 1912 Burroughs sent Metcalf a description of the novel he was working on, titled Tarzan of the Apes ; Metcalf was enthusiastic about the idea and promptly bought the manuscript when Burroughs submitted it in June. [32] It appeared in the October 1912 issue of All-Story. [9] The next three Barsoom novels appeared in All-Story over the next four years: The Gods of Mars was serialized from January to May 1913; [33] The Warlord of Mars ran from December 1913 to March 1914, and Thuvia, Maid of Mars appeared in 1916. [34] The second Tarzan book, The Return of Tarzan , appeared in New Story Magazine , but the series returned to All-Story for three of the later novels: The Beasts of Tarzan , The Son of Tarzan , and Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar , and for some of the subsequent short stories in the series. [35] Burroughs's Pellucidar series, about adventures inside a hollow Earth, also began in All-Story, with At the Earth's Core and Pellucidar . [26] The initial rate of less than a cent per word that Burroughs received for his first sale began to increase: Metcalf agreed to a rate of two and a half cents per word (equivalent to $0.76 in 2023), for everything he bought from Burroughs in 1914. [36]
By the time All-Story merged with Argosy in the summer of 1920, almost two dozen stories and serialized novels by Burroughs had appeared in the magazine. [35] Burroughs's popularity led to a demand for similar stories, and to imitations. [37] Science fiction historian Mike Ashley suggests that this was the reason for the increasing number of science fiction stories that began to appear, from writers such as Austin Hall, Homer Eon Flint, and Junius B. Smith. Hall's "Almost Immortal" appeared in 1916, along with short science fiction tales by John U. Giesy, J. B. Smith, Charles B. Stilson, and Victor Rousseau. [37] [38] The following year All-Story published Abraham Merritt's first story, "Through the Dragon Glass". Merritt was one of the most popular pulp writers, and in 1918 two more of his stories appeared: The People of the Pit, and "The Moon Pool". [39] "The Conquest of the Moon Pool", a sequel to the latter story, followed in 1919, and both were well received. [37] When Hugo Gernsback launched Amazing Stories , the first science fiction magazine, in 1926, he soon discovered that the technically oriented science fiction he preferred did not sell as well as more fantastic stories, and he responded by reprinting "The Moon Pool" in the May 1927 issue. [40]
In 2006, a copy of the October 1912 issue of All-Story, featuring the first appearance of the character Tarzan in any medium, sold for $59,750 (equivalent to $90,000 in 2023) in an auction held by Heritage Auctions of Dallas. [41]
The magazine's title was originally The All-Story Magazine. This was shortened to The All-Story in June 1911, and then changed to All-Story Weekly when it switched from monthly to weekly publication with the March 7, 1914, issue. From May 16, 1914, to May 8, 1915, it was titled All-Story Cavalier Weekly as a result of the merger with TheCavalier, and for the rest of its run, until the July 17, 1920, issue, it was All-Story Weekly again. [5] [42]
In 1929 Munsey's reorganized two of their magazines: Munsey's Magazine became part of a new love story magazine titled All-Story, and Argosy All-Story Weekly became simply Argosy. [43] [44] The new All-Story was soon retitled All-Story Love Stories and continued publication until 1955. [43]
The long history of the Munsey magazines meant that by the 1930s there were many stories readers had heard of but could no longer obtain. In response to reader requests, Munsey's launched Famous Fantastic Mysteries in 1939 to reprint old stories from both Argosy and All-Story Weekly. The following year Munsey's launched Fantastic Novels , another reprint magazine, to make longer stories available without needing to serialize them in Famous Fantastic Mysteries. Fantastic Novels only lasted five issues before being discontinued in 1941, but Famous Fantastic Mysteries lasted for 81 issues, ceasing publication with the June 1953 issue. [45] [46] Popular Publications, which had acquired Famous Fantastic Mysteries from Munsey's in 1942, brought back Fantastic Novels for another 20 issues between 1948 and 1951. [47] [46]
In 1970 Sam Moskowitz edited a collection of stories from the Munsey magazines titled Under the Moons of Mars: A History and Anthology of "The Scientific Romance" in the Munsey Magazines, 1912–1920. Seven of the nine stories included had originally appeared in All-Story. [3] [48]
Edgar Rice Burroughs was an American writer, best known for his prolific output in the adventure, science fiction, and fantasy genres. Best known for creating the characters Tarzan and John Carter, he also wrote the Pellucidar series, the Amtor series, and the Caspak trilogy.
Pulp magazines were inexpensive fiction magazines that were published from 1896 until around 1955. The term "pulp" derives from the wood pulp paper on which the magazines were printed, due to their cheap nature. In contrast, magazines printed on higher-quality paper were called "glossies" or "slicks". The typical pulp magazine had 128 pages; it was 7 inches (18 cm) wide by 10 inches (25 cm) high, and 0.5 inches (1.3 cm) thick, with ragged, untrimmed edges. Pulps were the successors to the penny dreadfuls, dime novels, and short-fiction magazines of the 19th century.
Amazing Stories is an American science fiction magazine launched in April 1926 by Hugo Gernsback's Experimenter Publishing. It was the first magazine devoted solely to science fiction. Science fiction stories had made regular appearances in other magazines, including some published by Gernsback, but Amazing helped define and launch a new genre of pulp fiction.
Abraham Grace Merritt – known by his byline, A. Merritt – was an American Sunday magazine editor and a writer of fantastic fiction.
Argosy was an American magazine, founded in 1882 as The Golden Argosy, a children's weekly, edited by Frank Munsey and published by E. G. Rideout. Munsey took over as publisher when Rideout went bankrupt in 1883, and after many struggles made the magazine profitable. He shortened the title to The Argosy in 1888 and targeted an audience of men and boys with adventure stories. In 1894 he switched it to a monthly schedule and in 1896 he eliminated all non-fiction and started using cheap pulp paper, making it the first pulp magazine. Circulation had reached half a million by 1907, and remained strong until the 1930s. The name was changed to Argosy All-Story Weekly in 1920 after the magazine merged with All-Story Weekly, another Munsey pulp, and from 1929 it became just Argosy.
A Princess of Mars is a science fantasy novel by American writer Edgar Rice Burroughs, the first of his Barsoom series. It was first serialized in the pulp magazine All-Story Magazine from February–July, 1912. Full of swordplay and daring feats, the novel is considered a classic example of 20th-century pulp fiction. It is also a seminal instance of the planetary romance, a subgenre of science fantasy that became highly popular in the decades following its publication. Its early chapters also contain elements of the Western. The story is set on Mars, imagined as a dying planet with a harsh desert environment. This vision of Mars was based on the work of the astronomer Percival Lowell, whose ideas were widely popularized in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Thuvia, Maid of Mars is a science fantasy novel by American writer Edgar Rice Burroughs, the fourth of the Barsoom series. The principal characters are Carthoris and Thuvia of Ptarth, each of whom appeared in the previous two novels.
Planet Stories was an American pulp science fiction magazine, published by Fiction House between 1939 and 1955. It featured interplanetary adventures, both in space and on some other planets, and was initially focused on a young readership. Malcolm Reiss was editor or editor-in-chief for all of its 71 issues. Planet Stories was launched at the same time as Planet Comics, the success of which probably helped to fund the early issues of Planet Stories. Planet Stories did not pay well enough to regularly attract the leading science fiction writers of the day, but occasionally obtained work from well-known authors, including Isaac Asimov and Clifford D. Simak. In 1952 Planet Stories published Philip K. Dick's first sale, and printed four more of his stories over the next three years.
Otis Adelbert Kline was an American songwriter, adventure novelist and literary agent during the pulp era. Much of his work first appeared in the magazine Weird Tales. Kline was an amateur orientalist and a student of Arabic, like his friend and sometime collaborator, E. Hoffmann Price.
Fantastic Universe was a U.S. science fiction magazine which began publishing in the 1950s. It ran for 69 issues, from June 1953 to March 1960, under two different publishers. It was part of the explosion of science fiction magazine publishing in the 1950s in the United States, and was moderately successful, outlasting almost all of its competitors. The main editors were Leo Margulies (1954–1956) and Hans Stefan Santesson (1956–1960).
Gertrude Barrows Bennett, known by the pseudonym Francis Stevens, was a pioneering American author of fantasy and science fiction. Bennett wrote a number of fantasies between 1917 and 1923 and has been called "the woman who invented dark fantasy".
Uncanny Tales was a Canadian science fiction pulp magazine edited by Melvin R. Colby that ran from November 1940 to September 1943. It was created in response to the wartime reduction of imports on British and American science-fiction pulp magazines. Initially it contained stories only from Canadian authors, with much of its contents supplied by Thomas P. Kelley, but within a few issues Colby began to obtain reprint rights to American stories from Donald A. Wollheim and Sam Moskowitz. Wollheim's and Moskowitz's later accounts of the relationship with Colby differ. Moskowitz reported that he found out via an acquaintance of Wollheim's that Colby had been persuaded by Wollheim to stop buying Moskowitz's submissions. Paper shortages forced the magazine to shut down after less than three years. It is now extremely rare.
Munsey's Magazine was an American magazine founded by Frank Munsey in 1889 as Munsey's Weekly, a humor magazine edited by John Kendrick Bangs. It was unsuccessful, and by late 1891 had lost $100,000. Munsey converted it into an illustrated general monthly in October of that year, retitled Munsey's Magazine and priced at twenty-five cents. Richard Titherington became the editor, and remained in that role throughout the magazine's existence. In 1893 Munsey cut the price to ten cents. This brought him into conflict with the American News Company, which had a near-monopoly on magazine distribution, as they were unwilling to handle the magazine at the price Munsey proposed. Munsey started his own distribution company and was quickly successful: the first ten cent issue began with a print run of 20,000 copies but eventually sold 60,000, and within a year circulation had risen to over a quarter of a million copies.
Avon published three related magazines in the late 1940s and early 1950s, titled Avon Fantasy Reader, Avon Science Fiction Reader, and Avon Science Fiction and Fantasy Reader. These were digest size magazines which reprinted science fiction and fantasy literature by now well-known authors. They were edited by Donald A. Wollheim and published by Avon.
Famous Fantastic Mysteries was an American science fiction and fantasy pulp magazine published from 1939 to 1953. The editor was Mary Gnaedinger. It was launched by the Munsey Company as a way to reprint the many science fiction and fantasy stories which had appeared over the preceding decades in Munsey magazines such as Argosy. From its first issue, dated September/October 1939, Famous Fantastic Mysteries was an immediate success. Less than a year later, a companion magazine, Fantastic Novels, was launched.
Amazing Stories Annual was a pulp magazine which published a single issue in July 1927. It was edited by Hugo Gernsback, and featured the first publication of The Master Mind of Mars, by Edgar Rice Burroughs, which had been rejected by several other magazines, perhaps because the plot included a satire on religious fundamentalism. The other stories in Amazing Stories Annual were reprints, including two stories by A. Merritt, and one by H.G. Wells. The magazine sold out, and its success led Gernsback to launch Amazing Stories Quarterly the following year.
Fantastic Novels was an American science fiction and fantasy pulp magazine published by the Munsey Company of New York from 1940 to 1941, and again by Popular Publications, also of New York, from 1948 to 1951. It was a companion to Famous Fantastic Mysteries. Like that magazine, it mostly reprinted science fiction and fantasy classics from earlier decades, such as novels by A. Merritt, George Allan England, and Victor Rousseau, though it occasionally published reprints of more recent work, such as Earth's Last Citadel, by Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore.
A. Merritt's Fantasy Magazine was an American pulp magazine which published five issues from December 1949 to October 1950. It took its name from fantasy writer A. Merritt, who had died in 1943, and it aimed to capitalize on Merritt's popularity. It was published by Popular Publications, alternating months with Fantastic Novels, another title of theirs. It may have been edited by Mary Gnaedinger, who also edited Fantastic Novels and Famous Fantastic Mysteries. It was a companion to Famous Fantastic Mysteries, and like that magazine mostly reprinted science-fiction and fantasy classics from earlier decades.
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.
Marvel Tales and Unusual Stories were two related American semi-professional science fiction magazines published in 1934 and 1935 by William L. Crawford. Crawford was a science fiction fan who believed that the pulp magazines of the time were too limited in what they would publish. In 1933, he distributed a flyer announcing Unusual Stories, and declaring that no taboos would prevent him from publishing worthwhile fiction. The flyer included a page from P. Schuyler Miller's "The Titan", which Miller had been unable to sell to the professional magazines because of its sexual content. A partial issue of Unusual Stories was distributed in early 1934, but Crawford then launched a new title, Marvel Tales, in May 1934. A total of five issues of Marvel Tales and three of Unusual Stories appeared over the next two years.