Weird Tales
From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959 |
Of old was the age when Weird began; Fanzines nor letterhacks there were Ackerman was not, nor Moskowitz But boundless Mundane, and fans nowhere... as the Pros' Edda touchingly puts it. Weird, established in 1923, was the first successful mag to specialize in strictly fantasy stories, contributing such authors as H. P. Lovecraft, Clark Ashton Smith, C. L. Moore, Robert E. Howard, and Seabury Quinn in its great days during the 30s. It began to slip during World War II, when a puckle of other fantasy mags went under, and went downhill to extinction in the mid-50s. But many of its [mythos]] (Cthulhu, Hyborian Age), heroes (Northwest Smith, Conan, Jules de Grandin), and great stories ("Shambleau", "The Call of Cthulhu", "The Dunwich Horror", "Three Marked Pennies") go marching on in fannish lore. |
The magazine gave its name to the genre of weird fiction, though the fiction it published ranged considerably beyond that.
- Website
- Entry in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction
- “Weird Tales: Cradle of Fantasy” by E. Hoffman Price in Fantasy Aspects 1 (May 1947, p. 6; reprinted from Lethe, July 1946)
Publication | 1923— |
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