Difference between revisions of "Famous Fantastic Mysteries"
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− | + | (Did you mean [[ffm (Versins)|ffm, a Pierre Versins fanzine]]?) | |
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− | Published by The Frank A. Munsey Co., then by Popular Publications (beginning in 1943), the [[pulp]] magazine was edited by [[Mary Gnaedinger]] for the entire run. | + | '''''Famous Fantastic Mysteries''''' (known as '''''FFM''''') began publication with a September-October, 1939, issue and lasted until June, 1953, for a total run of 81 issues. |
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+ | Published by The Frank A. Munsey Co., then by [[Popular Publications]] (beginning in 1943), the [[pulp]] magazine was edited by [[Mary Gnaedinger]] for the entire run. | ||
The magazine was monthly until the creation in July, 1940, of a companion magazine, ''[[Fantastic Novels]]''. | The magazine was monthly until the creation in July, 1940, of a companion magazine, ''[[Fantastic Novels]]''. | ||
− | Initially, ''Famous Fantastic Mysteries'' reprinted stories that had originally been published in | + | Initially, ''Famous Fantastic Mysteries'' reprinted stories that had originally been published in Munsey magazines, such as [[A. Merritt]]'s "The Moon Pool" and [[Ray Cummings]]' "The Girl in the Golden Atom" as serials. With the creation of ''[[Fantastic Novels]]'', however, reprinting long, classic [[SF]] novels in many installments was dropped. |
− | When ''[[Fantastic Novels]]'' ceased publication in April, 1941, ''Famous Fantastic Mysteries'' again began reprinting classic [[SF]] novels, but all in one issue instead of as serials. [[Frank R. Paul]], [[Virgil Finlay]], and [[Lawrence | + | When ''[[Fantastic Novels]]'' ceased publication in April, 1941, ''Famous Fantastic Mysteries'' again began reprinting classic [[SF]] novels, but all in one issue instead of as serials. [[Frank R. Paul]], [[Virgil Finlay]], and [[Lawrence Sterne Stevens]] did many of the magazine's cover illustrations. |
− | When the magazine was sold to Popular Publications the editorial policy changed, although | + | When the magazine was sold to Popular Publications the editorial policy changed, although Gnaedinger remained as editor. The new policy stated that in the future the magazine would publish only new stories or stories that had previously appeared only in book form. |
Critics have written that ''Famous Fantastic Mysteries'' was historically important because of its wide selection of stories, some by obscure American and British writers, and because it kept in print many stories that might otherwise have been lost. | Critics have written that ''Famous Fantastic Mysteries'' was historically important because of its wide selection of stories, some by obscure American and British writers, and because it kept in print many stories that might otherwise have been lost. | ||
− | There was also a Canadian edition, published from February, | + | There was also a [[Canadian]] edition, published from February, 1948, until August, 1952 (27 issues). |
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− | {{publication | + | {{publication | start=1939 | end=1953}} |
− | + | [[Category:US]] | |
− | [[Category: | + | [[Category:Canada]] |
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[[Category:prozine]] | [[Category:prozine]] |
Latest revision as of 01:58, 4 October 2023
(Did you mean ffm, a Pierre Versins fanzine?)
Famous Fantastic Mysteries (known as FFM) began publication with a September-October, 1939, issue and lasted until June, 1953, for a total run of 81 issues.
Published by The Frank A. Munsey Co., then by Popular Publications (beginning in 1943), the pulp magazine was edited by Mary Gnaedinger for the entire run.
The magazine was monthly until the creation in July, 1940, of a companion magazine, Fantastic Novels.
Initially, Famous Fantastic Mysteries reprinted stories that had originally been published in Munsey magazines, such as A. Merritt's "The Moon Pool" and Ray Cummings' "The Girl in the Golden Atom" as serials. With the creation of Fantastic Novels, however, reprinting long, classic SF novels in many installments was dropped.
When Fantastic Novels ceased publication in April, 1941, Famous Fantastic Mysteries again began reprinting classic SF novels, but all in one issue instead of as serials. Frank R. Paul, Virgil Finlay, and Lawrence Sterne Stevens did many of the magazine's cover illustrations.
When the magazine was sold to Popular Publications the editorial policy changed, although Gnaedinger remained as editor. The new policy stated that in the future the magazine would publish only new stories or stories that had previously appeared only in book form.
Critics have written that Famous Fantastic Mysteries was historically important because of its wide selection of stories, some by obscure American and British writers, and because it kept in print many stories that might otherwise have been lost.
There was also a Canadian edition, published from February, 1948, until August, 1952 (27 issues).
Entry in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction.
Publication | 1939—1953 |
This is a publication page. Please extend it by adding information about when and by whom it was published, how many issues it has had, (including adding a partial or complete checklist), its contents (including perhaps a ToC listing), its size and repro method, regular columnists, its impact on fandom, or by adding scans or links to scans. See Standards for Publications. |