Difference between revisions of "Orbit Science Fiction"

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(Did you mean [[Orbit|original anthology series]], a [[Orbit (Netherlands)|Kees van Toorn semiprozine]] or a [[Orbit (Leeds)|Leeds clubzine]]?)
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''(Did you mean a [[Orbit (Disambiguation)| different orbit]]?)''
  
'''''Orbit Science Fiction''''' was a digest-sized magazine that ran for a total of only five issues during 1953-1954.  The editor credited on the masthead was [[Jules Saltman]], but [[Donald A. Wollheim]] bought all the stories published. At the time [[Wollheim]] was working at [[Ace Books]] and this accounts for his anonymity.
 
  
Authors who appeared in the five issues included [[August Derleth]] (whose Tex Harrigan appeared in every issue), [[Charles Beaumont]], [[Mack Reynolds]], [[Richard Matheson]], [[Philip K. Dick]], [[Chad Oliver]], [[Alfred Coppel]], [[Gordon R. Dickson]], [[Michael Shaara]], [[Jack Vance]], and [[Wollheim]] himself (under his Martin Pearson and [[David Grinnell]] bylines).
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'''''Orbit Science Fiction''''' was a [[digest]]-sized [[prozine]] that ran for a total of only five issues during 1953–54.  The editor credited was [[Jules Saltman]], but [[Donald A. Wollheim]] bought all the stories published. At the time Wollheim was working at [[Ace Books]] and this accounts for his anonymity.
  
[[Frank H. Parnell]], writing in [[Peter Nicholls]]' ''The Science Fiction Encyclopedia'', wrote that ''Orbit'' fell victim to the inundation of the [[SF]] magazine market of the early 1950s.
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[[Authors]] who appeared in the five issues included [[August Derleth]] (whose Tex Harrigan appeared in every issue), [[Charles Beaumont]], [[Mack Reynolds]], [[Richard Matheson]], [[Philip K. Dick]], [[Chad Oliver]], [[Alfred Coppel]], [[Gordon R. Dickson]], [[Michael Shaara]], [[Jack Vance]], and Wollheim himself (under his Martin Pearson and [[David Grinnell]] bylines).
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[[Frank H. Parnell]], writing in [[Peter Nicholls]]' ''[[The Science Fiction Encyclopedia]]'', wrote that ''Orbit'' fell victim to the inundation of the [[SF]] magazine market of the early 1950s.
  
 
An [[Australian]] edition, one issue, appeared in 1954, a reprint of the first American issue.
 
An [[Australian]] edition, one issue, appeared in 1954, a reprint of the first American issue.
  
{{link | website=https://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/orbit_science_fiction | text=SF Encyclopedia entry}}
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{{SFE|name= orbit_science_fiction}}.
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{{publication | start=1953 | end=1954}}
 
{{publication | start=1953 | end=1954}}
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:prozine]]
 
[[Category:prozine]]

Latest revision as of 05:01, 1 June 2023

(Did you mean a different orbit?)


Orbit Science Fiction was a digest-sized prozine that ran for a total of only five issues during 1953–54. The editor credited was Jules Saltman, but Donald A. Wollheim bought all the stories published. At the time Wollheim was working at Ace Books and this accounts for his anonymity.

Authors who appeared in the five issues included August Derleth (whose Tex Harrigan appeared in every issue), Charles Beaumont, Mack Reynolds, Richard Matheson, Philip K. Dick, Chad Oliver, Alfred Coppel, Gordon R. Dickson, Michael Shaara, Jack Vance, and Wollheim himself (under his Martin Pearson and David Grinnell bylines).

Frank H. Parnell, writing in Peter Nicholls' The Science Fiction Encyclopedia, wrote that Orbit fell victim to the inundation of the SF magazine market of the early 1950s.

An Australian edition, one issue, appeared in 1954, a reprint of the first American issue.

Entry in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction.



Publication 19531954
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