Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. When in 1950 Gillings was given the editorship of Science Fantasy, the new sister magazine to Nova Publications' New Worlds, he incorporated Science-Fantasy Review into its first two issues as a news-chat section; this disappeared when John Carnell assumed the editorship of Science Fantasy with #3 and, as a consequence, Gillings lost control of ...

  2. They chose Gillings as the editor, and his fanzine, which had been retitled Science Fantasy Review in 1949, was incorporated in the new magazine as a department. The first issue was dated Summer 1950, but printing disputes meant that the second issue was delayed until winter.

  3. People also ask

  4. The Los Angeles Science Fiction League (a chapter of the Science Fiction League) changed its name without other significant alteration to the Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society in 1940. The term was also the title of a well known UK magazine 1950-1966 (see Science Fantasy ), which was also the period when the term was most in general use as a ...

  5. Dec 7, 2023 · 1947 - 1949 Genzine. Fantasy Review was retitled Science-Fantasy Review with issue 16. The last issue of Science-Fantasy Review as a fanzine was #18. Science-Fantasy Review was incorporated into the first issue of the prozine Science-Fantasy, published in July, 1950. It continued to be edited by Walter Gillings.

  6. (For other similar titles, see Fantasy Review disambiguation). Science-Fantasy Review (later issues' three-line masthead made it look like Science Fantasy Review lacking the explicit hyphen, but that was consistently used within), subtitled The Science-Fiction Newspaper, was a newszine "published by Liverpool Branch SFA", edited first by Leslie J. Johnson and then L. V. Heald (sometimes in ...

  7. New Worlds and Science Fantasy were the best sf magazines published in the UK before Interzone joined them in this category. As with New Worlds some unsold issues of the Roberts & Vinter Science Fantasy were bound up in twos and threes and sold under the title SF Reprise, these being SF Reprise 3 (anth 1966) containing #67-#69; SF Reprise 4 ...

  8. A popular genre in pulp fiction magazines, sword and planet stories send a human protagonist to a planet where they must contend with an alien society, usually with a sword in hand. It has the vibes of sword and sorcery—but in space. Not all sword and planet is science fantasy, but a sizable portion of it is.

  1. People also search for