Space Science Fiction Magazine
{{Short description|American science fiction magazine}}
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{{For|the similarly named magazine published in 1952–53|Space Science Fiction{{!}}Space Science Fiction}}
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{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}}
File:SpaceSFMSpr1957.jpg's "The New World to Conquer", in which spacemen come upon a planet of women who think of men as drones.]]
Space Science Fiction Magazine was a US science fiction magazine published by Republic Features Syndicate, Inc. as part of a package of radio shows and related genre magazines. It was edited by Michael Avallone, though the masthead listed Lyle Kenyon Engel as editor instead. Two issues appeared, both in 1957. It published short stories by well-known writers, including Arthur C. Clarke and Jack Vance, but it was not successful, and the magazine ceased publication late in 1957.
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Publication history and bibliographic data
Science fiction was one of the staple genres of American pulp magazine publishing, beginning in 1926 with Amazing Stories. A brief boom in the late 1930s was cut short by World War II, but the field expanded again in the late 1940s.Nicholls & Clute (1993), p. 483.Edwards & Nicholls (1993), pp. 1066-1071. By 1957 the boom had reached its height;Ashley (1978), p. 23. 24 science fiction magazines published at least one issue that year.Ashley (1978), pp. 270–271. One of the most prominent of these magazines, Galaxy Science Fiction, had a successful association with two radio shows, Dimension X and X Minus One. This sparked imitators, and during 1956 Lyle Kenyon Engel of Republic Features Syndicate persuaded an investor to finance a package of two radio shows and four magazines.Avallone (1983), pp. 26-27. The shows were American Agent, a spy drama, and The Frightened, to be narrated by Boris Karloff. The magazine package included a spy magazine and a horror magazine to tie in with the radio shows, and two additional titles: Private Investigator Detective Magazine and Space Science Fiction Magazine. Private Investigator
Space SF
Both issues were digest-sized, with 132 pages, and were priced at 35 cents. The issues were numbered as a single volume with two issues.
Contents
Engel obtained stories from moderately well-known science fiction names for both issues, including John Jakes, Mack Reynolds, Jack Vance, and Raymond F. Jones, but many of the stories were "barrel-scrapings" from the Scott Meredith Literary Agency, in the words of one historian; most had already been rejected at the other active science fiction markets. Space SF also published Arthur C. Clarke's "Critical Mass", one of the popular "White Hart" stories. It had already appeared in a 1949 edition of a British magazine, Lilliput, but Clarke revised it for this publication. Overall, in the words of Mike Ashley, "... [it] carried stories by noted sf writers, [but] they read like rejects from better magazines, and there was nothing of lasting value".Ashley, (1978), p. 22. Ashley comments that the best story was Jakes's "The Devil Spins a Sun-Dream", which was atmospheric if poorly plotted; the protagonist, a human prospector on Mars, finds a fabulous city, but an ancient booby-trap destroys it before his eyes.
Almost every story was illustrated, with Bruce Minney as artist. Both issues' covers were by Tom Ryan. There were no editorials, review columns, or any other contents other than fiction, and advertisements, all of which were for radio shows, including American Agent and The Frightened.
References
Sources
- {{cite book | first=Michael | last=Ashley | title=The History of the Science Fiction Magazine. Part 4: 1956–1965| publisher=New English Library| location=London | year=1978 | isbn= 978-0-450-03438-1 |ref=none}}
- {{cite book | first=Mike | last=Ashley | title=Transformations: The Story of the Science Fiction Magazines from 1950 to 1970 | publisher=Liverpool University Press | location=Liverpool | year=2005 | isbn=978-0-85323-769-3 | url=https://archive.org/details/transformationsv0000ashl |ref=none}}
- {{Cite book |last=Avallone |first=Michael |title=Mystery, Detective, and Espionage Magazines |publisher=Greenwood Press |year=1983 |isbn=0-313-23310-1 |editor-last=Cook |editor-first=Michael L. |location=Westport, Connecticut |pages=26–27 |chapter=American Agent |ref=none}}
- {{cite book |last1=Edwards |first1=Malcolm |last2=Nicholls |first2=Peter |title=The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction |year=1993 |publisher=St. Martin's |location=New York |pages=1066–1071 |chapter=SF Magazines |isbn=978-0-312-09618-2 |editor-last=Clute |editor-first=John |url= |ref=none |editor-last2=Nicholls |editor-first2=Peter}}
- {{cite book| last1= Nicholls| first1= Peter| last2= Clute| title= The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction| year= 1993| publisher= St. Martin's| location= New York| isbn= 978-0-312-09618-2| url= |ref=none|pages=483|first2=John|chapter=Genre SF|editor-last=Clute|editor-first=John|editor-last2=Nicholls|editor-first2=Peter}}
- {{cite book | first=Donald H. | last=Tuck |authorlink= Donald H. Tuck | title=The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy. Volume 3: Miscellaneous| publisher=Advent | location=Chicago | year=1982 | isbn= 978-0-911682-26-7|ref=none}}
Category:Magazines established in 1957
Category:Magazines disestablished in 1957
Category:Defunct science fiction magazines published in the United States
Category:Science fiction magazines established in the 1950s