Fantastic (magazine)

Fantastic (magazine)

Infobox Magazine
title = Fantastic


image_caption = February 1955 issue (Vol. 1, No. 8) of "Fantastic"
frequency = bi-monthly; monthly 1957–65, quarterly since 1976
category = Fantasy fiction magazine
firstdate = Summer 1952
finaldate = October 1980
company = Ziff Davis Publishing Co. Ultimate Publications
country = United States (Chicago, Illinois)
editor = Howard Browne Paul W. Fairman Cele Goldsmith Joseph Ross (Sep 1965 – Nov 1967) Harry Harrison Barry N. Malzberg Ted White (June 1969 – Jan 1979)
Elinor Mavor
circulation =
ISSN =

"Fantastic" was a fantasy and science fiction magazine published in the United States from 1952 to 1980. A sister publication, "Fantastic Adventures", was merged into "Fantastic" beginning with May/June 1953 issue.

Ziff-Davis era

Begun in 1952 by editor Howard Browne and publishers Ziff Davis (Z-D) as an attempt at a sophisticated and handsome digest-sized magazine, "Fantastic" was initially a success, and became even more so by its third issue, which featured a story attributed to the enormously popular crime fiction writer Mickey Spillane. The story was actually written by Browne, a crime-fiction writer and editor who had been editing the pulp magazines line Z-D published at that time, including "Amazing Stories", "Fantastic Adventures", and the recently-folded "Mammoth Detective", among others; apparently Spillane had told a version of the story he'd previously sold to "Fantastic" to a reporter from "Life Magazine", where it appeared ahead of the Z-D magazine's publication, leaving Browne unwilling to run the actual Spillane text.

Subsequent issues of "Fantastic" sold well enough for the pulp "Fantastic Adventures" to be merged with it in 1954; "Amazing" had already been reshaped to resemble "Fantastic". Browne was by his own account more comfortable with fantasy fiction than with sf, and soon was concentrating his attention on his writing career; his assistant Paul W. Fairman became editor of "Fantastic" and "Amazing" in 1956, and soon established a policy of reliable mediocrity by purchasing nearly all the contents of his issues from four writers: the young Robert Silverberg, Harlan Ellison, Randall Garrett and Milton Lesser (later better known as Stephen Marlowe), all commissioned to produce a certain amount of words per month, purchased unread.

Two innovations distinguished Fairman's regime: he published the first fantasy by Kate Wilhelm, and the sales of wish-fulfilment-fantasy-themed issues of "Fantastic" led to a short-lived companion magazine devoted to such fiction, "Dream World". Beginning in 1959, Cele Goldsmith's editorship considerably improved the magazine; among the writers whose careers began with their sales to Goldsmith's issues, Ursula K. Le Guin has particularly praised her work, as have subsequent editors Barry N. Malzberg and Ted White.

Ultimate publications era and brief revival

Z-D sold "Fantastic" and "Amazing" to Sol Cohen in 1965, who founded Ultimate Publications to publish them; after brief periods of being edited by Joseph Wrzos (or "Ross," as he signed himself), Harry Harrison, and Barry N. Malzberg, White edited the magazine for a decade under trying financial circumstances, but gained much acclaim for the quality of the fiction, critical and historical nonfiction (by Fritz Leiber and others), and illustrations published by his "Fantastic"; it was the only other regularly-published U. S. professional magazine devoted to fantasy, aside from "The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction", throughout most of those years. Despite attempts to reverse its poor sales, even as fantasy novels were reaching enormous audiences in the same years, "Fantastic" was merged with "Amazing" under Elinor Mavor's regime, in 1980.

A revival of the title, a retitling of the magazine "Pirate Writings" by its new publishers in 2000, was a nostalgic nod to the magazine's importance to the field.

Title changes and title confusions

A number of other magazines unrelated to the Z-D/Ultimate "Fantastic" have been published over the decades with the word "Fantastic" in their titles. In addition, "Fantastic" has had several titles on its own cover. Variant titles of "Fantastic" include
* "Fantastic"
* "Fantastic Science Fiction"
* "Fantastic Science Fiction Stories"
* "Fantastic Stories Of Imagination"
* "Fantastic: Science Fiction – Fantasy"
* "Fantastic Stories"
* "Fantastic Sword & Sorcery and Fantasy Stories"The title most likely to be confused is "Fantastic Adventures", since that shared the same publishers and overlapped for some months. Other unrelated Science Fiction magazines include
* "Fantastic Novels"
* "Famous Fantastic Mysteries"
* "Fantastic Science Fiction" (two unrelated pulp-sized issues in 1952)
* "Fantastic Story Magazine" (a companion to "Thrilling Wonder Stories", 1950-1955). This magazine was named "Fantastic Story Quarterly" until a change in publishing frequency made the name inappropriate.
* "Fantastic Universe" (1953-1960)

References

Brian Stableford: "Fantastic", in "The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction" (2nd ed 1993)

External links

* [http://www.locusmag.com/index/chklst/mg0267.htm Checklist of issues]
* [http://www.philsp.com/data/data111.html#FANTASTIC1952 Galactic Central Magazine Datafile]
* [http://www.isfdb.org/wiki/index.php/Magazine:Fantastic "Fantastic"] at Internet Speculative Fiction Database


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Fantastic Adventures — Infobox Newspaper name = Fantastic Adventures type = Monthly format = Fantasy fiction magazine foundation = 1939 owners = Ziff Davis Publishing Co. political = headquarters = 185 N. Wabash Ave. Chicago, Illinois editor = Raymond A. Palmer Howard… …   Wikipedia

  • Fantastic (disambiguation) — Fantastic or Fantastik can refer to:*The Fantastic genre of writing *Fantastic art *Fantastic Four, a Marvel Comics superhero team *Mr. Fantastic, a member of the Fantastic Four *The Fantasticks, a Broadway play *Fantastik, a cleaning spray… …   Wikipedia

  • Fantastic Story Magazine — was a science fiction pulp magazine published on a quarterly schedule by Best Books, a subsidiary imprint of Standard Magazines. Initially priced at 25 cents, the 160 page debut issue (Spring 1950) was titled Fantastic Story Quarterly , and it… …   Wikipedia

  • Fantastic Dizzy — Éditeur Codemasters Camerica (NES) Développeur Codemasters Cham …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Fantastic realism (literature) — Fantastic Realism ( Réalisme fantastique ) was a movement which had its hour of glory in the 1960s, and whose founding act was the publication of the book The Morning of the Magicians ( Le Matin des magiciens ), subtitled Introduction to… …   Wikipedia

  • Fantastic Universe — Infobox Magazine title = Fantastic Universe image size = 200px image caption = November 1954 issue; cover by Alex Schomburg editor = Sam Merwin, Beatrice Jones, Leo Margulies, Hans Stefan Santesson editor title = Editor staff writer = frequency …   Wikipedia

  • Fantastic Four — This article is about the superheroes. For other uses, see Fantastic Four (disambiguation). Fantastic Four Promotional art for Fantastic Four #509 (March 2004) by Mike Wieringo and Karl Kesel …   Wikipedia

  • Fantastic Films — Infobox Magazine title = Fantastic Films | image size = 200px | image caption = Fantastic Films issue 1 editor = Irving Karchmar art director = Mike Stein frequency = Varied per year category = Science Fiction, Fantasy company = Blake Publishing… …   Wikipedia

  • Fantastic Damage — Infobox Album Name = Fantastic Damage Type = studio Artist = El P Released = May 14 2002 Recorded = 2002 Genre = Hip hop Length = 70:18 Label = Definitive Jux DJX027 Producer = El P Reviews = *Allmusic rating|4.5|5 [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg …   Wikipedia

  • Fantastic Four (film series) — Infobox Film name = Fantastic Four series image size = caption = Fantastic Four poster director = Tim Story producer = Avi Arad Bernd Eichinger Chris Columbus Ralph Winter writer = Michael France Mark Frost ( Fantastic Four ) Don Payne (… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”