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Satellite Science Fiction; Saturn (magazine) Science Fantasy (magazine) Science Fiction Adventures (1956 magazine) Science Fiction Adventures (British magazine) Science-Fiction Plus; Space Science Fiction Magazine; Space Stories; STET (fanzine) Super-Science Fiction
First issue of Amazing Stories, dated April 1926, cover art by Frank R. Paul. Science-fiction and fantasy magazines began to be published in the United States in the 1920s. . Stories with science-fiction themes had been appearing for decades in pulp magazines such as Argosy, but there were no magazines that specialized in a single genre until 1915, when Street & Smith, one of the major pulp ...
Pages in category "Science fiction magazines established in the 1960s" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Isaac Asimov wrote an essay called "Catskills in the Sky" which appeared in the August 1960 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. He tells an anecdote about his children receiving this album as a present. He liked the music so much, especially the song "Why Go Up There," that he appropriated the album for his own record collection.
American science fiction and popular science magazine Printed Apex Magazine: 2005 United States Apex Book Company American horror and science fiction magazine. Online Asimov's Science Fiction: 1977 United States Penny Publications, LLC American magazine which publishes science fiction and fantasy and perpetuates the name of Isaac Asimov ...
Fantastic Universe was a U.S. science fiction magazine which began publishing in the 1950s. It ran for 69 issues, from June 1953 to March 1960, under two different publishers. It was part of the explosion of science fiction magazine publishing in the 1950s in the United States, and was moderately successful, outlasting almost all of its ...
A. Magazine (1989–2002); A. Merritt's Fantasy Magazine (1949–1950); Aboriginal Science Fiction (1986–2001); Absolute Magnitude (1993–2006); Access: America's Guide to the Internet, Access Media Inc. (1998–2001) [citation needed]
The early 1950s saw dramatic changes in the world of U.S. science fiction (sf) publishing. At the start of 1949, all but one of the major magazines in the field were in pulp format; by the end of 1955, almost all had either ceased publication or switched to digest format. [2]