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Aquila (children's magazine) Archive (magazine) Arena (magazine) Arena Three; Armchair Science; The Art Journal; The Art Newspaper; The Artist (UK magazine) The Artist and Journal of Home Culture; Artrocker (magazine) Arty (magazine) Asbri; Asiamoney; The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Register for British India and Its Dependencies; Astronomy Now ...
The Call; Cambrian Quarterly Magazine and Celtic Repertory; Cambridge Literary Review; Camera Owner; Camerawork; Candis Magazine; Canoe & Kayak UK; Cantab; Careless Talk Costs Lives
This was briefly revived as a second story arc titled Auchter's Axe in issues 29 to 30 prior to the magazine's cancellation. When some TSR UK staffers were made redundant, they started the publication Game Master to try to maintain the experience of Imagine and some of its popular features, such as Pelinore; that magazine also published ...
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Defunct magazines published in the United Kingdom (16 C, 470 P) Non-English-language magazines published in the United Kingdom (3 P) Magazines published in England (6 C, 20 P)
Campaign (magazine) The Car Illustrated; The Caricature Magazine or Hudibrastic Mirror; The Caterer; Cavalcade (magazine) The Celtic View; Chambers's Edinburgh Journal; The Champion (story paper) Charts Plus (1990s publication) Chat (magazine) Cheeky Weekly; Cheltenham Looker-On; Chemist + Druggist; The Cinema News and Property Gazette; Classic ...
Cover of the June 1936 issue. The artist is Norman Saunders.. New Mystery Adventures was a pulp magazine that appeared from 1935 to 1937. It included a mix of genres: there were occasional science fiction stories, and fantasies such as "Buried Alive" by Wayne Rogers and "Rescued by Satan" by Richard B. Sale, as well as adventure stories by authors such as L. Ron Hubbard. [1]
The journal was first published on 2 March 1863 by the publishing house of Longman in London, with Hereford Brooke George as its first editor. It was a replacement for Peaks, Passes, and Glaciers, which had been issued in two series: in 1858 (with John Ball as editor), and 1862 (in two volumes, with Edward Shirley Kennedy as editor).