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The Electric Company Magazine, Scholastic (1972–1987) Enter, Sesame Workshop (1983–1985) Highlights for Children; Hot Dog!, Scholastic (1979–199?) Jack and Jill, The Saturday Evening Post (1938-2009) Lego Magazine (defunct) Muse; National Geographic Kids Magazine; Nickelodeon Magazine (defunct) The Open Road for Boys (defunct)
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Each 36-page full-colour magazine contains a mix of stories, plays, poetry, nonfiction articles, book reviews, puzzles, comic serials and other texts. Published continually since February 1916, the School Magazine is the oldest magazine in Australia and the longest running literary magazine for children in the world. [4]
California Magazine; The California Sunday Magazine; The Californian (1880s magazine) Call-A.P.P.L.E. Car and Driver; Car Craft; Card Player; The Caribbean Pioneer; Cartoons Magazine; Cassier's Magazine; Casual Living; Cat Fancy; CATALYST Magazine; Catholic Digest; Catholic Update; The Catholic World; The Catholic World Report; Catster ...
Numerous magazines and annuals for children were published in Britain from the mid-19th century onward. Many of the magazines produced their own annuals, which sometimes shared the name of the magazine exactly, as Little Folks, or slightly modified, as The Boy's Own Paper and The Girl's Own Paper (first-listed below).
Dynamite was a magazine for children founded by Jenette Kahn and published by Scholastic Inc. from 1974 until 1992. The magazine changed the fortunes of the company, becoming the most successful publication in its history [1] and inspiring four similar periodicals for Scholastic, Bananas, Wow, Hot Dog! and Peanut Butter.
The Boy's Own Paper, front page, 11 April 1891. Magazines intended for boys fall into one of three classifications. These are comics which tell the story by means of strip cartoons; story papers which have several short stories; and pulp magazines which have a single, but complete, novella in them.
The magazines CoroCoro Comic and the now-defunct Comic BomBom technically belong to the kodomo (children's manga) demographic, but are often counted as shōnen magazines as they target an audience of school-aged boys. [8] [30] A list of the top shōnen magazines by circulation as of 2015 are listed below: [48]