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For more information about the history of these titles, see Ace Books, which includes a discussion of the serial numbering conventions used and an explanation of the letter-code system. This list covers the non-double novels, for both the letter-series and numeric-series books. For the Ace Double volumes, see Ace Doubles.
In January 1969, Ace Books switched from a letter-series code for its books to a numeric series. The number does not indicate sequence of publication, unlike the number in the letter series codes; instead it identifies the alphabetic position of the title.
Print/export Download as PDF; ... Pages in category "Lists of Ace Books books" The following 24 pages are in this category, out of 24 total. ... List of Ace titles in ...
Ace Books have published hundreds of science fiction titles, starting in 1953. Many of these were Ace Doubles (dos-a-dos format), but they also published many single volumes. . Between 1953 and 1968, the books had a letter-series identifier; after that date they were given five-digit numeric serial numb
Ace Books; Ace Science Fiction Specials; List of Ace miscellaneous double titles; List of Ace miscellaneous letter-series single titles; List of Ace miscellaneous numeric-series single titles
Until the late 1980s, Ace titles had two main types of serial numbers: letter series, such as "D-31" and "H-77", and numeric, such as "10293" and "15697". The letters were used to indicate a price. The following is a list of letter series with their date ranges and prices. [5] [51] D-series: 35¢, 1952 to 1962. S-series: 25¢, 1952 to 1956.
The list given here gives a date of publication; in all cases this refers to the date of publication by Ace, and not the date of original publication of the novels. For more information about the history of these titles, see Ace Books, which includes a discussion of the serial numbering conventions used and an explanation of the letter-code system.
Ace Books have published hundreds of genre titles, starting in 1952, including a few that did not fit into the standard three genres that Ace focused on -- science fiction, westerns, and mysteries. A few of these were in dos-à-dos format, but many were single volumes. Between 1953 and 1968, the books had a letter-series identifier; after that ...