Results
AMAZING STORIES.
Chicago: Ziff-Davis Publishing Company, 1951. Octavo, single issue, cover by Robert Gibson Jones, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Fiction by Robert Moore Willliams, Kendall Foster Crossen (this or Crossen's story in the Feb. 51 issue of Thrilling Wonder is is first published SF material), Milton Lesser, and others. [Reference: Tymm and Ashley, Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Weird Fiction Magazines, pp. 14-49].
DETECTIVE TALES.
Kokomo, IN: Popular Publications, Inc., 1951. Octavo, single issue, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Includes a John D. MacDonald story, "Over My Dead Body," and other fiction by Hugh B. Cave, William Campbell Gault, Richard Wormser and others. Detective Tales ran for eighteen years and was second only to Popular's Dime Detective in their detective magazine line-up. "It was a colorful, urgent, vigorous periodical, foaming with cheerful excesses; it was one of the classic pulp magazines." - Cook, Mystery, Detective and Espionage Magazines pp. 153-157. [Reference: Cook, Mystery, Detective and Espionage Magazines, pp. 153-157].
THRILLING WONDER STORIES.
New York: Standard Magazines, Inc., 1951. Octavo, single issue, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Includes "Overlords of Maxus" by Jack Vance. Fredric Brown, Kendell Foster Crossen, Sam Merwin, Jr. writing as "Matt Lee," and others. [Reference: Tymm and Ashley, Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Weird Fiction Magazines, pp. 743-762].
MARVEL SCIENCE STORIES.
New York: Stadium Publishing Corporation, 1951. Octavo, single issue, cover by Norman Saunders, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Stories by John Beynon (Harris), Lester del Rey, Alfred Coppel and others. [Reference: Tymm and Ashley, Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Weird Fiction Magazines, pp. 398-401].
WONDERS OF THE SPACEWAYS.
London: John Spencer & Co., [1951]. Small octavo, single issue, cover by Facey, pictorial wrappers. First of ten published, paperback size magazine. Six SF stories. [Reference: Harbottle and Holland p. 154. Tymn and Ashley (eds), Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Weird Fiction Magazines, pp. 768-769].




