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  • {{Header|Fantasy fiction}} ...al of overlap between the three, all of which are subgenres of speculative fiction.
    1 KB (221 words) - 14:37, 9 September 2022
  • ...' was a long-running [[United States|American]] [[pulp magazine]] of the [[horror comics]] and [[weird menace]] genres. It was originally published by [[Popu ...terward (1935) with its sister horror comic, ''[[Horror Stories (magazine)|Horror Stories]]'', also from the same publisher.
    3 KB (416 words) - 13:35, 24 August 2023
  • | company = [[Fiction House]] ...e stories. At first mostly Westerns stories but branching out into sports fiction, war stories and adventures in exotic countries in 1937.<ref>[http://philsp
    2 KB (279 words) - 05:35, 4 April 2022
  • ...oring the consequences of scientific innovations is one purpose of science fiction, making it a "literature of ideas". A science fiction magazine is a publication that offers primarily science fiction, either in a hard copy periodical format or on the Internet.
    3 KB (387 words) - 06:01, 18 January 2021
  • |category = Fiction, Literature '''''The Fantasy Fan''''' was a monthly [[American]] fantasy and horror fiction [[pulp magazine]] first published in September 1933, which was discontinue
    3 KB (370 words) - 05:33, 4 April 2022
  • {{Header|Internet Speculative Fiction Database 02/22}} | name = ISFDB: The Internet Speculative Fiction Database
    4 KB (670 words) - 17:30, 20 February 2022
  • ...had its heyday in the 1950s and 1960s. Catering to a male audience, these magazines featured pinup photography and lurid tales of adventure that typically feat ...hese magazines were also colloquially called "armpit slicks", "men's sweat magazines", or "the sweats", especially by people in the magazine publishing or distr
    4 KB (691 words) - 03:53, 5 January 2024
  • ...fetish ephemera, such as [[Exotique]], [[Fanni Hall]] and [[Bizarre Life]] magazines along with [[Nutrix]], [[Mutrix]], [[HOM]] and [[Eros Goldstripe]] titles, * Boots magazines (15)
    4 KB (612 words) - 00:13, 7 September 2023
  • '''The Encyclopedia of Fantasy''' is a 1997 reference work concerning fantasy fiction, edited by John Clute and John Grant. Other contributors include Mike Ashle ...en added. However, author and theme entries in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction often borrow terminology from entries in The Encyclopedia of Fantasy.
    7 KB (999 words) - 05:54, 10 January 2024
  • ...ated at the more far-fetched end of the spectrum, with a number of science fiction elements such as futuristic weapons and mad scientists. They were generally ...Horror'', all appearing under the aegis of Fading Shadows books. ''Halo of Horror'' has since been reprinted in a pulp facsimile format by Altus Press.[http:
    7 KB (931 words) - 23:36, 15 March 2021
  • {{Header|Science fiction magazines 02/23}} ...book reviews or articles, and some also include stories in the fantasy and horror genres.
    13 KB (1,952 words) - 17:53, 13 February 2023
  • ...t the Italian market which then welcomed stories containing a mixture of [[horror]], [[sex]] and [[nudity]]. Azpiri's work, drawn in a comical style, feature ...He also raises the issue of conflict between peoples, such as in [[science fiction]] stories where the inhabitants of soon-to-be colonized planets are massacr
    2 KB (396 words) - 13:01, 31 December 2022
  • '''''Weird Tales''''' is an [[American]] fantasy and horror fiction [[pulp magazine]] first published in March 1923. The magazine was set up in ...is story "The Vengeance of Nitocris"). Edmond Hamilton's earliest science fiction stories also first appeared in Wright's ''Weird Tales''.
    8 KB (1,132 words) - 23:32, 29 April 2024
  • ...ditionally the title of two unrelated, short-lived fantasy/science fiction magazines. ==Magazines==
    8 KB (1,118 words) - 18:46, 2 November 2021
  • {{Header|Pulp magazines 07/20}} ...ey were widely published from the 1920s through the 1950s. The term ''pulp fiction'' can also refer to mass market paperbacks since the 1950s.
    19 KB (2,960 words) - 11:00, 25 March 2024
  • {{Header|Nights of Horror 03/21}} ...Rights and upheld New York's request for destroying copies of ''Nights of Horror''. Shuster was never named as the illustrator until Gerard Jones published
    12 KB (1,994 words) - 22:47, 4 January 2024
  • ...rded in 1996); [[Hugo Award]] for Best Interior Illustrator, 1953; Science Fiction Hall of Fame, 2012 ...y, science-fiction, and horror illustration. His work appeared in the pulp magazines, the predecessors of the comics: Weird Tales, [[Famous Fantastic Mysteries]
    6 KB (820 words) - 05:44, 26 November 2022
  • ...t der Schwester]'' "with a macabre story combining horror, incest, science fiction, and crime-thriller imagery."<ref>Klaus Toepfer: ''Empire of Ecstasy'', pag ...azi rule, Schertel made his living as a lector and corrector of "harmless" fiction.
    7 KB (1,021 words) - 04:10, 15 January 2023
  • WiP films are works of fiction intended as [[pornography]]. The films of this genre include a mixture of e ...Damsel in distress|damsels in distress]] were particularly common in these magazines.
    19 KB (2,929 words) - 02:39, 5 December 2021
  • ...subjects for the lurid, sub-pornographic covers of these sensationalistic magazines which, by the end of the '60s, were in decline. ...ous life by way of the prison. Under the influence of [[Pulp magazine|pulp magazines and paperbacks]], they became popular [[B movie]]s in the 1950s. It was no
    17 KB (2,644 words) - 09:32, 19 November 2022
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