Flags

Red Ensign edit

 
England's Red Ensign

Canadian Red Ensign

 
Canadian flag (1921–1957)
 
Final Canadian Red Ensign (1957–1965)
 
Ontario's official flag since 1965

Flag of Canada edit

 
Flag of Canada adopted 1965

Flag of England edit

 
Flag of England from c. 1245, aka the St George's Cross

Union Jack edit

 
Union Jack adopted 1801,called Royal Union Flag in Canada

Flag of the United Kingdom edit

The national flag of the United Kingdom is the Union Jack, also known as the Union Flag.

The flag is the United Kingdom Union Flag (since 1801) and the Canadian Royal Union Flag (1964–present).

Rising Sun Flag edit

16 rays 十六条旭日旗 Jyūrokujō-Kyokujitsu-ki Flag of Japan






Weird Tales

Authors

M. R. James 1862-1936

Algernon Blackwood 1869-1951

H.P. Lovecraft 1890-1937


Weird Tales Magazine



SF

Timeline of science fiction

Authors

Prominent Golden Age Authors

Prominent Golden Age authors
Robert Silverberg in a 2010 essay argued that the true Golden Age was the 1950s, saying that “Golden Age” of the 1940s was a kind of "false dawn". "Until the decade of the fifties", Silverberg wrote, "there was essentially no market for science fiction books at all"; the audience supported only a few special interest small presses. The 1950s saw "a spectacular outpouring of stories and novels that quickly surpassed both in quantity and quality the considerable achievement of the Campbellian golden age"

Less Famous Authors

Raymond Z. Gallun

Anthologies

Raymond J. Healy anthologies


Groff Conklin anthologies


Other anthologies


Digests

 
Winterbotham's "Madness on Luna" April 1939 Amazing Stories
Astounding Stories of Super-Science Jan 1930 - Jan 1931 inclusive
Astounding Stories Feb 1931 - Feb 1938
Astounding Science Fiction Mar 1938 - Jan 1960 (start of John W. Campbell editorship)
Astounding/Analog Science Fact & Fiction Feb 1960 - Sep 1960
Analog Science Fact & Fiction Oct 1960 - Mar 1965
Analog Science Fiction Science Fact Apr 1965 - Dec 1971 (end of John W. Campbell editorship)
Analog Science Fiction Science Fact Jan 1972 - (same as previous name, different editors)
Analog Science Fact Science Fiction Jan 2020 - (swap Fact and Fiction)

Amazing_Stories: Influence_on_the_field
"After the first few years, when there was little or no competition, Amazing Stories never again led the field in the eyes of critics or fans. Despite its long history, the magazine rarely contributed much to science fiction beyond the initial creation of the genre, though Gernsback himself is commemorated in the name Hugo"

Frederik Pohl
"From the early 1960s until 1969, Pohl served as editor of Galaxy Science Fiction and Worlds of if magazines...He also served as editor of Worlds of Tomorrow from its first issue in 1963 until it was merged into if in 1967."

Worlds of Tomorrow 1963-1967 edited by Frederik Pohl isfdb
"Worlds of Tomorrow was an American science fiction magazine published from 1963 to 1967, at which point it was merged into If."

If/Worlds of If 1952-1974 isfdb
"If was merged into Galaxy Science Fiction after the December 1974 issue" "If was a digest-sized magazine throughout its life."

Fantastic 1952-1980, "digest-size fantasy and science fiction magazine" isfdb
"founded as a fantasy companion to Amazing Stories". "Early sales were good, and the company quickly decided to switch Amazing from pulp format to digest, and to cease publication of their other science fiction pulp, Fantastic Adventures."

Fantastic Adventures 1939-1953 isfdb
"Browne's interest in fantasy led him to start a new digest-sized magazine, Fantastic, in the summer of 1952; it was an immediate success, and led Ziff-Davis to convert Amazing Stories to digest format as well. The move from the pulp format to digests was well under way in the early 1950s, and with Fantastic's success there was little reason to keep Fantastic Adventures going. It was merged with Fantastic; the last issue was dated March 1953, and the May–June issue of Fantastic added a mention of Fantastic Adventures to the masthead, though this disappeared with the following issue."

Other Worlds 1949-1953 isfdb

Science Fiction Stories 1953-1960 The Original Science Fiction Stories isfdb
"With the September 1955 issue, the title graphic of Science Fiction Stories was modified so that the cover read The Original Science Fiction Stories."

"Note that although the cover read "The Original Science Fiction Stories" for much of the second run, the title was always "Science Fiction Stories", though some reference books index the magazine under "O""

Digest-sized_magazines
"The first sf magazine to change to digest size was Astounding, in 1943. Other major digests, which published more literary science fiction, were The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Galaxy Science Fiction and If."

"Most digest magazines began in the 1950s... Most survived only a few issues. By 1960, in the United States, there were only six sf digests on newsstands, in 1970 there were seven, in 1980 there were five, in 1990 only four and in 2000 only three."

Beginning of the digest era
"Street & Smith, one of the longest established and most respected magazine publishers, shut down all their pulps in the summer of 1949. The pulps were dying, largely as a result of the success of pocketbooks"

"Although Astounding had been in digest format since 1943..."

"The only survivor of Street & Smith's pulp titles was the digest-format Astounding Science Fiction. By the end of 1955, Fantastic Adventures, Famous Fantastic Mysteries, Thrilling Wonder, Startling Stories, Planet Stories, Weird Tales, and Fantastic Story Quarterly had all ceased publication. Despite the pulps' decline, a few new magazines did appear in pulp format at the end of the 1940s, though these were all short-lived, and several of them focused on reprints rather than new material."


Covers

Amazing Stories

Astounding


Galaxy