Verlag: Street & Smith, NY, 1941
Magazin / Zeitschrift
SingleIssueMagazine. Zustand: Fair to Good-. Vol. 26, No. 4. Pulp magazine. Edited by John W. Campbell, Jr. Cover art by Rogers for "Sixth Column" (vt.- "The Day After Tomorrow"; pt. 1 of 3) by Anson MacDonald [Robert A. Heinlein]. Includes "The Mechanical Mice" (novelette) by Maurice G. Hugi; "Doom Ship" (novelette) by Harry Walton; "The Day We Celebrate" by Nelson S. Bond; "The Traitor" by Kurt von Rachen [L. Ron Hubbard]; "Lost Rocket" by Manly Wade Wellman; "The Opportunists" by E. A. Grosser. Articles: "Starting Point" by Norman R. Goldsmith; "Dead- And Embalmed" by Arthur McCann [John W. Campbell, Jr.]. Readers' Departments: "The Editor's Page: Invention"; "In Times to Come"; "Analytical Laboratory"; "Book Review"; "Brass Tacks and Science Discussions". Illustrations by Eron, Kramer, Orban and Schneeman. No back cover; tears with losses to spine; edge tears to remaining cover which has an adhesion from old sticker or label; creasing; tanning.
Verlag: Street & Smith, NY, 1941
Magazin / Zeitschrift
SingleIssueMagazine. Zustand: Good-. Vol. 26, No. 4. Pulp magazine. Edited by John W. Campbell, Jr. Cover art by Rogers for "Sixth Column" (vt.- "The Day After Tomorrow"; pt. 1 of 3) by Anson MacDonald [Robert A. Heinlein]. Includes "The Mechanical Mice" (novelette) by Maurice G. Hugi; "Doom Ship" (novelette) by Harry Walton; "The Day We Celebrate" by Nelson S. Bond; "The Traitor" by Kurt von Rachen [L. Ron Hubbard]; "Lost Rocket" by Manly Wade Wellman; "The Opportunists" by E. A. Grosser. Articles: "Starting Point" by Norman R. Goldsmith; "Dead- And Embalmed" by Arthur McCann [John W. Campbell, Jr.]. Readers' Departments: "The Editor's Page: Invention"; "In Times to Come"; "Analytical Laboratory"; "Book Review"; "Brass Tacks and Science Discussions". Illustrations by Eron, Kramer, Orban and Schneeman. Dampstained with small losses.
Verlag: Street & Smith, NY, 1941
Magazin / Zeitschrift
SingleIssueMagazine. Zustand: Good. Vol. 28, No. 2. Pulp magazine. Edited by John W. Campbell, Jr. Cover art by Rogers for "By His Bootsraps" (novelette) by Anson MacDonald [Robert A. Heinlein]. Includes "Common Sense" (novelette; sequel to "Universe") by Robert A. Heinlein; "Not Final!" by Isaac Asimov; "Manic Perverse" by Winston K. Marks; "Two percent inspiration" by Theodore Sturgeon. Article: "The Sea King's Armored Division" (conclusion) by L. Sprague de Camp. Readers' Departments: "The Editor's Page: Documents for Tomorrow"; "In Times to Come"; "Analytical Laboratory"; "Brass Tacks". Illustrations by de Camp, Kolliker, Kramer, Orban, and Rogers. Creasing; cover glued on at hinge with tear into cover perprndicular from hinge; inside cover's free edges are taped.creasing; standard wear and tear; minor rear cover stains.
Verlag: Street & Smith, NY, 1941
Magazin / Zeitschrift
Single Issue Magazine. Zustand: Good+ to Very Good-. Vol. 26, No. 6. Pulp magazine. Edited by John W. Campbell, Jr. Cover art by Rogers for "Magic City" (novelette) by Nelson S. Bond. Includes "Trouble on Tantalus" (novelette) by P. Schuyler Miller; "Castaway" by Robert Moore Williams; "-And He Built a Crooked House" by Robert A. Heinlein; "Completely Automatic" by Theodore Sturgeon; "The Best-Laid Scheme" by L. Sprague de Camp; "Sixth Column" (vt.- "The Day After Tomorrow"; pt. 2 of 3) by Anson MacDonald [Robert A. Heinlein]. Articles: "The Klystron" by Stanley R. Short; "Gypped!" by Arthur McCann [John W. Campbell]. Readers' Departments: "The Editor's Page: Invitation"; "In Times to Come"; "Analytical Laboratory"; "Book Review"; "Brass Tacks and Science Discussions". Illustrations by M. Islip, Jack Binder, Schneeman, and Edd Cartier. Edge and corner wear; minor tears and losses; creasing; tanning; rear cover glued on at hinge.
Verlag: Street & Smith, NY, 1942
Magazin / Zeitschrift
SingleIssueMagazine. Zustand: Very Good. Vol. XXIX, No. 6. Bedsheet-sized pulp. Edited by John W. Campbell, Jr. Cover by Rogers for "Waldo" (novel) by Anson MacDonald (Robert A. Heinlein). Includes "Jackdaw" (novelette) by Ross Rocklynne; "Impediment" (novelette) by Hal Clement; "Deadlock" by Lewis Padgett (Henry Kuttner & C. L. Moore); "The Link" by Cleve Cartmill; "Kilgallen's Lunar Agency" by Norman L. Knight. Article: "Bombing Is a Fine Art" by Willy Ley. Readers' Departments: "The Editor's Page: Life As We Know It" by John W. Campbell, Jr.; "In Times to Come"; "Probability Zero"; "Brass Tacks". Illustrated by Kolliker, Orban and Schneeman. Tanning; corner wear; minor nicks and wear; minor stress crack; minor wet spot; light rubbing.
Verlag: Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, New York, 1963
Anbieter: S. Howlett-West Books (Member ABAA), Modesto, CA, USA
Magazin / Zeitschrift Erstausgabe
Magazine. Zustand: Very Good. 1st Edition; 1st Printing. True First Edition - serialized before the hardcover book was issued. Three volumes from Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. All three Volumes are in Very Good condition and were issued without a dust jacket. There is some edge wear, rubbing and wear to the spine ends and edges of the book covers. The July issue has a thin chip out of the foredge of the front cover. The July and September issues have some toning to the top corners of the text pages. ) The text pages are generally clean and bright otherwise. "Samuel R. Delany called the novel "endlessly fascinating" and said that it "maintains a delicacy, a bravura, and a joy". [4] The novel's second half has been praised as intriguing, as it goes into what happens after a typical hero's journey is finished. Oscar is married to a ruler in a situation that should be "happily ever after" and the end of many works, yet the novel continues rather than stops: having nothing to do and nothing new to conquer is itself a struggle for Oscar. A review at SF Site by Peter D. Tillman thought the book was okay, but felt it had aged poorly in parts. While Tillman acknowledged loving the book while younger and it making a good "pulp" read, he felt that it wasted too much time on Heinlein's personal hang-ups and rants, and that the relationship between Oscar and Star was too much puerile wish-fulfillment. " (from Wikipedia).