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Sci-Fi & Mystery

 

Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine,12 issues-Monthly Each issue of our print publication is packed with new mystery short stories — at least seven, varying in length from short-shorts to novellas — and one "Mystery Classic" — an outstanding tale from the genre's past. Every type of mystery fiction is represented, from the classic whodunit to the hardboiled tale to suspense — and everything in between!

Analog Science Fiction And Fact Magazine,12 issues-Monthly Astounding/Analog (often all-encompassingly just called ASF) is often considered the magazine where science fiction grew up. When editor John W. Campbell took over in 1938, he brought to Astounding an unprecedented insistence on placing equal emphasis on both words of "science fiction." No longer satisfied with gadgetry and action per se, Campbell demanded that his writers try to think out how science and technology might really develop in the future-and, most importantly, how those changes would affect the lives of human beings. The new sophistication soon made Astounding the undisputed leader in the field, and Campbell began to think the old title was too "sensational" to reflect what the magazine was actually doing. He chose "Analog" in part because he thought of each story as an "analog simulation" of a possible future, and in part because of the close analogy he saw between the imagined science in the stories he was publishing and the real science being done in laboratories around the world. Real science and technology have always been important in ASF, not only as the foundation of its fiction, but as the subject of articles about real research with big implications for the future. One story published during World War II described an atomic bomb so accurately-before Hiroshima-that FBI agents visited John Campbell to find out where the leak was. (There was no leak-just attentive, forward-thinking writers!) More recently, many readers first encountered the startling potentials of nanotechnology in these pages, in both fact articles (including one by nanotech pioneer K. Eric Drexler) and fiction.

Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine,12 issues-Monthly Asimov's Science Fiction magazine was created in 1977. In the thirty years since then, we have brought you the best stories in modern science fiction. Its editors have won eighteen Hugo Awards for Best Editor, and for the last several years Asimov's has placed more stories on the Final Hugo Ballot than all of its competitors combined, more than twice as many as its closest competetitor. Asimov's has been called, by bestselling author Robert Silverberg, "a truly distinguished magazine, worthy of being set beside such classics of the earlier golden ages as John W. Campbell's Astounding Science Fiction of 1939-42"; The Austin Chronicle called Asimov's "the most consistently innovative and readable SF magazine on the newsstands today."

Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine,12 issues-Monthly Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine was launched in the fall of 1941 by Lawrence E. Spivak of The Mercury Press (who subsequently founded and hosted the popular TV show Meet the Press). It was heralded as the brainchild of Ellery Queen himself, really the two-cousin writing team of Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee. Even in the early years, however, Frederic Dannay assumed primary responsibility for the magazine, serving as its editor-in-chief from 1941 until his death in 1982. The Ellery Queen tradition of literary excellence and top-notch crime and detective writing continues today. The Readers Encyclopedia of American Literature calls Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine "the finest periodical of its kind." Thanks to its many gifted contributors, EQMM remains where it has always been, on the cutting edge of crime and mystery fiction, offering readers the very best stories being written in the genre anywhere in the world.

Fangoria Magazine,10 issues-Seasonal FANGORIA® was launched in 1979 as a sister publication to the successful STARLOG® magazine. Whereas STARLOG's main focus was in Science-Fiction, FANGORIA was intended to focus largely on the realm of fantasy and horror. The first batch of issues reflected this, with Issue #1 featuring Toho's famed GODZILLA on it's cover, and subsequent issues featuring STAR TREK, THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK and other sci-fi fantasy subjects on their covers. By Issue #7, the FANGORIA we know and love began to truely take shape, with it's heart fully staked by the world of Horror Entertainment. With a cover featuring a now-iconic image of Jack Nicholson in THE SHINING, horror enthusiasts had their interests piqued. Leading the charge into the 1980's and the rise of the slasher film and franchise horror, FANGORIA continued to grow - issuing several compilations of the "BLOODY BEST OF FANGORIA", along with poster magazines, trading cards, and movie-tie-in specials. The FANGORIA name had become synonymous with HORROR. With the rise of genre popularity, competition began creeping in, and FANGORIA was quick to react with spin-offs such as TOXIC HORROR and the fabled GOREZONE. While the spin-off titles and the competing mags didn't last very long, FANGORIA slayed the pack and continued to carry the torch for horror fans everywhere.

Mysteries Magazine,4 issues If you have a voracious appetite for stories of lost treasure, are fascinated by the occult, or savor tales of the unexplained, Mysteries Magazine is for you. Mysteries Magazine is a factual, thought-provoking, in-depth look into the myths, occult and paranormal.

Sci-Fi Magazine,6 issues-BiMonthly The foremost source on all science fiction entertainment, from movies and TV, to online services, games, books and more. Provides exclusive coverage of SCI FI Channel programming, as well as information on the latest blockbuster SCI FI films, and television shows.