Uncanny Stories (magazine): Difference between revisions

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The Goodmans' magazines included several "weird-menace" pulps — a genre known for incorporating sex and sadism, with story lines that placed women in danger, usually because of a threat that appeared to be supernatural but was ultimately revealed to be the work of a human villain. The influence of the "sex and sadism" side of the Goodman's portfolio of magazines was apparent in Marvel Science Stories: it was not strictly a weird-menace pulp, but authors were sometimes asked to add more sex to their stories than was usual in the science fiction field at the time.
The Goodmans' magazines included several "weird-menace" pulps — a genre known for incorporating sex and sadism, with story lines that placed women in danger, usually because of a threat that appeared to be supernatural but was ultimately revealed to be the work of a human villain. The influence of the "sex and sadism" side of the Goodman's portfolio of magazines was apparent in Marvel Science Stories: it was not strictly a weird-menace pulp, but authors were sometimes asked to add more sex to their stories than was usual in the science fiction field at the time.


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Revision as of 22:11, 28 August 2020

Uncanny Stories
UncannyTales.jpg
Cover for May
Editor Martin Goodman
Publisher Manvis Publications, Inc.
Language English
First year April, 1939
Last issue May ,1940

Uncanny Tales was an American pulp science fiction magazine that ran from April 1939 to May 1940. Published by Martin Goodman under the "Manvis Publications, Inc." imprint. It should not be confused with Goodman's publication "Uncanny Stories".

The Goodmans' magazines included several "weird-menace" pulps — a genre known for incorporating sex and sadism, with story lines that placed women in danger, usually because of a threat that appeared to be supernatural but was ultimately revealed to be the work of a human villain. The influence of the "sex and sadism" side of the Goodman's portfolio of magazines was apparent in Marvel Science Stories: it was not strictly a weird-menace pulp, but authors were sometimes asked to add more sex to their stories than was usual in the science fiction field at the time.

Science fiction pulp magazines

See also: Internet Speculative Fiction Database and Gillian Archives
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