Why the wide swing in the number of titles in the ISFDB
by year of publication -- 50% jump -- from 1938 to 1939?
It's hard to believe that it reflects a step function in public
interest. The context is as follows:
year 1936 count 4738
1937 4628
1938 4117
1939 6245
1940 6685
1941 5746
1942 5513
Charles Packer wrote:
Why the wide swing in the number of titles in the ISFDB by year ofThere was a bit of a boom in SF magazines about this time. Unknown, for example, was launched in 1939 as were Startling Stories and Planet
publication -- 50% jump -- from 1938 to 1939?
It's hard to believe that it reflects a step function in public
interest. The context is as follows:
year 1936 count 4738 1937 4628 1938 4117 1939 6245 1940 6685 1941
5746 1942 5513
Stories. I presume there were others I don't know about.
Secondary publication and reprints became more popular, as I mentioned elsewhere.
Pohl's two magazines at this time were launched in 1940, too late to
account for the step function, but part of the 39-41 boom which came to
an end due to wartime paper shortages.
William Hyde
Ahasuerus wrote:
On 4/13/2025 3:51 AM, Charles Packer wrote:
Why the wide swing in the number of titles in the ISFDB
by year of publication -- 50% jump -- from 1938 to 1939?
It's hard to believe that it reflects a step function in public
interest. The context is as follows:
year 1936 count 4738
1937 4628
1938 4117
1939 6245
1940 6685
1941 5746
1942 5513
There were only 3 stable science fiction monthlies between mid-1930
and mid-1938, i.e. during the depths of the Great Depression:
*Amazing*, *Astounding* and *Wonder* (*Thrilling Wonder* after 1936.)
Things began to improve in mid-1938 with the launch of *Marvel* and
then the Golden Age really took off in 1939: *Unknown*, *Planet
Stories*, *Captain Future*, *Startling Stories*, *Dynamic*, *Famous
Fantastic Mysteries*, *Science Fiction*/*Future Fiction*, *Strange
Stories*, *Uncanny Tales*, *Marvel Science Stories*, *Fantastic
Adventures*, *Science Fiction Quarterly*, *Super Science Stories*,
*Astonishing Stories*, *Cosmic Stories*, *Fantastic Novels*, *Stirring
Science Stories*. Many of them died or had to scale back in the
aftermath of Pearl Harbor, but the ones that survived made a comeback
after WWII.
Clearly I should have read farther in the thread before replying.
My hat's off to you.
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