Fantasy & Science Fiction: 1967 - Volume 32, #1 - #6 (6 issues)
Six issues of Fantasy & Science Fiction magazine (Volume 32, issues #1 - #6) ranging from very fine to excellent condition. There is an expected level of wear and tear but these lively magazines are in excellent condition given their vintage.
Featuring 'The Little People' by John Christopher, 'Right Beneath Your Feet' by Isaac Asimov, 'Kingdom Come, Inc' by Robert F. Young, 'The Disenchanted Symphony' by James Huneker, 'The Hall of the Dead' by Robert E. Howard & L. Sprague de Camp, 'The Song of the Morrow' by Robert Louis Stevenson, 'Blackmail' by Fred Hoyle, 'Relic' by Mack Reynolds, 'The Investor' by Bruce Jay Friedman, 'Dawn' by Roger Zelazny, 'Problems Of Creativeness' by Thomas M. Disch, 'Randy's Syndrome' by Brian W. Aldiss, 'Planetoid Idiot' by Phyllis Gotlieb, 'Fifteen Miles' by Ben Bova, 'Sleeping Beauty' by Terry Carr, 'A Discovery in the Woods' by Graham Greene, 'Gentlemen, Be Seated' by Charles Beaumont and many more.
Featuring covers by John Brian Francis "Jack" Gaughan who was an American science fiction artist and illustrator and multiple winner of the Hugo Award in the category of Best Professional Artist. Dwight Graydon "Gray" Morrow was an American illustrator of comics, magazine covers and paperback books. He is co-creator of the Marvel Comics muck-monster the Man-Thing and of DC Comics Old West vigilante El Diablo. Chesley Knight Bonestell Jr, dubbed the "Father of Modern Space art" was a pioneering creator of astronomical art, his paintings inspired the American space program, and remain influential in science fiction art and illustration. Ron Walotsky, an American science fiction and fantasy artist who studied at the School of Visual Arts, he began a long and prolific career painting book and magazine covers starting with the May 1967 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction.
The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (usually referred to as F&SF) is a U.S. fantasy and science fiction magazine, first published in 1949 by Mystery House, a subsidiary of Lawrence Spivak's Mercury Press. The first issue was titled The Magazine of Fantasy, but the decision was quickly made to include science fiction as well as fantasy, and the title was changed correspondingly with the second issue. F&SF was quite different in presentation from the existing science fiction magazines of the day, most of which were in pulp format: it had no interior illustrations, no letter column, and text in a single-column format. F&SF quickly became one of the leading magazines in the science fiction and fantasy fields, with a reputation for publishing literary material and including more diverse stories than its competitors.
Publisher: Fantasy House Inc., 1967 (Out of Print)
Number of pages: 130
Format: Soft Cover
Size: 6" x 8" (140mm x 195mm)
Code: FANTSF1967A