- AMAZING STORIES
- 1. The magazine of scientifiction, with whose founding Hugo GERNSBACK announced the existence of sf as a distinct literary species. It was a BEDSHEET-sized PULP MAGAZINE issued monthly by Gernsback's Experimenter Publishing Co. as a companion to SCIENCE AND INVENTION; 1 was dated Apr 1926. The title survived to 1994, having been several times modified in the interim, but it saw great changes. Gernsback lost control of Experimenter in 1929 and it was acquired by B.A.Mackinnon and H.K.Fly, who were almost certainly operating as front-men for Bernarr MACFADDEN. The name of the company was modified more than once, then changed to Radio-Science Publications in 1930, then to Teck Publications in 1931; but these name changes were cosmetic, at least some of the new publishers being in fact Macfadden employees, and Macfadden was himself listed as publisher and owner in December 1931; he did not interfere with his editors. Arthur H.Lynch was named as editor of the May-Oct issues, but Gernsback's assistant T.O'Conor SLOANE, who had stayed with the magazine, soon (Nov 1929) assumed full editorship. The magazine reverted to standard pulp format with the Oct 1933 issue. The title was sold in 1938 to ZIFF-DAVIS, who installed Raymond A.PALMER as editor (June 1938). Palmer adopted a radically different editorial policy, concentrating on action-adventure fiction, much of it mass-produced by a stable of authors using house names. Howard BROWNE became editor in Jan 1950 and the magazine became a DIGEST with the Apr-May 1953 issue. After a brief period with Paul W.FAIRMAN as editor (June 1956-Nov 1958) - during which time the title was changed to Amazing Science Fiction (Mar 1958) and then Amazing Science Fiction Stories (May 1958) - Cele GOLDSMITH took over (Dec 1958), using her married name of Cele Lalli from Aug 1964; she ran the magazine until June 1965, when the title, which had changed back to Amazing Stories in Oct 1960, was sold to Sol Cohen's Ultimate Publishing Co. For some years thereafter the bulk of the magazine's contents consisted of reprints, with Joseph ROSS acting as managing editor (from Aug 1965). Harry HARRISON became editor in Dec 1967, but a period of confusion followed as he handed over to Barry N.MALZBERG in Nov 1968, who was in turn soon replaced by Ted WHITE in May 1969. White eliminated the reprints and remained editor until Oct 1978, when Sol Cohen sold his interest in the magazine to his partner Arthur Bernhard; White's last issue was Feb 1979. Elinor Mavor, using the pseudonym Omar Gohagen (May 1979-Aug 1980) and then her own name, became editor until the Sep 1982 issue. But in March 1982 - by which time it had again become Amazing Science Fiction Stories and had been combined with its long-time companion FANTASTIC (from the Nov 1980 issue) - the title was sold to TSR Hobbies, the marketers of the Dungeons \& Dragons role-playing game (GAMES AND TOYS), who installed George SCITHERS as editor, his first issue being Nov 1982. Scithers was replaced in Sep 1986 by Patrick Lucien Price. AMZ's circulation hit an all-time low in 1984 and recovery was slow, but a surge in sales in 1990 prepared the ground for the magazine to be relaunched in May 1991 in a large-sized slick format, with the original masthead restored. Kim Mohan took over as editor at the time of the image-change, and AMZ once again became monthly rather than bimonthly. Publication was temporarily suspended with the Dec 1993 issue - renamed Winter 1994 - as AMZ was continuing to lose money. It resumed with a Spring 1994 issue, now in digest-format, but only two further digest issues were published that year, the last being marked as Winter 1995. It seems probable that this will prove to be the last issue ever. In its earliest days AMZ used a great many reprints of stories by H.G.WELLS, Jules VERNE and Edgar Allan POE (considered by Gernsback to be the founding fathers of sf) alongside more recent pulp stories by Garrett P.SERVISS, A.MERRITT and Murray LEINSTER. The artwork of Frank R.PAUL was a distinctive feature of the magazine in this period. Original material began to appear in greater quantity in 1928, in which year Miles J.BREUER, David H.KELLER and Jack WILLIAMSON published their first stories in AMZ. SPACE OPERA made a spectacular advent when the first BUCK ROGERS IN THE 25TH CENTURY story, Armageddon 2419 A.D. (1928; 1962) by Philip Francis NOWLAN appeared in the same issue (Aug 1928) that E.E.Doc SMITH's The Skylark of Space (1928: 1946) began serialization. Sloane maintained Gernsback's policy of favouring didactic material that was sometimes rather stilted by pulp-fiction standards, but extravagant serial novels - notably Smith's Skylark Three (1930; 1948), Edmond HAMILTON's The Universe Wreckers (1930) and Jack Williamson's The Green Girl (1930; 1950) - maintained the balance. From 1930 AMZ faced strong competition from ASTOUNDING STORIES, whose higher rates of pay secured its dominance of the market. When Ray Palmer took over the ailing AMZ in 1938 he attempted to boost circulation in several ways. He aimed at a younger audience, obtaining several stories from Edgar Rice BURROUGHS, and ultimately (in the mid-1940s) elected to support a series of PARANOID fantasies by the obsessive Richard S.SHAVER with insinuations that Shaver's theories about evil subterranean forces dominating the world by superscientific means were actually true. However, the bulk of AMZ's contents in the Palmer era consisted of lurid formulaic material by such writers as Don WILCOX, David Wright O'BRIEN and William P.McGivern (1922-1982); Palmer was probably a frequent pseudonymous contributor himself. The fiction-factory system operated by ZIFF-DAVIS reached its height in the mid-1950s when the contents of several of their magazines were produced on a regular basis by a small group of writers including sometime AMZ editor Paul Fairman, Robert SILVERBERG, Randall GARRETT, Harlan ELLISON and Henry SLESAR. This system resulted in some confusion with regard to the correct attribution of several floating PSEUDONYMS, especially Ivar JORGENSEN. Few stories of note appeared under the first three Ziff-Davis editors, although Edmond Hamilton, Nelson BOND and Walter M.MILLER were occasional contributors. Under Cele Goldsmith's editorship AMZ improved dramatically, publishing good work by many leading authors. Notable contributions included Marion Zimmer BRADLEY's first Darkover novella, The Planet Savers (Nov 1958; 1962 dos), Harlan Ellison's first sf novel, The Sound of the Scythe (Oct 1959; rev as The Man with Nine Lives 1960 dos), and Roger ZELAZNY's NEBULA-winning He Who Shapes (Jan-Feb 1965; exp as THE DREAM MASTER 1966). Zelazny was one of several writers whose careers were aided in their early stages by Goldsmith; others include Ben BOVA (who did a series of science articles), David R.BUNCH, Thomas M.DISCH, Ursula K.LE GUIN and Robert F.YOUNG. When Ted White became editor he renewed the attempt to maintain a consistent standard of quality; although handicapped by having to offer a word-rate payment considerably less than that of his competitors, he achieved some degree of success. The special 50th-anniversary issue which he compiled appeared two months late (it bears the date June 1976) owing to scheduling difficulties. AMZ's continued survival during the next 15 years was something of a surprise, given its poor sales, though Scithers in particular made considerable efforts to maintain its literary quality. Patrick Lucien Price published good work, too, by such writers as Gregory BENFORD and Paul J.MCAULEY, and also new writers like Paul Di Filippo, but the magazine seemed to receive almost no promotion. The new slick packaging from 1991 was much more attractive than any of AMZ's previous incarnations, and arguably the most attractive of any sf magazine. Alas, it proved to be not commercially viable and by Dec 1994 AMZhad subsided into what may be suspended animation but is more probably death. AMZ had three UK reprint editions, 1946 (1 undated issue, pulp), 1950-53 (24 undated issues, pulp) and 1953-4 (8 undated issues, digest). Anthologies based on AMZ stories include The Best of Amazing (anth 1967) ed Joseph Ross, The Best from Amazing Stories (anth 1973) ed Ted White, Amazing Stories: 60 Years of the Best Science Fiction (anth 1985) ed Isaac ASIMOV and Martin H.GREENBERG, Amazing Stories: Vision of Other Worlds (anth 1986) ed Greenberg, and a number of others ed Greenberg.2. US tv series (vt Steven Spielberg's Amazing Stories) (1985-7). Amblin/Universal for NBC. Created by Steven SPIELBERG. Producers included Joshua Brand, John Falsey, David E.Vogel. Writers included Spielberg, Frank Deese, Richard Christian MATHESON, Mick Garris, Joseph Minion, Menno Meyjes, Michael McDowell, Paul Bartel. Directors included Spielberg, Robert Zemeckis, Peter Hyams, Burt Reynolds, Clint Eastwood, Joe DANTE, Martin Scorsese, Paul Bartel, Irvin Kershner, Danny DeVito, Tom Holland, Tobe Hooper. Two seasons, each of 22 25min episodes. An ambitious attempt to revive the 1950s-60s anthology format - which came at the same time as actual revivals of The TWILIGHT ZONE (1985-7) and Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1985-6), and a few competitors like The Hitch Hiker (1983-6) and Tales from the Darkside (1984-7) - this was less an sf series than its pulp-derived title suggested, more often going for the blend of fantasy and sentiment found in the less scary episodes of the original Twilight Zone. Kept afloat for two years through NBC having committed themselves - astonishingly - to 44 episodes from the very beginning, AS, despite its large budget and the unusually strong directing talent Spielberg was able to attract (Eastwood, Zemeckis, Scorsese, Bartel, etc.), was unsuccessful. Many disappointed viewers and critics felt that Spielberg had stretched himself too thin, as had Rod SERLING with Twilight Zone, by generating the often fragile storylines for the bulk of the episodes (16 out of 22 in the first season); one such projected episode looked even more fragile when expanded into a feature, BATTERIES NOT INCLUDED (1987). Too many of the stories, despite good special effects and performances, led nowhere. Typical of AS's uneven tone was the extended Spielberg-directed episode The Mission, a 50min WWII-bomber anecdote presciently cast (Kevin Costner, Kiefer Sutherland) and suspensefully directed, but sinking limply into a ludicrous and irritating fantasy finale. AS did have surprises - the gritty cartoon episode The Family Dog, designed by Tim Burton, being perhaps the overall highlight - but mainly it expressed the diminishing-return whimsy that was beginning to affect even Spielberg's big-screen work. Three episodes - The Mission, Mummy, Daddy and Go to the Head of the Class - were released together as a feature film, Amazing Stories (1987), outside the USA, and many other episodes have been released in groups of three on videotape. The versions of individual episodes are collected in Steven Spielberg's Amazing Stories (anth 1986) and Volume II of Steven Spielberg's Amazing Stories (anth 1986), both ed Steven Bauer.
Science Fiction and Fantasy Encyclopedia. Academic. 2011.