- BOYS' PAPERS
- Although boys' papers could easily be dismissed as being of negligible literary value, perhaps unjustly since Upton SINCLAIR and other eminent writers found their footing there, they played an important role in the HISTORY OF SF in the last three decades of the 19th century and the early years of the 20th century by creating a potential readership for the SF MAGAZINES and by anticipating many GENRE-SF themes.The prevailing style of US boys' papers was largely set in the 1870s and after by periodicals such as The Boys of New York and Golden Hours, which published serialized novels similar and often identical to those in dime-novel format (that is, one single short novel per issue); these are discussed in detail under DIME-NOVEL SF. Since US boys' papers were rare after WWI - American Boy was an exception (Carl CLAUDY) - the current discussion is UK-oriented.Some sf did appear quite early in UK boys' papers. W.S. HAYWARD's novel Up in the Air and Down in the Sea (1865) was serialized c1863-5 in Henry Vickers's Boy's Journal, as were its sequels. Nonetheless, the major impetus towards boys' sf in the UK came from abroad. Jules VERNE appeared in UK periodicals with Hector Servadac (trans 1877 Good Things; 1878), The Steam House (trans 1880-81 Union Jack; 1881) and 16 other serializations in The Boys' Own Paper. Andre LAURIE was represented with "A Marvellous Conquest: A Tale of the Bayouda" (1888; trans 1889 The Boys' Own Paper; vt The Conquest of the Moon: A Story of the Bayouda, 1889), and US dime novels from the FRANK READE LIBRARY were reprinted in The Aldine Romance of Invention, Travel and Adventure Library.UK authors soon followed this lead with a variety of themes. Several interplanetary adventures appeared in the mid-1890s in The Marvel and elsewhere; e.g., "In Trackless Space" (1902 The Union Jack) by George C. WALLIS, later a contributor to the sf pulps. LOST WORLDS were prominent, notably Sidney Drew's Wings of Gold (1903-4 The Boy's Herald; 1908) and the works of Fenton Ash (Frank AUBREY). World DISASTER appeared in "Doom" (1912 The Dreadnought), a vehicle capable of travel through the Earth in "Kiss, Kiss, the Beetle" (1913, Fun and Fiction), and an early SUPERMAN in "Vengeance of Mars" (1912 Illustrated Chips).Overriding all these themes was the future- WAR story, previously a minor genre - and remaining so in US boys' fiction - but encouraged obsessively in the UK by Lord Northcliffe, head of Amalgamated Press. Between 1901 and the outbreak of WWI in 1914, numerous warnings of imminent INVASION were published, foremost among them the works of John Tregellis, who contributed Britain Invaded (1906 The Boy's Friend; 1910), Britain at Bay (1906-7 The Boy's Friend; 1910), Kaiser or King? (1912 The Boy's Friend; 1913) and others.When WWI did finally break out, many papers folded, but they were replaced shortly after the Armistice by new periodicals firmly rooted in the 20th century. Among these was Pluck; subtitled "The Boy's Wireless Adventure Weekly", it published several sf stories linked by the common theme of radio. Among its stories were Lester Bidston's The Radio Planet (1923; 1926) and the first UK publication (1923) of Edgar Rice BURROUGHS's At the Earth's Core (1914 All-Story Weekly; 1922); the latter contributed to the publication of Edgar WALLACE's Planetoid 127 (1924 The Mechanical Boy; 1929) and adaptations of various stories in Sax ROHMER's Fu Manchu series (1923-4 Chums). Notable among the many other stories published were Leslie BERESFORD's "War of Revenge" (1922 The Champion), an account of a German attack on the UK in 1956 using guided missiles, Frank H. Shaw's world-catastrophe novel "When the Sea Rose Up" (1923-4 Chums) and Eric Wood's DYSTOPIA The Jungle Men: A Tale of 2923 AD (1923-4 The Boy's Friend; 1927).Most popular of all were the SPACE OPERAS then appearing in Boy's Magazine (first published 1922). Typical was Raymond Quiex's "The War in Space" (1926), which was very reminiscent of the 1930s PULP MAGAZINES with its story of ASTEROIDS drawn from orbit and hurled as missiles towards Earth, manmade webs of metal hanging in space, domed cities on strange planets and giant insects stalking the surface of hostile worlds. Many similar stories appeared: time machines, androids, titanic war machines, robot armies and matter transmitters became commonplace.When Boy's Magazine folded in 1934, its place was taken three weeks later by SCOOPS, the first UK all-sf periodical. In spite of its capable editor, Haydn Dimmock, and contributions by John Russell FEARN, Maurice Hugi and A.M. LOW, Scoops folded after only 20 issues.Adult sf magazines were available in the UK, both native and reprint, to fill the temporary gap left by the demise of Scoops - and COMIC books made their appearance in the later 1930s - but boys' papers continued to introduce young readers to sf concepts: Modern Boy with the CAPTAIN JUSTICE series that influenced a youthful Brian W. ALDISS, Modern Wonder with serializations of John WYNDHAM and W.J. Passingham, and The Sexton Blake Library, with pseudonymous contributions by E.C. TUBB and Michael MOORCOCK, are among the titles of the next few decades.Sf continued until more recently to play a role in boys' papers, with content modified to suit the times. In 1976, for example, an anonymous adaptation - as "Kids Rule, OK" - in Action of Dave WALLIS's Only Lovers Left Alive (1964) proved so violent that public outcry led to temporary suspension of the paper; in retrospect, the adaptation can be seen as a forerunner to such modern favourites as JUDGE DREDD.JE
Science Fiction and Fantasy Encyclopedia. Academic. 2011.