Startling Stories Year 1951 Magazine Back Issues
19391940194119421943194419451946194719481949195019511952195319541955
- Featuring Passport To Jupiter
- A Novel Of Tomorrow By Raymond Z. Gallun
- Moon Of The Unforgotten
- A Captain Future Novelet By Edmond Hamilton
- Featuring The Starmen Of Llyrdis
- A Novel Of Galactic Adventure By Leigh Brackett
- Earthmen No More A Captain Future Novelet By Edmond Hamilton
- The Seed From Space
- A Novel Of Earth's Strangest Invasion By Fletcher Pratt
- Letters Of Fire
- A Fantasy Of Hollywood Gone Haywire By Matt Lee
- Featuring The Dark Tower
- A Novel That Pierces The Future By Wallace West
- The Woman Fro Altair
- A Spaceman Takes A Wife By Leigh Brackett
- House Of Many Worlds
- A Novel Of Alien Earth By Sam Merwin, Jr.
- This Way To Mars By William Campbell Gault
- Featuring The Star Watchers
- An Interplanetary Novel By Eric Frank Russell
- The Gamblers A Novelet By M. Reynolds And F Brown
19391940194119421943194419451946194719481949195019511952195319541955
Startling Stories was an American pulp science fiction magazine, published from 1939 to 1955 by publisher Ned Pines' Standard Magazines. It was initially edited by Mort Weisinger, who was also the editor of Thrilling Wonder Stories, Standard's other science fiction title. Startling ran a lead novel in every issue; the first was The Black Flame by Stanley G. Weinbaum. When Standard Magazines acquired Thrilling Wonder in 1936, it also gained the rights to stories published in that magazine's predecessor, Wonder Stories, and selections from this early material were reprinted in Startling as "Hall of Fame" stories. Under Weisinger the magazine focused on younger readers and, when Weisinger was replaced by Oscar J. Friend in 1941, the magazine became even more juvenile in focus, with clichéd cover art and letters answered by a "Sergeant Saturn". Friend was replaced by Sam Merwin Jr. in 1945, and Merwin was able to improve the quality of the fiction substantially, publishing Arthur C. Clarke's Against the Fall of Night, and several other well-received stories.