Startling Stories Year 1953 Magazine Back Issues
19391940194119421943194419451946194719481949195019511952195319541955
- Today's Science Fiction-Tomorrow's Fact
- Featuring Double Meaning A Novel By Damon Knight
- And Overdrive A Novelet By Murray Leinster
- Today's Science Fiction-Tomorrow's Fact
- A Thrilling Publication
- Featuring Troubled Star
- A Novel By George O. Smith
- Today's Science Fiction-Tomorrow's Fact
- A Thrilling Publication
- Featuring Centaurus A Novel By Sam Merwin Jr.
- And The Shore Of Tomorrow By Chad Oliver
- Today's Science Fiction-Tomorrow's Fact
- Featuring Halos, Inc. A Novel By Kendell Foster Crossen
- And An Article By Willy Ley
- Today's Science Fiction-Tomorrow's Fact
- Featuring The Conditioned Captain
- A Novel By Fletcher Pratt
- And We Breathe For You A Novelet By Noel Loomis
- Today's Science Fiction-Tomorrow's Fact
- A Thrilling Publication
- Featuring Moth And Rust
- A Sequel To The Lovers
- Today's Science Fiction-Tomorrow's Fact
- Featuring Journey To Misenum A Novel By Sam Merwin Jr.
- And The Wages Of Synergy By Theodore Sturgeon
- Today's Science Fiction-Tomorrow's Fact
- Featuring Overdrive
- A Novelet By Murray Leinster
- Today's Science Fiction-Tomorrow's Fact
- Featuring The White Widows A Novel By Sam Merwin, Jr.
- Also Edmond Hamilton, Murray Leinster And Others...
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.