The Moon Terror & Other Stories

The Moon Terror & Other Stories 1927

The Moon Terror & Other Stories is a hardcover collection of four early stories from Weird Tales magazine from its first year of publication (1923). It was issued in 1927 by the publisher of Weird Tales.

Since its initial publication in as a two-part serial in 1923, readers of Weird Tales had sent in letters making repeated requests asking for the short novel The Moon Terror to be reprinted. Unfortunately, by the time the publishers finally got around to reprinting the story in book form in this collection in 1927, interest in The Moon Terror had waned (one factor being that Amazing Stories had come into existence in 1926 and was publishing similar SF horror tales).

So despite the publisher’s initial great hopes for The Moon Terror & Other Stories, the book proved to be a fiasco. It took years for it to sell out despite being peddled for $1.50 a copy in Weird Tales (usually in a prominent back cover ad) on into the 1930s. It was eventually given away free with a subscription to the magazine to try to dispose of the unsold copies.

This entire book can be downloaded here.

Off On A Comet

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Amazing Stories April 1926
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Off On A Comet, or Hector Servadac is a little-known Jules Verne novel, and a rather odd choice for the cover of this, the very first issue of Amazing Stories. Of course, the editors of Amazing Stories were great fans of Verne, as can be seen on the Contents page and in the introductory essay.

This entire issue can be downloaded here

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Scientifiction

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Before we settled on Science Fiction, people trying to categorize science-based fiction stories used a number of terms, including “Scientific Romance” and my personal favorite “Scientifiction”

The word Scientifiction was coined by Hugo Gernsback, the editor of Amazing Stories magazine.

Writing in 1928, he said, “When I coined the word “Scientifiction” in 1915, I knew that sometime or other it was bound to become popular, and I even cherished a secret hope that someday it might appear in a standard dictionary. In any event, “scientifiction” is a word that will grow with the added years. As science advances, scientifiction will advance and flourish. No one of to-day can even dimly foresee what it may produce. There was a time when science made scientifiction. The time has already come when scientifiction makes science. The author who works out a brand new idea in a scientifiction plot may be hailed as an original inventor years later, when his brain-child will have taken wings and when cold-blooded scientists will have realized the author’s ambitions.”

“The thought occurred to me, therefore, that what scientifiction needs at present is some sort of a label — and emblem, or a trade-mark, so to speak. Scientifiction is too good a thing to just be used as a word in mere letters. It should have a dignity, and the idea itself of scientifiction should have its own crest, henceforth.”

The cover illustration is Gernsback’s conception of a symbol for “Scientifiction.” A contest for a better symbol was announced on p.5 .

This complete issue can be downloaded here.

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