jimjum12 Posted May 25, 2021 Share Posted May 25, 2021 That's one of my favorite Lovecraft's. Here's mine ... part 1 and 2. GOD BLESS.... -jimbo(a friend of jesus) bc, RedFury and OtherEric 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post OtherEric Posted May 26, 2021 Popular Post Share Posted May 26, 2021 Jumping past my copy of the July 1941 Weird Tales, since @jimjum12just posted his nice copy. Here's the October 1941 Famous Fantastic Mysteries, with a reprint of "The Colour Out of Space", which at least gets equal billing on the cover even if the gorgeous Finlay art is for the other story. jimjum12, Scrooge, Sarg and 2 others 4 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jimjum12 Posted May 26, 2021 Share Posted May 26, 2021 (edited) This one has "The Music Of Erich Zann" .... from the honorable Dave Smith. Ol' Stan Lee made use of versions of that storyline a couple of times. GOD BLESS... -jimbo(a friend of jesus) Edited May 26, 2021 by jimjum12 bc, OtherEric and RedFury 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OtherEric Posted May 27, 2021 Share Posted May 27, 2021 January 1942 Weird Tales, with a reprint of "The Shadow Over Innsmouth". This issue is more famous for the Canadian version, which came out in May 1942 with largely the same contents... but a new cover actually featuring the Lovecraft story, one of only four pulps with the Lovecraft story as the cover. bc and asimovpulps 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jimjum12 Posted May 27, 2021 Share Posted May 27, 2021 23 minutes ago, OtherEric said: January 1942 Weird Tales, with a reprint of "The Shadow Over Innsmouth". This issue is more famous for the Canadian version, which came out in May 1942 with largely the same contents... but a new cover actually featuring the Lovecraft story, one of only four pulps with the Lovecraft story as the cover. Mileage varies with Lovecraft, depending on who you ask, but Shadow is one of my very, very favorites. Seeing the title on the cover elevates the appeal to me. I didn't read Lovecraft until my 20's and then, thirty years later I rediscovered Lovecraft at the Public Library and it was like I had never read the stories .... The same thing happened with REH except I began him in my very early teens. Same with ERB, which explains a lot about why Pulps attracted me in the first place. I grew up loving this sort of literature ... but can't say that a little Alistar McClain wasn't also eagerly devoured. GOD BLESS... -jimbo(a friend of jesus) bc, OtherEric, IngelsFan and 1 other 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
50YrsCollctngCmcs Posted May 28, 2021 Share Posted May 28, 2021 6 hours ago, jimjum12 said: Mileage varies with Lovecraft, depending on who you ask, but Shadow is one of my very, very favorites. Seeing the title on the cover elevates the appeal to me. I didn't read Lovecraft until my 20's and then, thirty years later I rediscovered Lovecraft at the Public Library and it was like I had never read the stories .... The same thing happened with REH except I began him in my very early teens. Same with ERB, which explains a lot about why Pulps attracted me in the first place. I grew up loving this sort of literature ... but can't say that a little Alistar McClain wasn't also eagerly devoured. GOD BLESS... -jimbo(a friend of jesus) I read Lovecraft of the bus to my high school in my teens. Then sort of forgot about it as well and in the last few years have read a number of anthologies. Shadow over Innsmouth was my favorite of those tales! I'd love to see the Canadian variant cover for that!! bc 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post OtherEric Posted May 28, 2021 Popular Post Share Posted May 28, 2021 3 hours ago, 50YrsCollctngCmcs said: I read Lovecraft of the bus to my high school in my teens. Then sort of forgot about it as well and in the last few years have read a number of anthologies. Shadow over Innsmouth was my favorite of those tales! I'd love to see the Canadian variant cover for that!! Swiped from the internet. Not my copy. 50YrsCollctngCmcs, bc, jimjum12 and 2 others 4 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IngelsFan Posted May 28, 2021 Share Posted May 28, 2021 49 minutes ago, OtherEric said: Swiped from the internet. Not my copy. Heritage sold the original art for this cover a few years back. asimovpulps, jimjum12 and OtherEric 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OtherEric Posted May 28, 2021 Share Posted May 28, 2021 With the March 1942 Weird Tales, they start reprinting "Herbert West: Reanimator". I don't quite want to call how they do it serialization... It takes them almost two years to get through the six parts of the story. They were really just throwing it in when they had room, as near as I can tell. I'm not sure if this counts as the first professional publication of the story, because I'm still very fuzzy on what exactly "Home Brew" was. I've seen it called an amateur publication, but I've also heard Lovecraft wrote the story to demand for the editor. But the payment was supposedly only $5 a chapter, which seems low even for short chapters in 1922. The few covers I've seen look far more professional than most amateur publications of the era. I suspect it was what we would now call a semi-prozine. Anybody here have a copy they could share? bc 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OtherEric Posted May 29, 2021 Share Posted May 29, 2021 July 1942 Weird Tales, with part 2 of "Herbert West: Reanimator". I've always thought this was one of the better 40's Brundage covers. jimjum12, comicjack and bc 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sarg Posted May 29, 2021 Share Posted May 29, 2021 On 5/28/2021 at 12:30 PM, OtherEric said: With the March 1942 Weird Tales, they start reprinting "Herbert West: Reanimator". I don't quite want to call how they do it serialization... It takes them almost two years to get through the six parts of the story. They were really just throwing it in when they had room, as near as I can tell. I'm not sure if this counts as the first professional publication of the story, because I'm still very fuzzy on what exactly "Home Brew" was. I've seen it called an amateur publication, but I've also heard Lovecraft wrote the story to demand for the editor. But the payment was supposedly only $5 a chapter, which seems low even for short chapters in 1922. The few covers I've seen look far more professional than most amateur publications of the era. I suspect it was what we would now call a semi-prozine. Anybody here have a copy they could share? $5.00 in 1922 is about $80 in today's dollars. Home Brew was not an amateur publication, otherwise they would not have paid anything. It was a short-lived, regionally-distributed magazine. jimjum12 and OtherEric 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post OtherEric Posted May 30, 2021 Popular Post Share Posted May 30, 2021 (edited) 18 hours ago, Sarg said: $5.00 in 1922 is about $80 in today's dollars. Home Brew was not an amateur publication, otherwise they would not have paid anything. It was a short-lived, regionally-distributed magazine. Thank you; "regionally distributed" makes a lot more sense than anything else I've ever heard about the title. Today's book: Weird Tales from November 1942, with part four of "Herbert West: Reanimator"; I don't have part three yet. This book is something of a passing of the torch. As Weird Tales runs out of Lovecraft to publish, this issue introduces their great discovery of the 1940's: This has the first story by Ray Bradbury in the series, only his second professional publication and the first credited just to him. (Apparently Henry Kuttner provided some uncredited assistance on the story.) Edited May 30, 2021 by OtherEric bc, RedFury, asimovpulps and 2 others 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
50YrsCollctngCmcs Posted May 31, 2021 Share Posted May 31, 2021 8 hours ago, OtherEric said: Thank you; "regionally distributed" makes a lot more sense than anything else I've ever heard about the title. Today's book: Weird Tales from November 1942, with part four of "Herbert West: Reanimator"; I don't have part three yet. This book is something of a passing of the torch. As Weird Tales runs out of Lovecraft to publish, this issue introduces their great discovery of the 1940's: This has the first story by Ray Bradbury in the series, only his second professional publication and the first credited just to him. (Apparently Henry Kuttner provided some uncredited assistance on the story.) Interesting to view Lovecraft as passing the torch to Bradbury! I also see Fritz Leiber here; did they publish his Fafhrd and Gray Mouser tales in Weird Tales? Thanks for posting all these great pulps; fun stuff. OtherEric 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OtherEric Posted May 31, 2021 Share Posted May 31, 2021 4 hours ago, 50YrsCollctngCmcs said: Interesting to view Lovecraft as passing the torch to Bradbury! I also see Fritz Leiber here; did they publish his Fafhrd and Gray Mouser tales in Weird Tales? Thanks for posting all these great pulps; fun stuff. Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser first appeared in the August 1939 issue of UNKNOWN, I don't believe they ever had any Weird Tales appearances. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OtherEric Posted May 31, 2021 Share Posted May 31, 2021 September 1943 Weird Tales, with part 5 of Herbert West: Reanimator finally showing up nearly a year after part 4. Reanimator holds a weird place in Lovecraft's body of work: It's generally regarded as one of his least successful stories by Lovecraft fans, but because of the movies it's one of his best known ones by people who haven't read that much by him. bc 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
50YrsCollctngCmcs Posted May 31, 2021 Share Posted May 31, 2021 12 hours ago, OtherEric said: Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser first appeared in the August 1939 issue of UNKNOWN, I don't believe they ever had any Weird Tales appearances. Interesting; I was not familiar with that title. Also fun to note L. Ron Hubbard had a story before he converted his sci-fi tales to a religion! Years ago there was a great article in the LA Times (or it may have been the Pasadena Weekly) about his pre-religious days here in the Pasadena area where he was hanging around a bunch of the rocket scientists at CalTech and what became JPL. A fascinating story. I had a collection of Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser in paperback form on my bookshelf for decades and never read it until these Covid days. I really enjoyed it and picked up the Sword and Sorcery collection in trade paperback afterwards. Thanks for posting! OtherEric 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
50YrsCollctngCmcs Posted May 31, 2021 Share Posted May 31, 2021 1 hour ago, OtherEric said: September 1943 Weird Tales, with part 5 of Herbert West: Reanimator finally showing up nearly a year after part 4. Reanimator holds a weird place in Lovecraft's body of work: It's generally regarded as one of his least successful stories by Lovecraft fans, but because of the movies it's one of his best known ones by people who haven't read that much by him. The reanimator was one of the tales in the Penquin collection of Lovecraft I picked up; I actually enjoyed that story quite a bit despite its debt to Frankenstein. OtherEric and jimjum12 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OtherEric Posted June 1, 2021 Share Posted June 1, 2021 November 1943 Weird Tales, with part 6 of "Herbert West: Reanimator". This is the last time Weird Tales (or at least the original run) prints a Lovecraft story that hadn't previously appeared in the magazine. bc 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
50YrsCollctngCmcs Posted June 1, 2021 Share Posted June 1, 2021 Did Weird Tales ever change their format to a digest to survive? Or did it end as a true pulp magazine? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RedFury Posted June 1, 2021 Author Share Posted June 1, 2021 31 minutes ago, 50YrsCollctngCmcs said: Did Weird Tales ever change their format to a digest to survive? Or did it end as a true pulp magazine? It did change to digest sized. The last 7 issues, from late 1954 into late 1954 are digests. 50YrsCollctngCmcs and OtherEric 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...