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- * Amazing Stories is now complete. * Thrilling Wonder Stories is now complete.3 KB (449 words) - 13:45, 16 April 2006
- ||''Amazing Stories'' ||104 ||''Jungle Stories'' ||104 KB (391 words) - 21:43, 13 September 2022
- * Indexed 46 issues of Amazing Stories (Data thanks to Dan Kurdilla). * Added a page for Startling Stories, which is completely indexed from 1939 through 1948, with good coverage els3 KB (491 words) - 13:53, 16 April 2006
- '''Finished''' I'm entering and verifying Amazing and Astounding up 1950, and F&SF up to the present. I'm jumping back and fo ...fties undone for now. Astounding on hold, while continuing on with Amazing Stories 1960's up. Doing secondary verification of Fantastic per request.--[[User:R10 KB (1,533 words) - 18:25, 31 May 2022
- ==Amazing Stories== ==Startling Stories==9 KB (1,272 words) - 11:48, 30 December 2020
- | [[Series:Air Wonder Stories|Air Wonder Stories]] | Amazing Detective Stories (1931) - see [[Magazine:Amazing Detective Tales|Amazing Detective Tales]]112 KB (15,145 words) - 18:22, 31 May 2022
- ...2343 of them new. Next up: the 1623 anthologies (with roughly 15,000 short stories) in the NESFA database. ...1-1966) of Amazing Stories and made a first pass at completing the Amazing Stories publication table.20 KB (3,157 words) - 14:19, 16 April 2006
- * [[Fanzine:Amateur Science Stories|Amateur Science Stories]] (1937-1938) * [[Fanzine:Amazing Experiences|Amazing Experiences]]14 KB (1,676 words) - 18:23, 25 March 2017
- ...ctly how they're credited. There are a couple dozen more folktales and old stories ... Yes, the house names make up 85% of it, but the rest needs checking. -- ...stories, and indexed their entire contents without indicating which of the stories weren't actually speculative. Other writers then copied from them when crea153 KB (25,708 words) - 03:05, 14 May 2020
- ...://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?DYNSSFEB1939 this issue of Dynamic Science Stories]. It contains a serial that was later (1966) reprinted in book form. The en .../53 through Feb/59 don't credit the editors in their biblios. For Amazing Stories, the problem starts with Jul/39 when the editor chages to R. A. Palmer and40 KB (6,314 words) - 20:31, 20 August 2009
- || Stupefying Stories Showcase ...archive.org/web/20130109153910/http://www.thisishorror.co.uk/fiction/short-stories/more-than-once-a-year-by-lee-davis/ 2012-12-24]100 KB (11,383 words) - 19:17, 25 November 2018
- ...k form. Related to this is that you would append "(Complete Novel)" to the stories' title. If you do a title search for "(Complete Novel)" you will see there' ...lready seen works divided into both X and Y parts, particularly with large stories reprinted in paperback form where some publishers will divide it in two pap124 KB (21,154 words) - 17:19, 17 December 2015
- ...Note that the "single-author" can be a collaboration: e.g. a collection of stories by Frederik Pohl and C.M. Kornbluth would qualify as a collection. However, ...ather jumbled attempt to explain why publications containing collaborative stories should also be typed as COLLECTION. I propose:227 KB (36,842 words) - 17:29, 17 December 2015
- ...ries. Again, written by the same author -- and in fact, they are brand new stories. For the sake of completeness of series, I think it would be good to includ ...e multiple different stories/novels within the same publication. Those two stories would belong to title records with the appropriate languages, and one would212 KB (35,169 words) - 17:27, 17 December 2015
- however the book itself is a novel. No TOC, no page heading for stories etc. If we use collection for fixups many of the classic novels become coll ...ents area. I think that's a reasonable approach since listing the original stories in the Contents are may confuse our users. However, I see that we don't hav206 KB (35,390 words) - 17:20, 17 December 2015
- ...does not open it for the ones that are in their universes but are original stories. ...e said "It opens the door for the ones which are adaptations of the actual stories/novels that are published in text format" then that would also include the231 KB (38,975 words) - 12:44, 29 June 2022
- ...ry issue. And there's the problem of really long-running magazines, like ''Amazing''. So, I think it's better to restrict the exception to magazines that are ...of italicizing publication names (but not normally lesser works like short stories which are not published by themselves). That said, I would like to propose246 KB (40,297 words) - 20:05, 26 September 2017
- ...ometimes decades after the fact. Think of the Verne and Wells serials in ''Amazing'' in the late 1920s or the reprint digests of the 1960s/early 1970s. [[User ==Fixups vs. Collections of linked stories vs. Omnibuses==168 KB (27,880 words) - 17:18, 17 December 2015
- ...(and/or collections/anthologies) which has some stories in between - these stories are part of the series but they are not in the main sequential numbers (see :::* Series where the stories are in the place of novels (such as [http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pe.cgi?36225 KB (36,311 words) - 12:24, 12 April 2021
- ...k at {{T|1197}}, we see the first publication of the title was the Amazing Stories serialization. So the broader question really is, should the title's date ...lps group related Serial records together. The later can be important when stories have been serialized multiple times, especially when one or more serializat478 KB (79,808 words) - 17:26, 17 December 2015
- ...ring to add notes to a pretty large number of issues for a large number of stories. Is that OK? (I can imagine that in a different magazine this might be do ...he Time-Machined Saga" (serial in ''Analog''), & a couple of maps in other stories, come to mind. I don't have the book ''The Technicolor® Time Machine'' to573 KB (97,958 words) - 17:23, 17 December 2015
- ...e, although that may include specific works of speculative fiction. Those stories might have been reprinted later either in collections or anthologies, thus ...e fiction contents. We then quickly realized that if we entered all non-SF stories in ''Argosy'', ''The Norton Book of American Literature'', etc, we would en621 KB (105,414 words) - 17:25, 17 December 2015
- : On the other hand, take {{A|R. A. Lafferty}}. All of his "r a lafferty" stories (I recall coming across a few many years ago) have been entered as by "R. A == How to handle author credit of traditional stories (again) ==376 KB (62,546 words) - 20:32, 27 June 2019
- Jules Verne's stories have been translated many times. The purpose of this page is to help identi || Eighteen sixty-six was marked by a strange occurrence, an amazing phenomenon that probably no one has yet forgotten. People living along the351 KB (49,680 words) - 15:51, 15 February 2022