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The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction
The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction
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The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction
Magazine cover depicting a view of a ringed planet from the surface of another planet or moon
An early issue, with an astronomical cover painting by Chesley Bonestell
EditorSheree Renée Thomas
Categoriesfantasy and science fiction
FrequencyBimonthly
FounderAnthony Boucher, J. Francis McComas, Lawrence Spivak
Founded1949
CompanySpilogale, Inc.
CountryUnited States
Based inHoboken, New Jersey
LanguageEnglish
Websitefandsf.com
ISSN0024-984X

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (usually referred to as F&SF) is a U.S. fantasy and science-fiction magazine, first published in 1949 by Mystery House, a subsidiary of Lawrence Spivak's Mercury Press. Editors Anthony Boucher and J. Francis McComas had approached Spivak in the mid-1940s about creating a fantasy companion to Spivak's existing mystery title, Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. The first issue was titled The Magazine of Fantasy, but the decision was quickly made to include science fiction as well as fantasy, and the title was changed correspondingly with the second issue. F&SF was quite different in presentation from the existing science-fiction magazines of the day, most of which were in pulp format: it had no interior illustrations, no letter column, and text in a single-column format, which in the opinion of science-fiction historian Mike Ashley "set F&SF apart, giving it the air and authority of a superior magazine".[1]

F&SF quickly became one of the leading magazines in the science-fiction and fantasy fields, with a reputation for publishing literary material and including more diverse stories than its competitors. Well-known stories that appeared in its early years include Richard Matheson's "Born of Man and Woman", and Ward Moore's Bring the Jubilee, a novel of an alternative history in which the South has won the American Civil War. McComas left for health reasons in 1954, but Boucher continued as sole editor until 1958, winning the Hugo Award for Best Magazine that year, a feat his successor, Robert Mills, repeated in the next two years. Mills was responsible for publishing Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes, Rogue Moon by Algis Budrys, Starship Troopers by Robert Heinlein, and the first of Brian Aldiss's Hothouse stories. The first few issues mostly featured cover art by George Salter, Mercury Press's art director, but other artists soon began to appear, including Chesley Bonestell, Kelly Freas, and Ed Emshwiller.

In 1962, Mills was succeeded as editor by Avram Davidson. When Davidson left at the end of 1964, Joseph Ferman, who had bought the magazine from Spivak in 1954, took over briefly as editor, though his son Edward soon began doing the editorial work under his father's supervision. At the start of 1966, Edward Ferman was listed as editor, and four years later, he acquired the magazine from his father and moved the editorial offices to his house in Connecticut. Ferman remained editor for over 25 years, and published many well-received stories, including Fritz Leiber's "Ill Met in Lankhmar", Robert Silverberg's "Born with the Dead", and Stephen King's The Dark Tower series. In 1991, he turned the editorship over to Kristine Kathryn Rusch, who began including more horror and dark fantasy than had appeared under Ferman. In the mid-1990s, circulation began to decline; most American magazines were losing subscribers and F&SF was no exception. Gordon Van Gelder replaced Rusch in 1997, and bought the magazine from Ferman in 2001, but circulation continued to fall, and by 2011 it was below 15,000. Charles Coleman Finlay took over from Van Gelder as editor in 2015. Sheree Renée Thomas succeeded Charles Coleman Finlay, becoming the magazine's 10th editor in the fall of 2020.

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction was purchased in February 2025, along with Asimov's Science Fiction and Analog Science Fiction, by Must Read Books Publishing.[2]

Publication history

[edit]

Lawrence Spivak

[edit]
Head shot of a man in a suit wearing glasses
Lawrence Spivak in 1960

The first magazine dedicated to fantasy, Weird Tales, appeared in 1923;[5] it was followed in 1926 by Amazing Stories, the first science fiction (sf) magazine.[6] By the end of the 1930s, the genre was flourishing in the United States, nearly twenty new sf and fantasy titles appearing between 1938 and 1941.[7] These were all pulp magazines, which meant that despite the occasional high-quality story, most of the magazines presented badly written fiction and were regarded as trash by many readers.[8] In 1941, Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine appeared, edited by Fred Dannay and focusing on detective fiction. The magazine was published in digest format, rather than pulp, and printed a mixture of classic stories and fresh material.[9] Dannay attempted to avoid the sensationalist fiction appearing in the pulps, and soon made the magazine a success.[10]

In the early 1940s Anthony Boucher, a successful writer of fantasy and sf and also of mystery stories, got to know Dannay through his work on the Ellery Queen radio show. Boucher also knew J. Francis McComas, an editor who shared his interest in fantasy and SF. By 1944 McComas and Boucher became interested in the idea of a fantasy companion to Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, and spoke to Dannay about it. Dannay was interested in the idea, but paper was scarce because of World War II.[10] The following year Boucher and McComas suggested that the new magazine could use the Ellery Queen name, but Dannay knew little about fantasy and suggested instead that they approach Lawrence Spivak, the owner of Mercury Press, which published Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine.[10][3]

In January 1946, Boucher and McComas went to New York and met with Spivak, who let them know later in the year that he wanted to go ahead. At Spivak's request they began acquiring material for the new magazine, including a new story by Raymond Chandler, and reprint rights to stories by H.P. Lovecraft, John Dickson Carr, and Robert Bloch. Spivak initially planned the first issue (for which Boucher and McComas were proposing the title Fantasy and Horror) for early 1947, but repeatedly delayed the launch because of poor newsstand sales of digest magazines. He also suggested that it should be priced at 35 cents an issue, which was higher than the original plan, to provide a financial buffer against poor sales.[11] In May 1949 Spivak suggested a new title, The Magazine of Fantasy, and in August a press release announced that the magazine would appear in October.[12] On October 6, 1949, Spivak, Boucher and McComas held a luncheon at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York City to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the death of Edgar Allan Poe and to launch "a new fantasy anthology periodical".[13] Invitees included Carr, Basil Rathbone, and Boris Karloff.[13]

The first issue, published by Fantasy House, a subsidiary of American Mercury,[14] sold 57,000 copies, which was less than Spivak had hoped for, but in November he gave Boucher and McComas the go-ahead for another issue. The title was changed to The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (almost always abbreviated to F&SF by both fans and science fiction historians) to reflect the contents.[13] Sales of the second issue were strong enough for Spivak to commit further, and the magazine's future became more assured, despite the difficulties caused by the fact that both Boucher and McComas lived on the west coast, whereas the magazine's publishing offices were in New York.[15] The publishing schedule moved to bimonthly with the December 1950 issue.[3] The pay rate for the early issues was two cents per word, or $100 for short pieces, which was competitive with Astounding Science Fiction, the leading sf magazine of the day.[16][17] By 1953 the rates had changed to three-and-a-half cents per word for stories under 3,000 words.[18]

In 1951, McComas, who had a full-time job in sales on top of his role as editor of F&SF, was forced to reduce his workload for health reasons.[19][note 1] Boucher then did most of the reading and editing, while McComas reviewed the results and occasionally vetoed a story. In August the following year the schedule switched to monthly.[19] In 1954 Spivak sold his shares in Mercury Press to his general manager, Joseph Ferman;[3][19][20] that year also saw McComas's departure—his health had deteriorated to the point where he had to give up the editing post completely.[19]

The Fermans and Gordon Van Gelder

[edit]
Head shot of a man at a microphone
Gordon Van Gelder in 2007

In 1957 Ferman launched a companion magazine, Venture Science Fiction, which was intended to focus on more action-oriented fiction than F&SF.[21] Boucher was unable to take on the extra work, so Robert P. Mills, who had been the managing editor for F&SF, became Venture's editor, with Boucher in an advisory role.[22] Later that year Ferman sold Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine to Bernard Davis, who was leaving Ziff-Davis to start his own publishing venture. Ferman retained F&SF, though Boucher departed, and Mills became the editor of F&SF while remaining managing editor of Queen's magazine.[23][24][25] Mills stayed for over three years, leaving at the end of 1961 to spend more time working as a literary agent, and Ferman replaced him with Avram Davidson, whose name first appeared on the masthead with the April 1962 issue.[26] Joseph Ferman's son Edward had worked for the magazine as an editorial assistant in the 1950s, but left in 1959 to gain experience elsewhere; he returned in 1962, and worked under Davidson as managing editor.[27] In 1963 Ted White, later the editor of Amazing Stories, became assistant editor, and stayed with the magazine until 1968.[28]

Davidson gave up the editor's chair in late 1964 in order to have more time to write, and was initially replaced by Joseph Ferman, who handed over control to his son Edward from May 1965, though the masthead did not reflect the change till 1966.[29][note 2] Four years later the younger Ferman took over from his father as publisher as well,[14] and moved the editorial and publishing offices to his house in Cornwall, Connecticut.[30] His wife, Audrey, was business manager, and Andrew Porter was an assistant editor.[30] In the early 1970s Ferman contacted Sol Cohen, the owner of Amazing Stories and Fantastic Stories, two competing sf magazines, about purchasing them both. Ferman was considering combining them into a single magazine and publishing them alongside F&SF, but Cohen decided to keep both titles.[31]

In 1969, an issue of F&SF was priced at 50 cents; by the end of the 1970s the price had gone up to $1.25, although the page count also rose, from 128 to 160 pages.[32][3] Circulation did not suffer, but rose from 50,000 to over 60,000, partly because of subscription drives through Publishers' Clearing House, and perhaps also because the magazine's quality remained consistent throughout the decade.[32][33] In Ashley's words, "F&SF delivered the goods month after month":[32] the schedule was reliable, the format remained unchanged, and the editor remained the same from 1965 throughout the next two decades and more.[34][35] Ferman managed to keep the circulation above 50,000, and sometimes above 60,000, during the 1980s.[36] He turned over the editorship to Kristine Kathryn Rusch in 1991, and by the mid-1990s circulation began to fall again. In 1997 Gordon Van Gelder took over as editor, and from the February 2001 issue was publisher as well, having bought the magazine from Ferman.[14] John Joseph Adams was Van Gelder's assistant editor from 2001 until December 2009.[37] Van Gelder was unable to arrest the decline in circulation, which by 2011 was down to less than 15,000. Van Gelder reduced the publication frequency to bimonthly, increasing the page count and price.[14] Charles Coleman Finlay guest-edited the July/August 2014 issue,[38] and was hired in 2015 as full-time editor, beginning with the March/April 2015 issue.[14] Sheree Renée Thomas was hired as editor, beginning with the March/April 2021 issue.[39]

Contents and reception

[edit]

Boucher, McComas, Mills and Davidson

[edit]

Boucher and McComas's original goal for the new magazine was to imitate the formula that had made Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine successful: classic reprints, along with quality fiction that avoided the excesses of the pulps.[9] The initial proposal called for the magazine to include fantasy, but not science fiction. Even before the launch, the editors found they were having trouble deciding exactly where the boundary lay, so when in February 1949 Joseph Ferman, Spivak's general manager, asked them to add sf to the lineup as a way to broaden the readership, they were happy to comply.[12] The first issue included only one story that could be called science fiction: Theodore Sturgeon's "The Hurkle Is a Happy Beast"; it also included reprints from the slick magazines by writers such as Richard Sale, and Guy Endore. The interior layout was quite different from the existing fantasy and sf magazines: there were no interior illustrations, and the text was printed in a single column, instead of two as was usual elsewhere. There was a book review column, but no letters page. According to sf historian Mike Ashley, this "set F&SF apart, giving it the air and authority of a superior magazine".[1] The logo design and layout were the work of Mercury Press's art director, George Salter, whose background was in book design rather than in pulp magazines.[1] Salter remained with the magazine until 1958.[40] He was responsible for many of the surreal early covers; these gave way to work by other artists, but his design for F&SF remained intact for decades, and in Ashley's opinion the consistency of appearance has been "one of the major selling points" of the magazine.[41]

When the second issue appeared, with the title revised to include "Science Fiction", there was no announcement of the change, and not much more science fiction than in the first issue.[1] Damon Knight contributed one example, "Not with a Bang", which Knight has described as his first fully professional story.[42] The next issue included Richard Matheson's first sale, "Born of Man and Woman", widely considered one of the finest stories F&SF ever published. Over the next few years several writers became strongly associated with the magazine, including Margaret St. Clair, Reginald Bretnor, Miriam Allen deFord, and Zenna Henderson, and Boucher was also able to attract some of the best-known established names, such as Arthur C. Clarke, Fritz Leiber, and Ray Bradbury. Fletcher Pratt and L. Sprague de Camp began their "Gavagan's Bar" series of stories in the first issue of F&SF, and Manly Wade Wellman published the first of his "John the Balladeer" stories in the December 1951 issue. The focus was on short fiction; serials and novels were mainly avoided. One exception was Ward Moore's Bring the Jubilee, an alternative history set in a world where the South wins the American Civil War.[43] Boucher bought "A Canticle for Leibowitz" from Walter M. Miller, who had been unable to sell it elsewhere, and printed it in the April 1955 issue; it was the first story in the series that would become the novel of the same name, and has since become recognized as a classic of the genre.[44]

A controversial article by the astronomer R.S. Richardson titled "The Day After We Land on Mars" appeared in the December 1955 issue;[note 3][45] Richardson commented that an exploration of other worlds would require "the men stationed on a planet [to be] openly accompanied by women to relieve the sexual tensions that develop among normal healthy males". Responses by Poul Anderson and Miriam Allen deFord appeared in F&SF the following year. DeFord argued that Richardson was assuming that women were not people in the same way as men, and the controversy has since been cited as part of the long debate within the genre about the image of women in science fiction.[47][45]

In 1958 F&SF won its first Hugo Award for Best Magazine, and when Mills became editor that year he maintained the high standards Boucher had set, winning the award again in 1959 and 1960.[14] Mills continued to publish a broad range of material without limiting the magazine to particular subgenres. Ashley cites John Collier, Robert Arthur, Allen Drury, and Ray Bradbury, all authors with mainstream reputations who appeared in F&SF in 1960, as evidence of the magazine's diversity.[44] Daniel Keyes had been unable to sell "Flowers for Algernon" until Mills bought it in 1959; it went on to win several awards and according to Clute and Nicholls is "arguably the most popular sf novel ever published".[44][48] Rogue Moon, a novel about a deadly artifact left by aliens on the moon, is often considered Algis Budrys's best novel; it appeared in 1960, and the following year saw Brian Aldiss's "Hothouse", the first in that series.[44] (Budrys later said that what he described as the "cuteness of the early F&SF school of editing—and its open contempt for the accomplishments of the Campbellian school" had resulted in "buckets and buckets of froth" but, more favorably, "Liberal Arts concepts in what had been almost exclusively a B. S. field".[49]) Zenna Henderson's stories of The People, a group of refugee humanoid aliens hiding on Earth, were published through the 1950s and 1960s and became a "central feature" of the magazine according to sf critic John Clute.[50][51] Boucher published Damon Knight's "The Country of the Kind", described by Ashley as "one of his most potent stories from the fifties", in 1956, and the same year, under the pseudonym "Grendel Briarton", Reginald Bretnor began a series of punning stories known as "Feghoots" that lasted until 1964.[note 4][52] At the end of the 1950s, during Mills' tenure as editor, Robert Heinlein's Starship Troopers was serialized in F&SF, under the title Starship Soldier; this was intended to be a juvenile novel but was rejected by Scribner's for being too violent. It won the Hugo Award in the novel category the following year, and proved to be one of Heinlein's most controversial books.[53]

One of Mel Hunter's series of robot covers which began in 1955. This example is from the July 1957 issue.

Among the cover artists in the first decade, sf historian and critic Thomas Clareson singles out the early astronomical scenes by Chesley Bonestell as being the most notable; these were among the first to replace George Salter's surreal artwork on the cover.[54] Kelly Freas and Ed Emshwiller, two of the most popular artists in the sf field, also contributed covers during the 1950s.[54][55][56] Mel Hunter began contributing covers with the November 1953 issue, and in October 1955 began a long-running series of covers that depicted a robot survivor of a nuclear holocaust engaging in human activities amidst the desolation—watering a flower, playing with toys, or reading a store catalog, for example.[57][58][4] A regular book review column appeared, titled "Recommended Reading"; it was signed simply "The Editors" until McComas ceased to be one of the co-editors, after which Boucher used his own name.[59] According to Clareson, the column "long remained the most catholic appraisal of the field" because of the variety of works reviewed.[54] Boucher did not review his own fiction in the column, though on at least one occasion he listed a new book of his, telling the reader: "Comments eagerly welcomed; in this case, you are the reviewer".[59] When Boucher left, he was succeeded by Damon Knight as book reviewer; Alfred Bester took over in 1960 and remained in the role until Avram Davidson became the book reviewer when he took the editorial chair.[60] Isaac Asimov had begun a series of science articles for Venture Science Fiction in January 1958, and when Venture was cancelled Mills brought the science column over to F&SF.[25][26] The column, which according to Asimov he enjoyed writing more than any of his other works, ran for decades without interruption, helping to contribute to a long-standing feeling of consistency and continuity in F&SF's format and contents.[14][26][61]

Avram Davidson, who became editor in 1962, had sold his first story to F&SF in 1954, though he was better remembered for "The Golem", which appeared in the March 1955 issue.[62] Under Davidson more work appeared by non-English-speaking writers such as Hugo Correa, Herbert Franke, and Shin'ishi Hoshi. Notable stories he acquired for F&SF include Terry Carr's first sale, "Who Sups with the Devil?", in 1962, and Roger Zelazny's "A Rose for Ecclesiastes" in November 1963. He published two "author special" issues: Theodore Sturgeon was featured in the September 1962 issue, and Ray Bradbury in May 1963. These author issues, which had been Joseph Ferman's idea, became a regular feature, with subsequent issues featuring Isaac Asimov (October 1966), Fritz Leiber (July 1969), Poul Anderson (April 1971), James Blish (April 1972), Frederik Pohl (September 1973), Robert Silverberg (April 1974), Damon Knight (November 1976), Harlan Ellison (July 1977), Stephen King (December 1990), Lucius Shepard (March 2001), Kate Wilhelm (September 2001), Barry N. Malzberg (June 2003), Gene Wolfe (April 2007), and David Gerrold (September/October 2016).[14]

Edward Ferman

[edit]

Joseph Ferman's son, Edward Ferman, was managing editor during Davidson's tenure as editor. When Davidson left, Joseph Ferman took over the editorial chair, but in reality Edward Ferman was doing all the editorial work, and by the May 1965 issue was in full control of the magazine. It remained eclectic through the 1960s and 1970s, publishing work by New Wave writers such as Thomas Disch and John Sladek, along with new US writers such as Samuel Delany and Roger Zelazny, hard science fiction stories by Gregory Benford and John Varley, fantasies by Sterling Lanier and Tom Reamy, and horror by Charles L. Grant and Stephen King.[14] The mid-1960s saw an increase in the diversity of stories appearing elsewhere in the field; magazines like New Worlds and Science Fantasy published material that previously could only have appeared in F&SF.[63] Sf author Christopher Priest, writing in 1978, commented that many writers later considered part of the New Wave soon found "a natural home for their work" in F&SF.[64] In Ashley's view the rest of the field was starting to catch up to F&SF's open-mindedness, but this did not lead to a drop in F&SF's quality; the end of the 1960s saw Ferman printing some old-fashioned material such as John Christopher's novel about miniaturization, The Little People, alongside much of Roger Zelazny's early output, and "anarchic and often indefinable" stories by R.A. Lafferty, Harvey Jacobs, and others. In 1968, Piers Anthony's early novel Sos the Rope was serialized; Anthony had won a competition sponsored in part by F&SF.[63]

Harlan Ellison and James Tiptree, Jr. were frequent contributors in the 1970s, Tiptree contributing some of her best-known stories, such as "And I Awoke and Found Me Here on the Cold Hill's Side" and "The Women Men Don't See"; Ellison's many stories in F&SF included "The Deathbird", in 1973, which won a Hugo Award, and "Jeffty Is Five" in 1977, which won both a Hugo and a Nebula Award. Other award-winning stories from Ferman's first decade and a half included Fritz Leiber's "Ship of Shadows" in 1969, "Ill Met in Lankhmar" in 1970, and "Catch That Zeppelin" in 1975; all three won Hugos, and the latter two also won Nebulas. Poul Anderson's "The Queen of Air and Darkness" won both a Hugo and a Nebula, Robert Silverberg's "Born with the Dead" won a Nebula, and Frederik Pohl's novel of Martian colonization, Man Plus, also won a Nebula.[14]

Judith Merril took over the book review column on Davidson's departure, and was followed by James Blish in 1970 and Algis Budrys in 1975, with frequent contributions from other reviewers such as Joanna Russ and Gahan Wilson.[30][65][66] In 1965 Wilson began contributing cartoons, and continued to do so regularly until 1981.[30] Ferman set a humorous competition for the readers in the November 1971 issue, and thereafter ran two or three similar competitions every year.[67] These were later collected in a 1996 anthology, titled Oi, Robot, the title taken from a competition to add a single letter to a well-known work of SF.[68] A film review column, the first in the magazine since Charles Beaumont's "The Science Screen" (and "William Morrison" aka Joseph Samachson's live-theater column "The Science Stage") in the latter 1950s, conducted by Samuel R. Delany, commenced in 1969;[65] Baird Searles contributed the column between 1970 and 1984.[67] Among the later reviewers, Ellison was one of the most popular, and columns from his first four years were collected as Harlan Ellison's Watching in 1989.[67]

Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine was launched in 1977 and from 1983, under the editorships of Shawna McCarthy and later Gardner Dozois, it began to publish more mature material, becoming a more direct competitor to F&SF's market niche.[14][69] Authors such as Lucius Shepard, James Blaylock, and John Crowley, whose work was a natural fit for F&SF, were selling to Asimov's as well. The launch of Omni in 1978 also had an impact.[14] For almost every year in the 1970s stories published in F&SF won more award nominations, and were selected for more "Year's Best" anthologies, than the other magazines; in the 1980s that was no longer true, as Asimov's took over the leading role, and Omni sometimes pushed F&SF into third place.[70][71] Ferman was still able to acquire some highly regarded material, such as "Lost Boys" by Orson Scott Card, and Kirinyaga by Mike Resnick.[14] When Omni rejected George R.R. Martin's "Monkey Treatment" and Gardner Dozois's "Down Among the Dead Men", which were dark fantasy, Ferman acquired both.[72] Along with these regular columns, Ferman occasionally published articles, such as "Science Fiction and the University", a feature in the May 1972 issue that included contributions from Darko Suvin, Thomas Clareson, and Philip Klass.[73]

F&SF won the Hugo Award for Best Magazine for four consecutive years, from 1969 through 1972, when the award was changed to "Best Professional Editor". Initially this category was dominated by Ben Bova, the editor of Analog, but Ferman won it for three more years at the start of the 1980s.[74]

F&SF dominated the early years of the Locus Award for Best Magazine, winning every year from the award's creation in 1971 until 1982. Another winning streak saw it take home the award for every year from 2002-2010.

Some of the artists who had provided covers for early issues of F&SF, including Chesley Bonestell, Ed Emshwiller, and Alex Schomburg, were still contributing their work into the late 1970s,[74] and many of the regular writers from the early years, such as Reginald Bretnor, Ron Goulart, and Hilbert Schenck, continued to appear in F&SF into the 1980s. A newer group, including Joanna Russ and R.A. Lafferty, had become regulars more recently.[75] Some established writers such as Thomas Disch published their more unusual work in F&SF,[76] and there were also writers such as Felix C. Gotschalk, whose unusual stories were described by Ferman as "a step ahead of most sf writers (or perhaps he's marching in a different direction)".[77] In Ashley's opinion, Ferman managed to "balance the work of these eccentric writers so that they never distorted the contents yet kept the magazine on the edge".[77]

Newer writers who began to appear regularly in the 1980s included Bruce Sterling, who published his early Shaper/Mechanist stories in F&SF, beginning with "Swarm", in 1982.[78] Stephen King's "The Dark Tower" series had begun in 1979 in F&SF, and four more stories appeared over the next three years before being collected as a novel in 1982;[78][79] and Michael Shea and Bob Leman contributed horror and weird fiction regularly in the 1980s.[80] Despite the increased competition from Omni and Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, Ferman managed to keep F&SF's reputation for quality intact throughout the 1980s;[81] it was not as distinct from its competition as it had once been, but it retained an "idiosyncratic individuality", in Ashley's words.[82]

After Ferman

[edit]

Under Kristine Kathryn Rusch F&SF began to publish more dark fantasy and horror stories, such as "The Night We Buried Road Dog" by Jack Cady, which won a Nebula Award. When Rusch took over as editor, Isaac Asimov had been writing the science column for over three decades, and Algis Budrys had been contributing a book review column since 1975; in 1992 Asimov died and Budrys departed. The science column ran for 399 consecutive issues, ending in February 1992. Asimov's widow, Janet Asimov, wrote another essay for the December 1994 issue, based on her conversations with her husband before his death, and a final essay appeared in January 1996, containing material from the book Yours, Isaac Asimov: A Lifetime of Letters.[14] The science column continued to appear, written by Bruce Sterling and Gregory Benford among others, and John Kessel took over the book reviews; Robert Killheffer succeeded Kessel, with some overlap in 1994 and 1995. Asimov's maintained its dominance of the field through the 1990s, though Rusch published well-received material such as "The Martian Child" by David Gerrold and "Last Summer at Mars Hill" by Elizabeth Hand. Rusch won one Hugo Award as editor during her five years at F&SF, in 1994.[14]

Van Gelder printed more fantasy and less hard science fiction than had Rusch, and in Ashley's opinion he was able to "restore some of the magazine's distinctiveness". As a result of the switch to bimonthly in 2009, with the resulting higher page count in each issue, the magazine began to publish longer stories.[14]

Assessment

[edit]

F&SF quickly established itself as one of the leading magazines. Ashley describes it as bridging "the attitude gap between the slick magazines and the pulps"', and argues that it made the genre more respectable.[43] The fantasy side of the magazine attracted writers who had been regular contributors to Weird Tales and Unknown, two of the best-known fantasy pulps, and in Ashley's opinion, it soon found a "middle ground" between those pulp traditions and fantasy written for the slicks.[83] It was known as the most literary of the science fiction and fantasy magazines, and it published the most diverse range of material.[14] In a 1978 review of New Wave SF, Christopher Priest agreed that F&SF has a bias for literary work, and added that "it has been a sort of New Wave of its own ever since its inception".[64]

From the 1950s, F&SF was regarded as one of the "big three" science fiction magazines, along with Astounding Science Fiction and Galaxy Science Fiction.[84][85] In a review of a 1952 issue, James Blish (writing as William Atheling, Jr.) commented that much of the magazine to that point was wonderfully written, and that Boucher's and McComas's editorial acumen made F&SF very readable, but that on occasion a well-written, sophisticated, but unoriginal science fiction story might be accepted by F&SF because it was not a specialist sf magazine.[86] At the end of the 1950s Kingsley Amis described it as "the most highbrow" of the science fiction magazines,[87] and Gary K. Wolfe later said that F&SF, along with Galaxy, "defined the tenor" of the 1950s.[88] In the 1960s, Judith Merril argued that it was Boucher and McComas who made a place in the genre for writers such as Charles Beaumont, Mildred Clingerman, Edgar Pangborn, and many others who, in her opinion, had "virtually stopped writing until the necessary new magazine came along".[note 5][89][91]

In 2007, Ashley commented that F&SF had been "the most consistently enjoyable magazine of the last 50 years".[92] In his view, a key reason for the magazine's appeal was that its roots were in the literary tradition, with Lawrence Spivak, its first publisher, the inheritor of H.L. Mencken's American Mercury, which had been successful and widely respected as a literary review. Unlike most of its competitors, F&SF had no connection to the pulp magazine era, and its editors had always intended to appeal to readers of books, rather than of magazines.[34] Ashley also cites F&SF's broad editorial policy, which allowed the magazine to carry a wider range of fiction than its competitors.[30] In 2014 Gary Westfahl praised the "creative editors of the 1980s and 1990s, such as Gardner Dozois ... and Gordon Van Gelder", but added that "such editors were no longer the most important figures in the field".[93]

Bibliographic details

[edit]
F&SF's circulation from 1962 to 1990[94][36]

As of March 2017, the editorial succession is as follows:[14]

The first issue was titled The Magazine of Fantasy; with the second issue the title switched to The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. The magazine has been in digest format since the beginning.[14]

The publisher was initially Fantasy House, a subsidiary of Mercury Press; from March 1958 the publisher was listed as Mercury Press instead.[3] Since February 2001 the publisher has been Van Gelder's Spilogale, Inc.[14]

The following table lists F&SF's prices over the years.[3][96][97][98][99] When Joseph Ferman announced the price change in the February 1959 issue, his justification for the increase was that "during the past ten years...paper costs have gone up by 38%, composition, printing, binding and handling costs have gone up by 32%, postages costs have gone up from 33% to 60%, and various other costs have risen as much or more".[100]

Date Issue price Special issue details
Fall 1949 – January 1959 35 cents October 1958 @ 40 cents
February 1959 – December 1964 40 cents October 1959 (tenth anniversary) @ 50 cents
January 1965 – June 1969 50 cents
July 1969 – October 1971 60 cents
November 1971 – February 1975 75 cents October 1974 (25th anniversary) @ $1.00
March 1975 – February 1978 $1.00
March 1978 – February 1980 $1.25 October 1979 (30th anniversary) @ $2.50
March 1980 – September 1982 $1.50
October 1982 – December 1988 $1.75
January 1989 – December 1990 $2.00 October 1989 (40th anniversary) @ $2.95
January 1991 – November 1993 $2.50 October/November @ $3.95
December 1993 – June 1995 $2.75 October/November @ $3.95
July 1995 – January 1997 $2.95 October/November @ $4.50
February 1997 – June 1998 $2.99 October/November @ $4.59
July 1998 – December 2002 $3.50 October/November @ $4.59 in 1998 & 2000–2001; $5.95 in 1999; $4.99 in 2002
January 2003 – December 2007 $3.99 October/November @ $4.99 from 2003–2006; $5.99 in 2007
January 2007 – December 2008 $4.50 October/November @ $5.99 in 2008
January 2009 – March 2009 $4.99
April/May 2009 – August/September 2009 $6.50 October/November @ $7.50
December 2009 – December 2010 $7.00
January 2011 – December 2012 $7.50
January 2013 – December 2016 $7.99
January 2017 – December 2020 $8.99
January 2021 – $9.99

Anthologies

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The following anthologies of fiction from F&SF have appeared.[101][102][103]

Year Editor(s) Title Publisher
1952 Anthony Boucher & J. Francis McComas The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction Little, Brown
1953 Anthony Boucher & J. Francis McComas The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: Second Series Little, Brown
1954 Anthony Boucher & J. Francis McComas The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: Third Series Doubleday
1955 Anthony Boucher The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: Fourth Series Doubleday
1956 Anthony Boucher The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: Fifth Series Doubleday
1957 Anthony Boucher The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: Sixth Series Doubleday
1958 Anthony Boucher The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: Seventh Series Doubleday
1959 Anthony Boucher The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: Eighth Series Doubleday
1960 Robert P. Mills The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: Ninth Series Doubleday
1960 Robert P. Mills A Decade of Fantasy and Science Fiction Doubleday
1961 Robert P. Mills The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: Tenth Series Doubleday
1962 Robert P. Mills The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: Eleventh Series Doubleday
1963 Avram Davidson The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: Twelfth Series Doubleday
1964 Avram Davidson The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 13th Series Doubleday
1965 Avram Davidson The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 14th Series Doubleday
1966 Edward L. Ferman The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 15th Series Doubleday
1967 Edward L. Ferman The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 16th Series Doubleday
1968 Edward L. Ferman The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 17th Series Doubleday
1968 Edward L. Ferman Once and Future Tales from the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction Harris-Wolfe
1969 Edward L. Ferman The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 18th Series Doubleday
1970 Edward L. Ferman & Robert P. Mills Twenty Years of Fantasy and Science Fiction Putnam
1971 Edward L. Ferman The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 19th Series Doubleday
1973 Edward L. Ferman The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 20th Series Doubleday
1974 Edward L. Ferman Best From Fantasy and Science Fiction: Twenty-fifth Anniversary Anthology Doubleday
1977 Edward L. Ferman The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 22nd Series Doubleday
1980 Edward L. Ferman The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 23rd Series Doubleday
1982 Edward L. Ferman The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 24th Series Doubleday
1989 Edward L. Ferman The Best From Fantasy & Science Fiction: A 40th Anniversary Anthology St. Martin's
1994 Edward L. Ferman & Kristine Kathryn Rusch The Best From Fantasy & Science Fiction: A 45th Anniversary Anthology St. Martin's
1999 Edward L. Ferman & Gordon Van Gelder The Best From Fantasy & Science Fiction: A 50th Anniversary Anthology Tor
2003 Gordon Van Gelder One Lamp Four Walls Eight Windows
2004 Gordon Van Gelder In Lands That Never Were Thunder's Mouth
2005 Gordon Van Gelder Fourth Planet from the Sun Thunder's Mouth
2009 Gordon Van Gelder The Very Best of Fantasy & Science Fiction: 60th Anniversary Anthology Tachyon
2014 Gordon Van Gelder The Very Best of Fantasy & Science Fiction: Volume 2 Tachyon

In 1981, Martin H. Greenberg edited a hardcover facsimile edition of the April 1965 issue of F&SF, with the addition of an introduction by Edward Ferman, and memoirs by the authors whose work appeared in the issue. The book was published by Southern Illinois University Press.[101]

Overseas editions

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F&SF has had multiple foreign editions, including:

  • Argentina. Minotauro (September 1964 – June 1968), edited by Francisco Porrúa under the alias Ricardo Gosseyn, and published by Ediciones Minotauro, Buenos Aires. Ten issues. The full title was Minotauro fantasía y ciencia-ficción. Minotauro did not reprint individual issues of F&SF; instead each issue was filled with stories selected from various issues of F&SF.[104] Also La revista de ciencia ficción y fantasía (October 1976 – February 1977), edited by Marcial Souto and published by Ediciones Orión. Three issues. This was primarily a reprint edition of F&SF but also published some original material.[105]
  • Australia. The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (November 1954 – August 1958), published by Consolidated Press as a saddle-stapled digest. 14 issues. The first six issues were 128 pages long, the next 4 were 112 pages, and the last four were 96 pages. It was priced at 2/- throughout. The contents were selected from the US magazine but the Australian issues did not correspond to individual issues of the original.[101]
  • Brazil. Galáxia 2000 (first issue January 1968), edited by Mario Camarinha, and published by Ediçōes O Cruzeiro. Four or five issues. This contains reprints from not only the US edition of F&SF, but also from the French, Italian and Argentinian versions. This was followed in 1970 by another Magazine de Ficçāo Cientifica, which appeared in April 1970. The editor was initially Jerônymo Monteiro; he died after two issues and was succeeded by his daughter, Theresa Monteiro. The publisher was Revista do Globo. The magazine ran from April 1970 to November 1971, publishing a total of 20 issues, each containing a story by a local writer along with the reprinted material.[106]
  • France. Fiction (October 1953 – February 1990), edited by Alain Dorémieux for most of its existence. 412 issues. Fiction included original French stories as well as translations from the English version of the magazine, and occasionally these French stories subsequently appeared in F&SF, translated into English. One example is "Les Premiers jour de mai" by Claude Veillot, which appeared in Fiction in May 1960 and then as "The First Days of May" in F&SF in December 1961, translated by Damon Knight. Since 2005 it has been issued twice a year as a magazine/anthology series.[14][107]
  • Germany. A series of anthologies titled Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction began appearing in Germany in 1963, published by Heyne. These contained stories selected from F&SF. The editor was Charlotte Winheller for issues 1–9; Walter Ernsting for issues 10–14; Wulf H. Bergner for issues 15–42; and Manfred Kluge from issue 43 until at least 1985.[108]
  • Israel. Fantasia 2000 (December 1978 – 1984), edited by Aharon Hauptman and Gabi Peleg; published by A. Tene for the first 15 issues, and thereafter by Hyperion.[109] 44 issues.[110] Most of Fantasia 2000's contents were translations of material that had originally appeared in F&SF, along with some original stories by Israelis. It included translations of Asimov's science column, and also included departments that did not originate in F&SF, such as a letters page and non-fiction articles.[109]
  • Italy. Fantascienza (November 1954 – May 1955), edited by Livio Garzanti, published by Garzanti e i Fratelli Treves. 7 issues. Reprints of issues of F&SF. Also Fantasia & Fantascienza (December 1962 – October 1963), edited by G. Jori, published by Minerva Editrice. 10 monthly issues, omitting May 1963. A reprint of F&SF, but it included some original material as well.[111] Another series of reprints was published by Elara from 2013 to 2017, for a total of 17 issues with irregular periodicity.[112]
  • Japan. S-F Magazine (February 1960 – current as of 2017), edited by (among others) Masami Fukushima, Ryozo Nagashima, and Imaoka Kiyoshi. This began as a reprint edition of F&SF, but soon began printing more original fiction, and as of 2016 is the leading Japanese science fiction magazine, publishing both original material and stories reprinted from a variety of sources.[113][114][115]
  • Mexico. Ciencia y Fantasía (September 1955 – December 1957), editor unknown, published by Novaro-México, S.A. 14 issues. Reprinted from F&SF by selecting stories from different issues of the original magazine.[116][117]
  • Norway. Nova – Fantastiske Fortellinger [no] (1971–1979), edited by Terje Wanberg, Øyvind Myhre, Per G. Olson, and Johannes H. Berg, published by Stowa Forlag. 34 issues. Initially titled Science Fiction-Magasinet, it began by reprinting from F&SF; from the fourth issue it began to feature new material.[118]
  • Sweden. Jules Verne Magasinet (1969–2013), edited and published by Bertil Falk (1969–1971); edited by Sam Lundwall (1972–2013) and published by Askild & Kärnekull (1972), Delta (1973–1983), and Sam J Lundwall Fakta & Fantasi (1983–2010).[119] Starting with the Askild & Kärnekull issues, and until at least the mid-1980s, this contained a large proportion of reprints from F&SF, along with some original material from other sources.[120][121]
  • United Kingdom. Two series, both titled The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. The first series was published by Mellifont Press, and ran from October 1953 to September 1954, in digest format, with 128 pages, priced at 1/6. The contents were taken from the U.S. magazine, but the UK issues did not directly correspond to individual U.S. issues. The second series was published by Atlas Publishing & Distributing from December 1959 to June 1964, in digest format. All issues were 128 pages except for January 1961 through November 1961 and March 1962 through June 1964, which were 112 pages. The price was 2/- from until November 1961, and 2/6 from December 1961 until the end of the run. As with the first series the reprint issues did not exactly correspond to individual U.S. issues. After the second series ended, some additional material from the U.S. issues was reprinted in the UK edition of Venture Science Fiction.[101]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Sources

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (often abbreviated as F&SF) is an American digest-sized magazine founded in 1949, renowned for publishing high-quality short stories, novelettes, and poetry in the genres of fantasy and , along with reviews, cartoons, and articles. The magazine was launched in Fall 1949 by Lawrence Spivak's Mercury Press imprint, , initially titled The Magazine of Fantasy before incorporating in its second issue; it has maintained a consistent focus on literary-oriented , distinguishing itself from pulpier contemporaries through sophisticated editing and diverse author contributions. Co-founders Anthony Boucher and J. Francis McComas served as its first editors from 1949 to 1954, establishing a reputation for eclectic selections that included reprints from literary sources alongside original works; subsequent editors have included Anthony Boucher (1954–1958), Robert P. Mills (1958–1962), (1962–1964), Joseph W. Ferman (1964–1965), Edward L. Ferman (1966–1991), (1991–1997), Gordon Van Gelder (1997–2015), C.C. Finlay (2015–2020), and Sheree Renée Thomas (2021–present). Over its 75-year history, F&SF has published seminal stories such as Daniel Keyes's "" (1959, expanded into a ), Walter M. Miller Jr.'s excerpts from (1955–1957), and early works by authors including , , , , and , contributing significantly to the evolution of modern . The magazine has received numerous accolades, including Hugo Awards for Best Professional Magazine in 1958, 1959, 1960, 1963, and 1969–1972, as well as Best Editor Hugos for Ferman (1981–1983), (1994), and Van Gelder (2007–2008); its stories have collectively won dozens of Hugo, , and World Fantasy Awards, underscoring its influence on the genre. Originally quarterly, F&SF shifted to bimonthly publication in 1951 and has varied between monthly and bimonthly schedules since, with ownership changes including a 2025 acquisition by Must Read Books Publishing alongside sister titles Analog and ; as of November 2025, it remains active, offering print and digital editions bimonthly.

Publication History

Founding and Early Years

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction was founded in 1949 by editors Anthony Boucher and J. Francis McComas as a digest-sized publication dedicated to combining fantasy and science fiction with a focus on literary merit rather than pulp conventions. The inaugural issue, titled The Magazine of Fantasy and published in Fall 1949 by Fantasy House, Inc., a subsidiary of Mercury Press, featured a mix of new stories and reprints emphasizing sophisticated storytelling, including Theodore Sturgeon's "The Hurkle Is a Happy Beast," William Tenn's "The Man with the Common Touch," and Ray Bradbury's horror tale "The Small Assassin." Lawrence E. Spivak, founder of Mercury Press and publisher of Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, served as the magazine's initial publisher from its launch, providing financial backing after Boucher and McComas pitched the concept in the mid-1940s. Initial circulation reached approximately 50,000 copies, reflecting early interest in a venue for more refined genre fiction. With the second issue in Spring 1950, Spivak oversaw a to The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction to better encompass its dual focus, while the publication schedule shifted from quarterly to bimonthly by February 1951 and monthly from August 1952 onward. Under Boucher and McComas's co-editorship through August 1954, the magazine prioritized high-quality short fiction, often drawing from established authors and avoiding the sensationalism of competing pulps; notable early contributors included , whose story "The Last Question" appeared in 1956, alongside ongoing works by Bradbury such as "The Fog Horn" in 1951. This period established the magazine's reputation for editorial discernment, with circulation stabilizing around 50,000–60,000 copies in the early 1950s. Boucher continued as sole editor until 1958, marking a smooth transition to subsequent editorial leadership.

Ferman Era and Editorial Transitions

In 1958, Joseph W. Ferman assumed the role of publisher for The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, marking the transition to full ownership and operation under Mercury Press, which he controlled following the magazine's earlier years under Fantasy House, Inc. This shift provided operational stability, allowing the publication to build on its established reputation for literary and fantasy while navigating the evolving genre landscape of the mid-20th century. Under Ferman's leadership, the magazine emphasized high-quality, eclectic content that blended speculative genres without rigid adherence to traditional pulp conventions. Editorial transitions during this period reflected a commitment to fresh perspectives amid growing genre diversity. Following Robert P. Mills's editorship (1958–1962), Avram Davidson served as editor from 1962 to 1964, bringing a focus on imaginative, often whimsical narratives that expanded the magazine's appeal. Davidson's tenure culminated in a Hugo Award for the magazine in 1963, underscoring its rising influence. In late 1964, Joseph W. Ferman briefly acted as interim editor before his son, Edward L. Ferman, formally took over in January 1966, initiating a 25-year stewardship that prioritized sophisticated, varied fiction ranging from hard science fiction to subtle fantasy. Complementing this, Judith Merril contributed as books editor from 1965 to 1969, enhancing the magazine's critical engagement with contemporary works through her influential review column. These handovers ensured continuity while adapting to reader interests in more experimental forms. The Ferman era saw the magazine achieve notable growth and resilience, with circulation expanding significantly during the 1960s and 1970s as gained mainstream traction. To address the literary shifts of the New Wave era—characterized by introspective, socially conscious —the publication maintained an eclectic balance, incorporating a broader range of fantasy elements alongside innovative speculative tales by authors like and . Specific innovations included the introduction of the "Curiosities" column in 1969, a regular feature highlighting obscure and eccentric books in the genres, which enriched the magazine's nonfiction offerings and appealed to dedicated readers. Post-1970s, as the boom waned and market challenges emerged, the Fermans responded by sustaining editorial quality and thematic diversity, avoiding drastic format changes while fostering long-term stability. This approach carried into the early 1990s, when Gordon Van Gelder assumed the editorship in 1991 under continued Ferman ownership.

2025 Acquisition and Ongoing Operations

In the early 2020s, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction faced significant operational challenges, including printing delays that resulted in only two double issues being published in —Winter and Summer—while skipping the planned Spring edition and shifting to a quarterly schedule. These production issues, attributed to unforeseen circumstances by publisher Gordon Van Gelder, led to widespread rumors that the magazine had ceased publication, especially as no new issues appeared in early 2025. The magazine's future was secured in February 2025 when it was acquired by Must Read Magazines, a division of the new publishing company Must Read Books, alongside Analog Science Fiction and Fact and Asimov's Science Fiction. The acquisition retained all existing editorial staff, including editor-in-chief Sheree Renée Thomas, and committed to maintaining the traditional print digest format, with plans to expand distribution and digital offerings. Van Gelder, who had led the magazine since 1997, described the handover as a necessary evolution amid pandemic-era disruptions, expressing optimism about its continuity under new ownership. Under the new ownership, editorial operations continued with Sheree Renée Thomas as editor, emphasizing a commitment to diverse voices in amid ongoing industry discussions on . As of November 2025, the magazine planned resumption of bimonthly publication, with the Summer 2025 digital edition available for preorder in and PDF formats for $9.99, marking the first new content since the 2024 issues. Subscriptions are handled through the publisher's website, accepting payments via or credit card, with one-year options starting at $39.97 for six bimonthly issues in print or digital.

Editorial Approach and Content

Key Editors' Styles

The founding co-editors, Anthony Boucher and J. Francis McComas, established The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction with a commitment to sophisticated, non-formulaic narratives that blended science fiction and fantasy genres, deliberately steering away from pulp conventions like space opera in favor of character-driven stories with literary merit. Their approach, modeled after the polished style of Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, prioritized stylish prose, humorous and light-hearted tales, and reprints from esteemed authors such as Robert Graves and Sinclair Lewis, fostering a reputation for quality over quantity in speculative fiction. This vision shaped early issues by showcasing unusual, character-focused works, exemplified by stories like Walter M. Miller Jr.'s A Canticle for Leibowitz segments, which highlighted introspective themes amid genre experimentation. Under Edward L. Ferman's long tenure from 1966 to 1991, the magazine promoted experimental and literary science fiction and fantasy, incorporating subtle New Wave influences while avoiding their more radical excesses, and introduced enduring features such as film reviews to broaden its cultural scope. Ferman balanced tradition with contemporary evolution by publishing diverse subgenres—including hard SF, fantasy, and horror—from innovative voices like Harlan Ellison and James Tiptree Jr., emphasizing high literary standards and support for emerging talent such as Pamela Sargent and John Varley. His editorial philosophy consolidated the magazine's identity as a venue for thoughtful, wide-ranging material, as seen in special author-focused issues and stories like Ursula K. Le Guin's The Rule of Names, which explored nuanced social dynamics through speculative lenses. Gordon Van Gelder, editor from 1997 to 2015, maintained a balance between the magazine's storied traditions and fresh contemporary voices, enhancing diversity in authorship and themes while expanding online accessibility and upholding the classic digest format. His approach shifted emphasis toward broader fantasy elements alongside hard SF, increasing issue sizes to accommodate more content and actively soliciting international and underrepresented writers to reflect evolving genre landscapes. This era saw greater digital engagement through the official website and a deliberate push for varied perspectives, as in publications featuring diverse authors like in stories addressing identity and otherness. Sheree Renée Thomas, editor since 2021, emphasizes character-oriented with strong voices, pacing, and surprising elements, prioritizing diverse, intergenerational, and intersectional perspectives from global and marginalized creators. Building on the magazine's legacy, her approach welcomes translations and themes of equity and inclusion, continuing to evolve F&SF's literary identity through thoughtful, wide-ranging material that honors its foundational quality. This focus is evident in recent issues as of November 2025, featuring works that explore cultural resistance and diverse speculative narratives.

Signature Features and Notable Works

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction has long distinguished itself through distinctive recurring departments that enhance its literary appeal. One such hallmark is the "Curiosities" column, initiated in 1969 and continuing to the present, which spotlights quirky, obscure books and artifacts of enduring interest to readers, often unearthing forgotten gems from literary history. The magazine also conducts annual readers' awards, polling subscribers to select favorite stories, novelettes, and novellas from each volume, thereby fostering direct engagement with its audience and highlighting community preferences. Additionally, F&SF has produced themed issues, curating works by diverse authors to address representation in science fiction and fantasy. Among the magazine's notable works are several seminal pieces that debuted in its pages, cementing F&SF's role in launching enduring classics. Walter M. Miller Jr.'s "A Canticle for Leibowitz," a post-apocalyptic novelette, first appeared in the April 1955 issue, later expanded into the acclaimed 1959 novel of the same name. In the 1960s, Ursula K. Le Guin's early stories, including "The Rule of Names" (October 1964), marked her initial forays into professional publication and helped establish her universe. The magazine has served as a vital platform for influential authors, many of whom debuted or built significant portions of their oeuvres within its issues. (the pseudonym of Alice Sheldon) made her breakthrough with "And I Awoke and Found Me Here on the Cold Hill's Side" in the March 1972 issue, followed by a series of provocative stories exploring gender, humanity, and alienation that defined her career. contributed prolifically, with standout tales like "Repent, Harlequin! Said the Ticktockman" (May 1965), a Hugo-winning on that exemplified his sharp, socially incisive style. Octavia E. Butler's debut in F&SF came with "Crossover" in the January 1975 issue, introducing themes of racial identity and transformation that foreshadowed her and broader explorations of power dynamics. Over its history, F&SF's content has evolved from an initial emphasis on fantasy—comprising roughly 50% of early issues in the , reflecting its origins in blending whimsical and speculative elements—to a more balanced mix of and fantasy by the 2000s, accommodating diverse subgenres while maintaining literary depth. This progression includes consistent inclusion of poetry, which was prominent in the magazine's formative years but declined sharply after 1977, becoming rare thereafter, and cartoons, which proliferated starting in the mid-1960s under artist , adding satirical humor to complement the prose.

Reception and Impact

Critical Evaluations

In the 1950s, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction received early praise for elevating the genres beyond their pulp roots, with founding editor Anthony Boucher applying rigorous literary standards to story selections, rejecting works lacking strong writing even if conceptually innovative. Critics like Judith Merril lauded this approach for enhancing science fiction's respectability and blurring boundaries between science fiction and fantasy to appeal to broader audiences. The publication was distinguished as a stylish digest focused on non-pulp, high-quality fiction, setting it apart from contemporaries like Astounding Science Fiction and Galaxy Science Fiction. From the 1960s through the 1980s, assessments highlighted debates over the magazine's selective embrace of the New Wave movement, publishing influential experimental authors such as and while steering clear of its more radical stylistic excesses. Traditionalists commended this balance for preserving narrative coherence and accessibility amid genre innovation, though some critiques noted emerging rivalry from , which diluted F&SF's distinctive voice over time. Locus Magazine consistently ranked it among leading professional magazines during this era, underscoring its role in sustaining quality short fiction. Post-2000 evaluations offered mixed perspectives, acknowledging a decline in circulation—from peaks above 50,000 in the late 1990s to under 15,000 by 2011—attributed to the rise of and shifting reader habits, yet praising sustained high standards in storytelling. The magazine earned acclaim for advancing diversity by featuring international contributors like Hugo Correa and Shin’ichi Hoshi, with editor C.C. Finlay actively encouraging non-U.S. voices to broaden representation in the genres. In , following its acquisition by Must Read Books Publishing, initial critiques expressed cautious optimism, citing retained editorial staff like Gordon Van Gelder as a and plans for expanded digital and distribution to potentially revitalize its influence without altering core or style. Scholarly analyses, such as those in The Science Fiction Encyclopedia, position The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction as a premier "literary digest" that rivals anthologies in curating consistent, high-impact short fiction, underscoring its enduring contribution to genre evolution through stylistic sophistication and thematic depth.

Awards and Cultural Influence

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (F&SF) has garnered an extensive array of accolades, particularly through the Hugo Awards administered by the World Science Fiction Society. The magazine itself won the Hugo for Best Professional Magazine eight times from 1958 to 1972, with victories in 1958 (under editors Anthony Boucher and Robert P. Mills), 1959 (Boucher and Mills), 1960 (Mills), 1963 (Mills and ), 1969–1972 (Edward L. Ferman). After the category was discontinued following 1972, F&SF's editorial team continued to receive nominations in related categories, though wins shifted toward individual stories published in its pages. Over its history, F&SF has published more than 40 Hugo-winning works across categories like Best , Best Novelette, and Best , including Fritz Leiber's "Ship of Shadows" (1969, Best ) and Harlan Ellison's "" (1977, Best ). Stories from F&SF have also secured numerous Nebula Awards from the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, recognizing excellence in . Notable examples include Ken Liu's "The Paper Menagerie" (2011, Best Short Story), which additionally won a Hugo and , and G.V. Anderson's nominations in recent years, such as "A Strange Uncertain Light" (2019, Best Short Story). The magazine's anthologies, such as The Very Best of Fantasy & Science Fiction edited by Gordon Van Gelder (2009), have earned nominations, while the publication itself received the World Fantasy Special Award—Professional in 2021 for editor C.C. Finlay and again in 2025 for editor Sheree Renée Thomas. These honors underscore F&SF's consistent editorial quality and its role in elevating standout works. Beyond awards, F&SF has profoundly shaped and fantasy literature and by launching the careers of numerous influential authors. It published early stories by , , , , and , providing a platform for innovative voices that defined the genres' literary evolution. This editorial focus on character-driven, thoughtful narratives influenced broader cultural depictions of speculative themes, contributing to the genre's integration into and academic discourse. In scholarly contexts, F&SF is frequently cited in studies of science fiction's development, with its contents analyzed for their impact on themes like identity, technology, and society in works such as those exploring the magazine's role in the "New Wave" movement of the and 1970s. F&SF's enduring legacy is evident in its frequent representation in prestigious annual anthologies, highlighting its ongoing relevance. For instance, selections from the magazine appear in The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy series. This inclusion, alongside critical praise for award-winning issues, affirms F&SF's position as a cornerstone of , fostering through accessible yet profound storytelling that continues to inspire new generations.

Bibliographic and Distribution Details

Format Evolution and Domestic Publication

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction debuted in Fall 1949 as a digest-sized publication with 160 pages, measuring approximately 5.25 by 7.5 inches, setting it apart from the pulp formats common in the genre at the time. It retained this compact, single-column layout throughout its early decades under Mercury Publications, emphasizing literary quality over visual spectacle. In the 1960s, while some science fiction magazines experimented with larger bedsheet or slick formats, F&SF steadfastly maintained its digest size, a consistency that persisted into the 1990s despite industry shifts toward bigger publications. By the late 2000s, the magazine adapted to economic pressures by increasing its page count to 260 per issue starting in April/May 2009, while reverting to a bimonthly schedule of six double issues per year. Digital editions emerged in the , offered alongside print through the official website, allowing subscribers access to PDF or formats for recent issues. Production challenges in 2024 led to a shift to quarterly print releases, which has continued as of , with a growing emphasis on digital delivery following the February 2025 acquisition by Must Read Books Publishing, which retained Gordon van Gelder as a consultant. As of November 2025, print and digital editions are published quarterly. Occasional special issues, such as author-focused editions honoring figures like in 1962, have supplemented the regular schedule since the early 1960s. Circulation peaked above 60,000 copies in the , reflecting strong interest in short-form during that era. However, like many print periodicals, it experienced a steady decline amid rising production costs and competition, dropping below 15,000 by 2011 and to around 4,800 print subscriptions by 2023. Subscriptions have traditionally been available via mail order, with online options including payment through platforms like integrated into the website by 2025. Domestically, initial newsstand distribution occurred through Fantasy House, Inc., a of Mercury Publications, from 1949 to 1958, followed by Mercury Press until 2001. Gordon van Gelder then acquired and published it independently via Spilogale, Inc., handling both subscriptions and limited newsstand availability until the 2025 sale to Must Read Books Publishing. While not directly under Magazines—unlike contemporaries Analog and Asimov's—F&SF benefited from shared genre distribution networks in later years, ensuring U.S. availability through major outlets until print delays prompted a digital pivot. International editions have occasionally adapted the core digest format for overseas markets, though primary focus remains on domestic logistics.

Anthologies and International Editions

The magazine's editorial team has curated numerous anthologies featuring standout stories from its pages, with the longest-running being the annual The Best from Fantasy & series. Launched in 1952 and edited initially by Anthony Boucher and J. Francis McComas, the series continued under editors including Robert P. Mills and Edward L. Ferman, resulting in 25 volumes through the 1970s that reprinted selected tales, often in uncut form to preserve authorial intent. The curation process emphasized quality and diversity, drawing from the magazine's mix of , fantasy, and speculative works to highlight emerging and established voices. A milestone 50th anniversary , edited by Ferman and Van Gelder, appeared in 2000, compiling iconic pieces from the publication's history. After the annual series concluded, themed anthologies compiled by Gordon Van Gelder preserved and repackaged F&SF content for targeted audiences. Examples include The Fourth Planet from the Sun: Tales of Mars (featuring 12 stories from to contemporary authors), Lonely Souls (four novellas exploring identity and emotion), In Lands That Never Were: Tales of Swords & Sorcery (showcasing fantasy adventures), and One Lamp: Alternate History Stories (14 "what if" scenarios). These collections, available in print for $17.95 and signed by the editor, focus on conceptual themes rather than chronological reprints. Since the early , digital versions of these and other F&SF anthologies have been issued as e-books, enhancing accessibility through platforms like Kindle. International editions and reprints have extended F&SF's reach beyond the since the 1950s. In the , Mellifont Press issued a digest-sized reprint edition from October 1953 to September 1954 (12 issues at 1/6 each, 128 pages), followed by UK-printed versions with adapted contents from December 1959 to June 1964, published by entities including the Atlas Publishing Group. hosted brief magazine editions by Moewig Verlag in 1955 and 1960, each lasting only a few issues, before Heyne Verlag launched a long-running in 1963 that translated and reprinted F&SF stories, continuing for several years. In , Fiction magazine, launched by Editions OPTA in October 1953, incorporated numerous F&SF reprints alongside original , sustaining a crossover influence until its conclusion in 1980. Japan saw Hayakawa Shobo initiate a reprint edition in 1955, which transitioned to include original content and grew into one of the country's leading periodicals by the 2010s. Sporadic reprints of F&SF material have appeared in other Asian markets, though without sustained dedicated editions. The February 2025 acquisition of F&SF by Must Read Magazines—a division of Must Read Books Publishing—has bolstered international efforts through digital exports, with anthologies and issues now distributed globally via e-book platforms like Kindle in formats including and PDF. This expansion builds on prior e-book initiatives, making curated collections available for 12 months post-purchase in multiple regions.

References

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