Pulps

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(Did you mean a British fanzine, or a Robert Weinberg fanzine?)


The pulps were inexpensive fiction magazines printed on cheap wood-pulp paper. Such prozines dominated SF publishing from its beginnings through the 1940s, largely replaced by digest-sized magazines over the ’50s. The format was characterized by unsophisticated and usually formulaic adventure stories. Nonetheless, modern SF grew from those pulp beginnings and correspondence in the lettercolumns was the origin of fandom.

Published from 1896 through the 1950s, the typical pulp magazine was 7 inches wide by 10 inches high, half an inch thick, and 128 pages long. Pulps were printed on cheap paper with ragged, untrimmed edges.

Some pulps, like Argosy and Amazing Stories, ran a variety of stories by different authors. Other pulps, like The Shadow or Doc Savage, specialized in the exploits of specific characters.



Publishing