Difference between revisions of "Slicks"

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Slicks is the colloquail term for magazines printed on paper having a more or less glossy finish, as opposed to [[pulps]], the term used for magazines printed on pulp paper.
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'''''Slicks''''' is the colloquial term for magazines printed on paper having a more or less glossy finish, as opposed to [[pulps]], the term used for magazines printed on pulp paper.
  
During the [[Golden Age]], most magazines printing SF stories were [[pulps]] rather than slicks. [[SF]] authors aspired to be published in slicks, as they paid ''considerably'' more per word (20-50 cents/word compared with 5 cents/word) and since they were very choosey markets which were not [[SF]] genre markets, were considerably more prestigious.  (From its earliest days, [[fandom]] yearned to be accepted by mainstream society (see "[[It is a proud and lonely thing to be a fan]]") and [[sf]] in the slicks was seen as a beginning.
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During the [[Golden Age]], most magazines printing [[SF]] stories were [[pulps]] rather than slicks. SF [[authors]] aspired to be published in slicks, as they paid ''considerably'' more per word (20–50 cents/word compared with 5 cents/word) and since they were very choosey markets which were not [[SF]] genre markets, were considerably more prestigious.  (From its earliest days, [[fandom]] yearned to be accepted by [[mainstream]] society (see "[[It is a proud and lonely thing to be a fan]]") and [[sf]] in the slicks was seen as a beginning.
  
{{publishing}}
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A few [[prozines]], such as ''[[Omni]]'', have been slicks.
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{{fanspeak}}

Latest revision as of 02:54, 13 February 2023

Slicks is the colloquial term for magazines printed on paper having a more or less glossy finish, as opposed to pulps, the term used for magazines printed on pulp paper.

During the Golden Age, most magazines printing SF stories were pulps rather than slicks. SF authors aspired to be published in slicks, as they paid considerably more per word (20–50 cents/word compared with 5 cents/word) and since they were very choosey markets which were not SF genre markets, were considerably more prestigious. (From its earliest days, fandom yearned to be accepted by mainstream society (see "It is a proud and lonely thing to be a fan") and sf in the slicks was seen as a beginning.

A few prozines, such as Omni, have been slicks.



Fanspeak
This is a fanspeak page. Please extend it by adding information about when and by whom it was coined, whether it’s still in use, etc.