Fantasy fiction magazine
A fantasy fiction magazine, or fantasy magazine, is a magazine which publishes primarily fantasy fiction. Not generally included in the category are magazines for children with stories about such characters as Santa Claus. Also not included are adult magazines about sexual fantasy. Many fantasy magazines, in addition to fiction, have other features such as art, cartoons, reviews, or letters from readers. Some fantasy magazines also publish science fiction and horror fiction, so there is not always a clear distinction between a fantasy magazine and a science fiction magazine. For example, Fantastic magazine published almost exclusively science fiction for much of its run.
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Current magazines
- Abyss & Apex Magazine, 2003–present
- Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine, 2002–present AUS
- Apex Magazine, Apex Magazine, 2005–present
- Aurealis, 1990–present, AUS
- Bards and Sages Quarterly, 2009–present
- Beneath Ceaseless Skies, 2008–present
- Black Gate, 2001–present
- Clarkesworld Magazine, 2006–present, webzine
- Daily Science Fiction, 2010–present, webzine/email zine
- Fantastyka, 1982–present, Poland; the oldest SF/fantasy magazine in Eastern Europe, print
- GUD Magazine, 2006–present, print/pdf
- Heavy Metal, 1974–present
- Hypnos, 2012–present[1]
- Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet, 1996–present
- Lightspeed, 2006–present webzine (Fantasy magazine merged with Lightspeed to become one title in 2012)
- The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, 1949–present, US
- Mir Fantastiki, 2003–present, Russia
- Mithila Review, 2016–present, India
- On Spec, 1989–present, CA
- Orion's Child Science Fiction & Fantasy Magazine
- Postscripts Magazine, 2004–present, UK
- Strange Horizons, 2000–present, webzine
- Three-lobed Burning Eye, 1999–present
- Weird Tales, 1923–54, US (multiple revivals, including 1986–present, US)
Defunct magazines
- Absent Willow Review, 2008–2011[2]
- Argosy, 1882–1942, 1942–1978, US
- Beyond Fantasy Fiction, 1953–1955, US
- Electric Velocipede, 2001–2013
- Famous Fantastic Mysteries, 1939–1953, US[3]
- Fantastic, 1952–1980, US (title revived in the 2000s for the former Pirate Writings)
- Fantastic Adventures, 1939–1953, US
- Fantastic Novels, 1940–41, 1948–1951, US[4]
- Fantasy Fiction, 1953, US
- Fantázia, Slovakia
- Fenix, 1990–2001, Poland
- Forgotten Fantasy, 1970–71, US
- Ideomancer, webzine, 2001–2015
- Imagination, 1950–1958, US
- Jim Baen's Universe
- Marion Zimmer Bradley's Fantasy Magazine, 1988–2000, US
- Der Orchideengarten, 1919–1921, Germany
- Paradox Magazine, 2003–?
- Realms of Fantasy, 1994–2010, US
- Science Fantasy, 1950–1967, UK (aka Impulse)
- Shimmer Magazine, 2005–2018
- Subterranean Magazine, print 1995–2007, webzine 2007–2014
- Sybil's Garage, 2003–2010
- The Third Alternative, UK
- The Twilight Zone Magazine, 1981–1987, US
- Unknown, 1939–1943, US
- Whispers, 1973–1987, US
gollark: 3d6: omnidisks are ALL colours.
gollark: They're helpful, not malicious.
gollark: TomatOS?
gollark: Open one anywhere and use `cd`.
gollark: On your actual computer: Download the Windows ZIP from the releases page, open command prompt in the same folder, then run the kristforge EXE or whatever with the address as the argument.
External links
- Duotrope - search engine for fiction magazines
References
- Hypnos
- Absent Willow Review
- "Famous Fantastic Mysteries covers, contents". Archived from the original on 2006-11-19. Retrieved 2006-10-14.
- "Fantastic Novels covers, contents". Archived from the original on 2007-02-27. Retrieved 2006-10-14.
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