Galileo (magazine)

Galileo Magazine of Science & Fiction was a science and science fiction magazine published out of Boston, Massachusetts.[1]

Galileo Magazine of Science & Fiction
Galileo first issue (1976)
EditorCharles C. Ryan
CategoriesScience fact & science fiction
FrequencyQuarterly (issues #1-3); bimonthly (issues #4–16)
FormatMagazine
PublisherVincent McCaffrey
Total circulation
(July 1978)
50,000
FounderVincent McCaffrey
Year founded1976
First issueSeptember  1976 (1976-09)
Final issue
Number
January 1980 (1980-01)
16
CompanyAvenue Victor Hugo Publishers (issues #1-6 )
Galileo Magazine, Inc. (issues #7-17)
CountryU.S.A.
Based inBoston, Massachusetts
LanguageEnglish

Publication history

The first issue was released in September 1976.[1][2] Issue #5 was published in October 1977. It then changed to a bimonthly publishing schedule beginning with issue #6 published in January 1978. The last issue published was issue #16 in January 1980.[1] Issue #17 was planned, but the magazine folded and only the covers for #17 were printed.

Contributors

Larry Niven's The Ringworld Engineers was serialized in #13–#16. Other contributors include:

Issues

  • Issue #1 1976 (quarterly)
  • Issue #2 1976 (quarterly)
  • Issue #3 1977 (quarterly)
  • Issue #4 July 1977 (quarterly)
  • Issue #5 October 1977 (quarterly)
  • Issue #6 January 1978 (bimonthly)
  • Issue #7 March 1978 (bimonthly)
  • Issue #8 May 1978 (bimonthly)
  • Issue #9 July 1978 (bimonthly)
  • Issue #10 September 1978 (bimonthly)
  • Issue #11 & 12 double issue June 1979 (bimonthly)
  • Issue #13 July 1979 (bimonthly)
  • Issue #14 September 1979 (bimonthly)
  • Issue #15 November 1979 (bimonthly)
  • Issue #16 January 1980 (bimonthly)
gollark: I would simply use a calculator.
gollark: Ah, they seem to already be doing that.
gollark: This is very cool. I don't think you would even need very expensive hardware for it: instead of physical shutters use a transparent LCD or something.
gollark: If you just have x² or something, this just has b and c = 0.
gollark: (assuming real coefficients)

See also

References

  1. "Galileo". SF Encyclopedia. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
  2. Michael Ashley (1 January 2007). Gateways to Forever: The Story of the Science-fiction Magazines from 1970 to 1980. Liverpool University Press. p. 309. ISBN 978-1-84631-003-4. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
  • Galileo at the Science Fiction Encyclopedia
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.