Transcribe
Translate
Sparx, Special Edition, September 1947
Front cover
More information
digital collection
archival collection guide
transcription tips
THIS IS SPARX VOLUME ONE NUMBER FOUR DATED SEPTEMBER NINTEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY SEVEN. IT IS SUED FOR THE PHILCON MEMORY BOOK AND, MORE ESPECIALLY FOR TO MAKE SURE THAT MY EXCHANGEES DON'T FORGET ME. SUBSCRIPTION IS FIVE CENTS PER ISSUE OR AN ALL FOR ALL TRADE CONTINUED. or a contribution to the insides of the mag. NO MORE DEADHEADS AFTER THIS ISSUE. If you get the next ish, it will be because of a sub, or because you are lucky. And NO ONE will be lucky. In fact, there'll be no more ishes, unless I get cooperation of all sorts. Material and encouragement. This issue is composed on the spur of the moment out of material that happened to be around, and out of my head. Appologies, if you don't think it up to snuff. To my new readers: SPARX is a highly miscellaneous publication, containing almost anything, which appears about three or four times per annum, when the spirit moves. As I have said above, this issue is in honor of the Philcon, and the Memory Book. SPARX number one is out of print. Two and three are available in limited quantities, ataa nickel per for those who want to get 'em. Guess that's enough editorializing for now. JOIN AVC JOIN AVC JOIN AVC JOIN AVC JJOIN AVC JJOIN AVC JOIN AVC JOIN AV PULP IS AS PULP DOES by Donald W. Bratton Leafing through old issues of Weird Tales, no fan could miss the persistant ads for the book "The Moon Terror." It must have been difficult to get rid of the thing, for the ads ran over ten years, the price finally dropping to half a buck. And I wouldn't pay that much for it today. On a catalog card it looks like this: The moon terror; ... Popular Fiction publishing co., Indianapolis, c1927. 192 pages. 19 cm. Jacket, illustrated. "These stories are reprinted from early issues of the magazine Weird Tales" -- page 2. Contents. The moon terror, by A. G. Birch. Ooze, by Anthony M. Rud. Penelope, by Vincent Starrett. An adventure in the fourth dimension, by Farnsworth Wright. A four-story collection, its only noteworthy items are the last two stories, both shorts: "Penelope" and "An Adventure in the Fourth Dimension." "The Moon Terror" must have been a terror to the publisher. The
Saving...
prev
next
THIS IS SPARX VOLUME ONE NUMBER FOUR DATED SEPTEMBER NINTEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY SEVEN. IT IS SUED FOR THE PHILCON MEMORY BOOK AND, MORE ESPECIALLY FOR TO MAKE SURE THAT MY EXCHANGEES DON'T FORGET ME. SUBSCRIPTION IS FIVE CENTS PER ISSUE OR AN ALL FOR ALL TRADE CONTINUED. or a contribution to the insides of the mag. NO MORE DEADHEADS AFTER THIS ISSUE. If you get the next ish, it will be because of a sub, or because you are lucky. And NO ONE will be lucky. In fact, there'll be no more ishes, unless I get cooperation of all sorts. Material and encouragement. This issue is composed on the spur of the moment out of material that happened to be around, and out of my head. Appologies, if you don't think it up to snuff. To my new readers: SPARX is a highly miscellaneous publication, containing almost anything, which appears about three or four times per annum, when the spirit moves. As I have said above, this issue is in honor of the Philcon, and the Memory Book. SPARX number one is out of print. Two and three are available in limited quantities, ataa nickel per for those who want to get 'em. Guess that's enough editorializing for now. JOIN AVC JOIN AVC JOIN AVC JOIN AVC JJOIN AVC JJOIN AVC JOIN AVC JOIN AV PULP IS AS PULP DOES by Donald W. Bratton Leafing through old issues of Weird Tales, no fan could miss the persistant ads for the book "The Moon Terror." It must have been difficult to get rid of the thing, for the ads ran over ten years, the price finally dropping to half a buck. And I wouldn't pay that much for it today. On a catalog card it looks like this: The moon terror; ... Popular Fiction publishing co., Indianapolis, c1927. 192 pages. 19 cm. Jacket, illustrated. "These stories are reprinted from early issues of the magazine Weird Tales" -- page 2. Contents. The moon terror, by A. G. Birch. Ooze, by Anthony M. Rud. Penelope, by Vincent Starrett. An adventure in the fourth dimension, by Farnsworth Wright. A four-story collection, its only noteworthy items are the last two stories, both shorts: "Penelope" and "An Adventure in the Fourth Dimension." "The Moon Terror" must have been a terror to the publisher. The
Hevelin Fanzines
sidebar