Details supplied by Douglas Greene. |
More of an anthology series than a magazine, The Saint Mystery Library combined stories from its parent magazine with original stories and stories from other sources. First six issues were 4¼″ by 6½″, the following eight issues 4¼″ by 7″ size. Each issue had two separate numbers, an issue number listed in the indicia which started at #1, and a book number which started at #118 - as the latter numbers are more familiar, both numbers are listed below. |
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Details supplied by Jerry Boyajian. |
Details supplied by Jerry Boyajian. |
Details supplied by Jerry Boyajian. |
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Details supplied by Jerry Boyajian. |
Details supplied by Jerry Boyajian. |
Details supplied by Jerry Boyajian. |
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Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Details supplied by Jerry Boyajian. |
Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Details supplied by Jerry Boyajian. |
More of an anthology series than a magazine, The Saint’s Choice, with one exception, reprinted stories from a variety of sources. |
Subtitled “The Saint’s Choice of English Mystery”. |
Subtitled “The Saint’s Choice of American Crime”. |
Subtitled “The Saint’s Choice of True Crime Stories”. Details supplied by Tom Daniels. |
Subtitled “The Saint’s Choice of Humorous Crime”. |
Subtitled “The Saint’s Choice of Impossible Crime”. |
Subtitled “The Saint’s Choice of Hollywood Crime”. |
Subtitled “The Saint’s Choice of Radio-Thrillers”. |
This magazine was really three seperate magazines in one. It started life in 1957 as a science fiction/fantasy magazine under the title Saturn, The Magazine of Science Fiction, but only lasted for 5 issues. It then switched to a detective magazine for 14 issues, titled Saturn Web Detective Story Magazine in the Table of contents but (Saturn) Web Detective Stories on the cover and spine. Finally it became a weird-menace terror title under the name Web Terror Stories for a final 8 issues. The precise title varies from issue to issue, and often differs between the cover, spine and masthead. |
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