The FictionMags Index
Index by Name: Page 9261
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[]Sichel, Harold (fl. 1910s-1920s) (chron.)
- * [front cover], (cv) The St. Nicholas Magazine July 1922
- * [front cover], (cv) The American Boy Feb 1927, Apr 1929
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Scribner’s Magazine December 1920
- * [illustration(s)], (il) The St. Nicholas Magazine Oct 1921, Aug 1926, Jul, Sep, Oct 1927, Jan, Mar 1928, Oct, Dec 1930
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Boys’ Life April 1926
- * [illustration(s)] (with Herbert Johnson), (il) Everybody’s Magazine April 1916
[]Sichrovsky, Elena (fl. 2010s-2020s) (about) (chron.)
- * Angel Snow, (vi) Sci Phi Journal #4, 2019
- * Bathsheba’s Corsage, (pm) The Deadlands #30, October 2023
- * Crabgrass in October, (ss) Apparition Literary Magazine #24, Reclamation, October 2023
- * Embryo, (ss) Mythaxis Magazine #34, Summer 2023
- * Goodnight, Virginia Bluebells, (ss) Nightmare #128, May 2023
- * Marigolds in Winter, (ss) Planet Scumm #9, Winter 2020
- * Tonight We’re Wearing Waste Bags, (ss) Radon Journal #7, May 2024
- * What if We Held Hands and Blew Up Heaven, (pm) Strange Horizons October 9 2023
- * A Wine Glass of Mercury, (ss) Baffling Magazine #14, January 2024
- * Wings of a Dove, (ss) Hinnom Magazine #9, October 2018
[]Sickert, Walter (Richard) (1860-1942) (about) (chron.)
- * Ada Lundberg, (il) The Yellow Book July 1894
- * Bodley Heads, No. I. Mr. Richard Le Gallienne, (il) The Yellow Book January 1895
- * Charley’s Aunt, (il) The Yellow Book October 1894
- * Collins’s Music Hall, Islington, (il) The Yellow Book October 1894
- * Hotel Royal, Dieppe, (il) The Yellow Book January 1895
- * A Lady Reading, (il) The Yellow Book April 1894
- * The Lion Comique, (il) The Yellow Book October 1894
- * The Middlesex Music Hall, (il) The Yellow Book April 1895
- * The Music Hall, (pi) The Idler March 1895
- * The Old Beford Music Hall, (il) The Yellow Book July 1894
- * The Old Oxford Music Hall, (il) The Yellow Book April 1894
- * Portrait of Aubrey Beardsley, (il) The Yellow Book July 1894
- * Portrait of Mr. George Moore, (il) The Yellow Book January 1895
- * Portrait of Mrs. Ernest Leverson, (il) The Yellow Book April 1895
- * The Rialto, Venice, (il) The Savoy #2, April 1896
- * Therese Lessere, (ar) Colour November 1918
- * Three Pictures, (gp) The Yellow Book Jul, Oct 1894, Jan 1895
- * Two Sketches, (gp) The Yellow Book April 1895
_____, [ref.]
[]Sickles, Noel (Douglas) (1910-1982) (about) (chron.)
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Collier’s November 29 1941
- * [illustration(s)], (il) The Saturday Evening Post Jan 17, Nov 20 1948, Apr 8, Jun 24 1950, Jan 4, Jan 25 1958, Apr 8 1967
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Boys’ Life February 1966
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Argosy Oct 1968, Jan 1969
[]Siclari, Joseph D. (fl. 1970s-2010s) (books) (chron.)
- * Introduction, (in) The Complete Quandry, Vol. 1 ed. Joe D. Siclari, Joe D. Siclari, 1982
- * Introduction (with Mike Resnick), (in) Worldcon Guest of Honor Speeches ed. Mike Resnick & Joe Siclari, NESFA Press, 2006
- * Ticka…Ticka…Ticka…The Typer Goes Ever Onward, (ed)
- * [letter], (lt) Khatru #2, May 1975
- * [photography], (pt) Pulp Vault #14, April 2011
_____, ed.
- * Editor: Fanhistorica #4, December 1982
- * The Complete Quandry, Vol. 1, (Joe D. Siclari, September 1982, an)
- * The Complete Quandry, Vol. 2, (Joe D. Siclari, August 1983, an)
- * Worldcon Guest of Honor Speeches (with Mike Resnick), (ISFiC Press, August 2006, oa)
[]Sid (fl. 1930s) (chron.)
- * The Bookkeeper’s Blues, (pm) Pep Stories April 1934
- * Child of Nature, (pm) Snappy September 1934
- * Diplomatic Complaint, (pm) Tattle Tales October 1934
- * Finis, (pm) Snappy August 1934
- * House Party, (pm) Pep Stories March 1934
- * Love and Sauerkraut, (pm) Bedtime Stories November 1934
- * Mercenary Lady, (ss) Gay Broadway Winter 1934
- * The Night Owl, (pm) Snappy July 1934
- * No Odds, (pm) Pep Stories February 1934
- * Poem, (pm) Snappy April 1934
- * Poems by Sid, (pm) Pep Stories March 1934
- * Rain, (pm) Spicy Stories November 1934
- * Rushing the Growler, (cl) The Police Gazette November 14 1933
- * Snappy Poems, (pm) Snappy October 1933
- * Snappy Poetry by Sid, (pm) Snappy December 1933
- * Song in a Cabaret, (pm) Pep Stories June 1934
- * Summer Soliloquy, (pm) Gay Parisienne August 1934
- * Verse, (pm) Snappy May 1934
[]Siddall, David (fl. 2000s-2010s) (chron.)
- * Camilla, (ss) Supernatural Tales #19, Summer 2011
- * Deadbait, (nv) Noir Nation #3, October 2013
- * Fake, (ss) All Due Respect #2, March 2014
- * Going Back, (ss) Supernatural Tales #11, Spring 2007
- * The Judas Man, (ss) Supernatural Tales #15, Summer 2009
- * Melody, (ss) Supernatural Tales #8, Autumn 2004
- * The Other One, (ss) Albedo One #44, 2013
[]Siddall, John M. (1874-1923) (chron.)
- * Abraham Lincoln Belongs in History—Not in the Nursery, (ms) The American Magazine November 1917, uncredited.
- * Aim with Your Imagination—But Don’t Neglect to Shoot!, (ms) The American Magazine December 1918, uncredited.
- * Are you on Two Pay-rolls? You Can Be—and you Should Be, (ms) The American Magazine October 1918, uncredited.
- * Considering Who Grandpa Was—We’re Not so Bad, (ms) The American Magazine October 1916, uncredited.
- * Consider Your Ears—They Are Not Purely Decorative, (ms) The American Magazine January 1917, uncredited.
- * Deal a Few Cards to Others—Life Is no Game of Solitaire, (ms) The American Magazine August 1918, uncredited.
- * Dr. Thomas A. Storey, (bg) The American Magazine April 1913 [Ref. Thomas A. Storey]
- * Don’t Get Anxious about New York: Let New York Get Anxious About You, (ms) The American Magazine February 1917, uncredited.
- * “Don’t Use Your Head—Use Mine,” Says the Kaiser, (ms) The American Magazine July 1918, uncredited.
- * Good Brains Don’t All Travel the Same Way, (ms) The American Magazine December 1916, uncredited.
- * A Great Ancestor Would Be All Right if So Many Outsiders Didn’t Butt In, (ms) The American Magazine June 1917, uncredited.
- * Here Is a New Suit of Clothes for Some Old Ideas, (ms) The American Magazine March 1916, uncredited.
- * Here Is the Reason Some Men Appear So Marvelously Able, (ms) The American Magazine May 1918, uncredited.
- * How the World Empties and Fills, (ms) The American Magazine October 1915
- * If This Be Contempt of Court—Send Me the Bill, (ms) The American Magazine April 1916, uncredited.
- * If You Aren’t Fighting—Are You Worth Fighting For?, (ms) The American Magazine February 1918, uncredited.
- * If Your Ego Bothers You—Go Look at the Stars, (ms) The American Magazine July 1916, uncredited.
- * It Is Hard to Tell How Numb a Young Skull is, (ms) The American Magazine June 1916, uncredited.
- * It Is Sometimes Better to Remain a Bore than to Make Yourself Too Intersting, (ms) The American Magazine March 1917, uncredited.
- * It’s the Encores People Call for That Make Lying Difficult, (ms) The American Magazine October 1917, uncredited.
- * It Was the United States of America That Yelled Down That Stairway, Mr. German Major, (ms) The American Magazine November 1918, uncredited.
- * I Will Hang This on Balboa—Because He Has Had His Fun and Is Dead, (ms) The American Magazine April 1917, uncredited.
- * Just What Has Been Done to Communicate with the Dead, (ed) The American Magazine April 1920 [Ref. James H. Hyslop]
- * Let’s Break Away from Granddaddy, (ms) The American Magazine November 1915, uncredited.
- * A Mail Carrier Is Not the Only One Who Has to Keep on Delivering, (ms) The American Magazine September 1917, uncredited.
- * Men Can’t Be Geared Up—Unless They Are Cheered Up, (ms) The American Magazine July 1917, uncredited.
- * The Millennium Is No Mushroom, (ms) The American Magazine January 1916, uncredited.
- * Money Talks—But There Are Other Speakers, (ar) The American Magazine September 1916, uncredited.
- * Moths Don’t Destroy Treasures Like These, (ms) The American Magazine March 1918, uncredited.
- * No One Person Is Allowed to Carry Around All the World’s Knowledge, (ms) The American Magazine December 1917, uncredited.
- * Now That We Have Bought Them—Let’s Bury Them!, (ms) The American Magazine August 1917, uncredited.
- * On the Art of Writing, (ar) The Collegiate World November 1921
- * Sid Says: If You Ever Reach Easy Street—Turn Into It!, (ms) The American Magazine August 1923, uncredited.
- * Sid Says:
* ___ Money Talks—But There Are Other Speakers, (ar) The American Magazine September 1916, uncredited.
* ___ I. Let’s Break Away from Granddaddy, (ms) The American Magazine November 1915, uncredited.
* ___ II. To Go Thoroughly Married Takes Time and Trouble, (ms) The American Magazine December 1915, uncredited.
* ___ III. The Millennium Is No Mushroom, (ms) The American Magazine January 1916, uncredited.
* ___ IV. This Is a Want Ad for a World-Beater, (ms) The American Magazine February 1916, uncredited.
* ___ V. Here Is a New Suit of Clothes for Some Old Ideas, (ms) The American Magazine March 1916, uncredited.
* ___ VI. If This Be Contempt of Court—Send Me the Bill, (ms) The American Magazine April 1916, uncredited.
* ___ VII. Strive as we Will—Our Brows Slope Gently Downward, (ms) The American Magazine May 1916, uncredited.
* ___ VIII. It Is Hard to Tell How Numb a Young Skull is, (ms) The American Magazine June 1916, uncredited.
* ___ IX. If Your Ego Bothers You—Go Look at the Stars, (ms) The American Magazine July 1916, uncredited.
* ___ X. Some Poetry Is Made to Be Heard—Not Heeded, (ms) The American Magazine August 1916, uncredited.
* ___ XI. Considering Who Grandpa Was—We’re Not so Bad, (ms) The American Magazine October 1916, uncredited.
* ___ XII. You Can Go Further if You Take Others with You, (ms) The American Magazine November 1916, uncredited.
* ___ XIII. Good Brains Don’t All Travel the Same Way, (ms) The American Magazine December 1916, uncredited.
* ___ XIV. Consider Your Ears—They Are Not Purely Decorative, (ms) The American Magazine January 1917, uncredited.
* ___ XV. Don’t Get Anxious about New York: Let New York Get Anxious About You, (ms) The American Magazine February 1917, uncredited.
* ___ XVI. It Is Sometimes Better to Remain a Bore than to Make Yourself Too Intersting, (ms) The American Magazine March 1917, uncredited.
* ___ XVII. I Will Hang This on Balboa—Because He Has Had His Fun and Is Dead, (ms) The American Magazine April 1917, uncredited.
* ___ XVIII. Some Mighty Good Salaries Go to Men Who Would Almost as Soon Work for Nothing, (ms) The American Magazine May 1917, uncredited.
* ___ XIX. A Great Ancestor Would Be All Right if So Many Outsiders Didn’t Butt In, (ms) The American Magazine June 1917, uncredited.
* ___ XX. Men Can’t Be Geared Up—Unless They Are Cheered Up, (ms) The American Magazine July 1917, uncredited.
* ___ XXI. Now That We Have Bought Them—Let’s Bury Them!, (ms) The American Magazine August 1917, uncredited.
* ___ XXII. A Mail Carrier Is Not the Only One Who Has to Keep on Delivering, (ms) The American Magazine September 1917, uncredited.
* ___ XXIII. It’s the Encores People Call for That Make Lying Difficult, (ms) The American Magazine October 1917, uncredited.
* ___ XXIV. Abraham Lincoln Belongs in History—Not in the Nursery, (ms) The American Magazine November 1917, uncredited.
* ___ XXV. No One Person Is Allowed to Carry Around All the World’s Knowledge, (ms) The American Magazine December 1917, uncredited.
* ___ XXVI. What Goes On in Your Head Is Older Than You Think, (ms) The American Magazine January 1918, uncredited.
* ___ XXVII. If You Aren’t Fighting—Are You Worth Fighting For?, (ms) The American Magazine February 1918, uncredited.
* ___ XXVIII. Moths Don’t Destroy Treasures Like These, (ms) The American Magazine March 1918, uncredited.
* ___ XXIX. Here Is the Reason Some Men Appear So Marvelously Able, (ms) The American Magazine May 1918, uncredited.
* ___ XXX. Where do I come in?—Asks the Human Being, (ms) The American Magazine June 1918, uncredited.
* ___ XXXI. “Don’t Use Your Head—Use Mine,” Says the Kaiser, (ms) The American Magazine July 1918, uncredited.
* ___ XXXII. Deal a Few Cards to Others—Life Is no Game of Solitaire, (ms) The American Magazine August 1918, uncredited.
* ___ XXXIII. When the “Lunar Limited” Starts—Buy a Ticket, (ms) The American Magazine September 1918, uncredited.
* ___ XXXIV. Are you on Two Pay-rolls? You Can Be—and you Should Be, (ms) The American Magazine October 1918, uncredited.
* ___ XXXV. It Was the United States of America That Yelled Down That Stairway, Mr. German Major, (ms) The American Magazine November 1918, uncredited.
* ___ XXXVI. Aim with Your Imagination—But Don’t Neglect to Shoot!, (ms) The American Magazine December 1918, uncredited.
* ___ LII. You Wouldn’t Go to a Deaf Mute for Lessions in Elocution, (ed) The American Magazine April 1920
- * Some Mighty Good Salaries Go to Men Who Would Almost as Soon Work for Nothing, (ms) The American Magazine May 1917, uncredited.
- * Some Poetry Is Made to Be Heard—Not Heeded, (ms) The American Magazine August 1916, uncredited.
- * Strive as we Will—Our Brows Slope Gently Downward, (ms) The American Magazine May 1916, uncredited.
- * This Is a Want Ad for a World-Beater, (ms) The American Magazine February 1916, uncredited.
- * To Go Thoroughly Married Takes Time and Trouble, (ms) The American Magazine December 1915, uncredited.
- * What Goes On in Your Head Is Older Than You Think, (ms) The American Magazine January 1918, uncredited.
- * When the “Lunar Limited” Starts—Buy a Ticket, (ms) The American Magazine September 1918, uncredited.
- * Where do I come in?—Asks the Human Being, (ms) The American Magazine June 1918, uncredited.
- * You Can Go Further if You Take Others with You, (ms) The American Magazine November 1916, uncredited.
- * You Wouldn’t Go to a Deaf Mute for Lessions in Elocution, (ed) The American Magazine April 1920
_____, ed.
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