The FictionMags Index


Magazine Contents Lists: Page 3023


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    Stag [Vol. 15 No. 10, October 1964] ed. Noah Sarlat (Atlas Magazines, Inc., 40¢, 100pp, quarto, cover by Mort Künstler) []
    • 8 · Stag Confidential · [uncredited] · cl
    • 13 · Last Laughs · Various · hu
    • 14 · “Mr. President, Red China Has Orbited a Cobalt Bomb” · W. J. Saber · nv
    • 18 · An Intimate Look at the Call Girl World · Carl Sherman · ar
    • 22 · On-the-Deck B-24 Ace Who Broke Rommel’s Back · Glenn Infield · ts
    • 24 · Final Day in the Life of Heavyweight Ernie Knox · Robert Liston · ar
    • 26 · G-2’s Nude Debutante Decoy of Embassy Row · Anson Hunter · ts
    • 28 · Stag’s Big Picture · [uncredited] · pi
    • 30 · Found: America’s Last Cannibal Tribe · E. C. Schurmacher · ts
    • 34 · Space Island, U.S.A.—Our Top Secret Man-on-the-Moon Base · L. B. Taylor, Jr. · ar
    • 36 · How Yvonne Got Into the Christine Keeler Scandal · [uncredited] · pi
    • 38 · George Cook’s Miracle Sub Rescue of 33 Marooned GIs · Stan Smith · ts
    • 40 · For Your Information · [uncredited] · ms
    • 42 · Sex Visits for Men Behind Bars · Leon Lazarus · ar
    • 50 · Out of This World · [uncredited] · ms
    • 86 · Out of the Stag Bag · The Readers · lc


    Stag [Volume 16 Number 3, March 1965] ed. Noah Sarlat (Atlas Magazines, Inc., 40¢, 100pp, quarto, cover by Mort Künstler) []
    • 8 · Stag Confidential · [uncredited] · cl
    • 11 · Last Laughs · Various · hu
    • 12 · Girls Who Bring Sex to Your Door · Richard Farrington · ar; “When the clinching of a sale depends on more intimate extras the customer is always right.”
    • 16 · From Inside the Vatican: Father O’Flaherty’s P.O.W. Escape Compound · James Burns · ts; illustrated by Bruce Minney; “Whether the Pope knew about it or not, a redheaded Irish padre and his underground railroad shuttled 4000 Allied GIs in and out of the Holy State, right under the noses of the Fascist police and Hitler’s top SS aces.”
    • 18 · Ten “Instant Doom” Weapons That Can Destroy the Earth · Robert Laguardia · ar; “Giant ICBMs, psyche gases, Buck Rogers death rays. The ultimate in mass annihilation - and the ultimate in deterrents, for the hope is that because they exist, they’ll never be used.”
    • 20 · Dec. 30th—The Day They Robbed the Washington Mint · James Harvey · ts; illustrated by Samson Pollen; “Nobody had ever tried to heist the Treasury’s ‘Dillinger-proof’ money factory - until an obscure wrapping clerk walked off with $160,000 in $20 bills, hot off the government presses.”
    • 24 · Coral Sea…U.S. Navy’s Bloodiest Pacific Battle · Stan Smith · ar; “The order to intercept the Jap armada was clear to every man in Task Force 17: roadblock Hirohito’s fleet dead in its tracks, or risk losing the entire ocean.”
    • 28 · Until There Are None · W. J. Saber · nv; illustrated by Charles Copeland; “Three Secretaries were murdered and it was obvious the rest would die in order of importance. It was time for a showdown for an ex-POW and his ”brainwasher“ -- terror-master Gen. Cho”.
    • 30 · Stag’s Big Picture · [uncredited] · pi
    • 32 · Robert Rogers’ “Quick-Kill” Rangers—American’s First Commando Army · Richard Gallagher · ts; illustrated by George Wilson; “No ‘civilized’ troops had ever fought a war the way these men did: Attacking where least expected, striking with hit-and-run tactics that had every enemy soldier garrisoned on the lonely Northwest frontier shying at his own shadow.”
    • 34 · Sweet Potato Spader from the Swinging Island of Jersey · [uncredited] · pi
    • 36 · Murderous Mortars of “Texas” Jack Shelby—1st Inf. Div. Hero · Len Guttridge · ts; “The ex-broncobuster and his 107-pound, 81 mm, stovepipe-figured, shell spitting ‘lady’ were the most lethal combo ever to go into WW II combat.”
    • 38 · For Your Information · [uncredited] · cl
    • 40 · The Savage World Below City Streets · John Drozen · ts; “In every major city that has a subway system, teen-age ‘rat-packs’ terror stalk the maze of tunnels and arcades, working out of subterranean clubhouses, preying on commuters in an orgy of crime”.
    • 50 · Out of This World · [uncredited] · ms


    Stag [v19 #4, April 1968] []
    Issue partially indexed.


    Stag [v19 #7, July 1968] []
    Issue partially indexed.



    Stag [v22 #13, November 1971] []
    Issue partially indexed.
    • · The Worst Horror Story of World War II · Sal Principe · ts


    Stag [v24 #11, November 1973] []
    Issue partially indexed.




    Stag [v34 #10, October 1983] (Stag Magazine Corp., $3.50, 92pp, quarto) []
    Details supplied by Kenneth R. Johnson, listing fiction only.




    Stag Annual [#5, 1968] (60¢, quarto) []
    Details taken from eBay listing.
    • · Villa of the Assassins · John Lange · ss
    • · Last Night with Laura · Erskine Caldwell · ss
    • · Hot Afternoon with Ellen · Erskine Caldwell · ss
    • · Yank Howitzer Bandit Who Blasted Open the Riviera Fortress of Gold · Mario Cleri · ar
    • · Weapons King · Joseph Disher · ar; a story of Sam Cummings.
    • · Killer Medical Labs · Anthony Scaduto · ar
    • · I Sold My Body on Hamburg Street of Whores · Greta · ar
    • · 25 Sex Hangs Ups Solved · George Robinson · ar
    • · War Hero Who Blasted the Nazi and Red Top Aces · Glenn Infield · ar; features Col. Robin Olds.
    • · Our Top Polaris Sub Is Trapped in Chicom Waters · Greg Ibson · ar
    • · Wild Antics of Those Coffee Break Passion Dolls · Jay Webb · ar
    • · Destruction of Run of Engine #5 · Ray Lunt · ar
    • · Auto Repair Shops That Rob Blindly · Dan Dineen · ar


    Stag Annual [#15, 1973] (75¢, 132pp, quarto) []
    Details supplied by Steve Holland.




    Stag: Man’s Own Magazine:   (about)








    Stag: Man’s Own Magazine [#6 (New Series), n.d. (Autumn 1947)] (1/6d, 68pp, cover: [photo of Hazel Court]) []
    Various cartoons by Betts, Pits. Various photographs including Janis Carter, Lucille Ball, Martha Vickers, Hedy Lamarr, Loretta Young, Diana Dors.
    Details supplied by Steve Holland.






    Stage and Screen   (about)
    Although the publisher and displayed price are American, this was a British magazine that reprinted from a variety of US magazines.














    Stand   (about)
    Little magazine with a blend of poetry, fiction and articles.


    Stand [#7, Spring 1954] []
    Issue partially indexed.
    • · It’s Not by His Beak You Can Judge a Woodcock · Glyn Jones · ss




    Stand [Summer 1985] []
    Issue partially indexed.





    Stand [Autumn 1990] []
    Issue partially indexed.




    Stand [v32 #3, 1991] []
    Issue partially indexed.






    Stand [Summer 1994] []
    Issue partially indexed.






    The Standard [v17, October 1930] (standard) []
    Issue partially indexed from The Standard Index of Short Stories by Francis J. Hannigan.


    The Standard [v17, December 1930] (standard) []
    Issue partially indexed from The Standard Index of Short Stories by Francis J. Hannigan.


    The Standard [v17, January 1931] (standard) []
    Issue partially indexed from The Standard Index of Short Stories by Francis J. Hannigan.


    The Standard [v17, March 1931] (standard) []
    Issue partially indexed from The Standard Index of Short Stories by Francis J. Hannigan.


    Standard Stories   (about)
    Standard Stories—UK; Jul. 1925-May 1926 (11 issues); Hutchinson, London; monthly; standard pulp; mostly reprints; superseded by Best-Story Magazine.


    Standard Stories [Vol. 1 No. 1, July 1925] (Hutchinson, 1/-, 100pp, pulp) []
    This first issue is interesting because it asked authors to select their favourite amongst their own stories.
    Details supplied by Mike Ashley & Richard Fidczuk.
    • 5 · Out of the Ruins · Sir Philip Gibbs · ss Cosmopolitan December 1924; the story he least dislikes because its events were later replicated in real life.
    • 22 · Good Hunting, Old Chap! · Sapper · ss The Strand Magazine May 1920; not a Bulldog Drummond story but a very moving story based on McNeile’s own dog. McNeile loved his dog and couldn’t forgive himself when he was put down. This story was clearly cathartic.
    • 31 · The Clock · A. E. W. Mason · ss The Windsor Magazine #184, April 1910; science fiction. A clock briefly stops time. Mason says the story is based on his own clock which used to perform oddly.
    • 43 · Picq Plays the Hero · Leonard Merrick · ss Harper’s Bazar November 1918; the only story critics and reviewers had a common agreement about how good it was.
    • 51 · The Ghost with the Smiling Eyes · Berta Ruck · ss The New Magazine (UK) May 1924; chosen because it brings back memories of her grandmother. Ruck was the wife of Oliver Onions and it was when they had just married and Berta was combing her hair that the crackling caused by the static made Onions think how unique that sound is and which inspired the ghost story “The Beckoning Fair One”. Berta (the name is short for Roberta) was a very close friend of Edith Nesbit and Nesbit used her name for the eldest girl in The Railway Children.
    • 58 · The Decree Made Absolute · Mrs. Belloc Lowndes · ss McClure’s Magazine June 1908; by Hilaire’s sister - chosen because Marie felt strongly about the moral of her story - that children should not be separated from their mother.
    • 71 · The Riddle of Countess Runa · Anthony Hope · ss McClure’s Magazine March 1904; he liked the way he’d brought out the romance and humour in life.
    • 78 · The Girl at the Gate · H. de Vere Stacpoole · ss; because it captures a time now long gone.
    • 84 · A Lustrum of Fidelity · Edith Bigelow · ss The Smart Set November 1902; this doesn’t look like a favourite story - more like a space filler.
    • 90 · Purely Platonic · Stanley J. Rubinstein · ss
    • 93 · New Friends and Old · A. M. Chisholm · ss The Smart Set June 1904; another space filler.







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