cover: Nude adolescent female faces reader; gold (?) band around hair; bunch of grapes and sheaf of wheat cover (most of) right and left breasts respectively (no indication what holds them there); right hand holds mystic device incorporating ships model and a balance; left holds device incorporating ankh and a four-walled bell; to either side of her are pillars carved with Egyptian hieroglyphics; picture cuts off just above navel level. The only cover that might have caused raised eyebrows at a newstand, I think. Promised lead story next month: Joan of Arc, by Paul Chadwick. |
note on the table of contents offers an unusual reason for the combinated date: In order to give hosts of new readers the time to catch up on the wealth of ground covered by TRUE MYSTIC SCIENCE, the January issue is combined with the February... Details supplied by Denny Lien. |
pagination runs from 103-166, not counting covers; 101-168 if covers are counted. The previous issues pagination stopped at 82 (or 84 counting covers, as TMS apparently did in the pagination of the earlier issues, where the first text page was p.3). Theres no explanation of why the jump from page 84 to page 101; certainly neither issue appears to be defective; maybe Its A Mystical Thing. Details supplied by Denny Lien. |
Details supplied by Denny Lien. |
Details supplied by Denny Lien. |
Details supplied by Denny Lien. |
The photo on the back is comparable to the entries in present-day FT Simulacra Cornere.g. natural phenomena (tree branches and foliage in this case) which bear close accidental resemblance to people or thingsbut unsurprisingly TMS is pushing this photo (from 1927) as miraculous rather than accidental. Details supplied by Denny Lien. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Incomplete details taken from the Index of Short Stories in Edward J. OBriens The Best Short Stories (1918-1921). |
Details supplied by Sharon Eisenberg. |
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UK version of the US True Story, which was the first of the so-called confessions magazines. Stories were purportedly true and hence were uncredited. An unusual feature of the magazine is that each story is prefixed by a Reading Time - to the nearest second! |