Title changed from Western Fiction Magazine. |
Details supplied by David Lee Smith. |
Details supplied by John Locke from Table of Contents. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Although the cover and table of contents of each issue has Long John Lathams in small print above the title, the magazine is referred to throughout as just Western Fiction Magazine. |
Dated August 1970 on the cover. |
Dated October 1970 on the cover. Details supplied by Tom Daniels. |
Dated January 1971 on the cover. Details supplied by Tom Daniels. |
Dated March 1971 on the cover. Details supplied by Tom Daniels. |
Title changed from Western Fiction Magazine. Although the cover and table of contents of each issue has Long John Lathams in small print above the title, the magazine is referred to throughout as just Western Magazine. |
Dated June 1971 on the cover. Details supplied by Tom Daniels. |
Dated September 1971 on the cover. Details supplied by Tom Daniels. |
Dated January 1972 on the cover. Details supplied by Tom Daniels. |
Dated March 1972 on the cover. |
Details taken from library catalogue of the National Cowboy Museum. |
Title changed from Western Magazine. |
Details taken from library catalogue of the National Cowboy Museum. |
Details taken from library catalogue of the National Cowboy Museum. |
Details taken from library catalogue of the National Cowboy Museum. |
--- see under Western Fiction Magazine (1930s). |
--- see under National Home Monthly. |
The Western Library was, in Amalgamated Press terms, rather short-lived, running to only 110 issues between 1950 and 1954. The 64-page stories appeared in the same pocket library format as the more famous Sexton Blake Library, sharing with the latter a number of authors (T.C.H. Jacobs, better known as Jacques Pendower, for instance), as well as its editor Len Pratt. Unlike the Blake series, a number of Western Library titles were reprints of American novels, by such famous authors as Ernest Haycox, Max Brand and Clarence E. Mulford (the creator of Hopalong Cassiday). The longest running series was the Lannagan tales of John Hunter, which were translated into picture strips in a companion Cowboy Library. Shorter series included the Careless OConnor series by Mike MCracken (Gordon Landsborough) and the Whip McCord series by Jacobs. Other series may exist. |
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