Everything about Weird Tales totally explained
» This article is about the pulp magazine. For other uses, see Weird tales (disambiguation).
Weird Tales is an
American fantasy and
horror fiction pulp magazine first published in March
1923. The magazine was set up in
Chicago by
J.C. Henneberger, an ex-journalist with a taste for the macabre.
Edwin Baird was the first editor of the monthly, assisted by
Farnsworth Wright.
Edwin Baird
Baird first published some of
Weird Tales' most famous writers, including
H. P. Lovecraft,
Clark Ashton Smith and
Seabury Quinn, author of the hugely popular
Jules de Grandin stories. The magazine lost a considerable sum of money under Baird's editorship, however--running through $11,000 in capital and amassing a $40,000 debt--and he was fired after 13 issues.
Henneberger offered the job to Lovecraft, who declined, citing his reluctance to relocate to Chicago; "think of the tragedy of such a move for an aged antiquarian," the 34-year-old writer declared.
Farnsworth Wright
The publisher then gave the job to Farnsworth Wright, who became the magazine's best-known editor. Wright (who suffered from
Parkinson's disease) continued to publish stories by Lovecraft, Smith, and Quinn, though he was more selective than Baird; he rejected Lovecraft's "
At the Mountains of Madness", "
The Shadow Over Innsmouth", and (initially) "
The Call of Cthulhu", among other stories. Many of Smith's
Hyperborean cycle stories were rejected as well.
Among the new writers Wright found for the magazine were
Robert Bloch and
Robert E. Howard, whose
Conan the Barbarian stories, among many others, were hugely popular. Wright even put playwright
Tennessee Williams into print for the first time (with his story "The Vengeance of Nitocris").
Edmond Hamilton's earliest science fiction stories also first appeared in Wright's
Weird Tales.
Notably, Wright hired the former fashion designer and illustrator
Margaret Brundage to produce the magazine's cover illustrations, starting in 1933--making Brundage the first and only female cover artist of the pulp era. She created many striking images, especially of nude or semi-nude young women in provocative poses (her whipping scenes attracted the highest attention). Though her art was far from flawless, Brundage's covers became a focus of extreme attention and controversy--which of course helped to sell the magazine. Wright also ignited the careers of two important fantasy artists,
Virgil Finlay and
Hannes Bok, by buying and publishing their work, first and frequently.
Weird Tales always struggled financially. In the 1920s and '30s, the magazine's business manager, William Sprenger, was crucial in keeping the enterprise afloat. It is estimated that the monthly circulation of
Weird Tales never topped 50,000 copies per issue. (In the 1920s, circulation figures for the most successful pulps topped one million; even in the depths of the
Great Depression, popular pulps like
Doc Savage or
The Shadow enjoyed circulations of 300,000 per issue, monthly or even semi-monthly.) After 1926 Farnsworth Wright paid his contributors at the rate of one cent per word, double the going pulp rate of a half-cent per word; but during the 1930s the magazine was sometimes very late in making its payments to authors (which wasn't unusual in the pulp field as a whole, at the time).
In 1938 Henneberger sold
Weird Tales to William J. Delaney, owner and publisher of the magazine
Short Stories. Davis brought in Dorothy McIlwraith, the editor of
Short Stories, to assist Wright. A period of policy clashes and declining sales led to Wright's departure from
Weird Tales in March 1940. Wright died in June of that year.
Dorothy McIlwraith
Under the editorship of Dorothy McIlwraith beginning in April 1940,
Weird's later years were distinguished by an influx of newer writers, including such major figures as
Ray Bradbury,
Manly Wade Wellman,
Fritz Leiber,
Henry Kuttner,
C. L. Moore,
Theodore Sturgeon,
Joseph Payne Brennan,
Jack Snow, and
Margaret St. Clair, a somewhat more eclectic range. Occasionally the magazine would publish Lovecraftian pastiches presented as pieces of "lost" Lovecraft completed by his self-appointed
literary executor August Derleth, who also wrote fiction for the magazine under his own name.
Like most pulp magazines,
Weird Tales suffered from the newsprint shortage during
World War II, and after the War from increasing competition from comic books, radio drama, television, and inexpensive paperback books. Commercially, the magazine declined until it ceased publication in September
1954, after 279 issues.
Later incarnations
The magazine had several reincarnations in subsequent decades.
The first was a short-lived magazine in the early 1970s edited by
Sam Moskowitz and published by
Leo Margulies. It lasted four issues.
The second was a series of
four paperback anthologies published from 1981-1983 and edited by
Lin Carter. The series was licensed by Robert Weinberg and Victor Dricks, who purchased the title after Margulies' death.
Current version
Weird Tales was more lastingly revived in 1988 under license by publisher/editors
George H. Scithers,
John Gregory Betancourt, and
Darrell Schweitzer, beginning with issue 290. The revived magazine has seen reasonable commercial success (as far as fiction magazines go), publishing notable contemporary writers such as
Tanith Lee,
Brian Lumley, and
Thomas Ligotti.
Weird Tales became part of the
DNA Publications chain for several years around the turn of the millennium, and in 2005 was sold to
Wildside Press (owned by former co-editor Betancourt) and changed to a bimonthly (6 issues/year) schedule.
In early 2007, Wildside announced an imminent revamp of
Weird Tales, naming
Ann VanderMeer the new fiction editor and creative director Stephen Segal the new nonfiction editor. Scithers and Schweitzer remain as contributors, Betancourt as publisher. The April/May 2007 edition (issue #344) featured the magazine's first all-new design in almost 75 years.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Weird Tales'.
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