翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Captain Michalis
・ Captain Midlands
・ Captain Flint
・ Captain Forever
・ Captain Fortune Show
・ Captain Fracassa's Journey
・ Captain Fracasse
・ Captain Freedom
・ Captain Frodo
・ Captain from Castile
・ Captain from Castile (novel)
・ Captain from Toledo
・ Captain FTP
・ Captain Fury
・ Captain Future
Captain Future (magazine)
・ Captain Future (Nedor Comics)
・ Captain Gallagher
・ Captain Gallant of the Foreign Legion
・ Captain Gatso
・ Captain Gault
・ Captain general
・ Captain General of the Church
・ Captain General Royal Marines
・ Captain George Anderson House
・ Captain George Conrad Flavel House
・ Captain George Costentenus
・ Captain George Flavel House Museum
・ Captain George K. H. Coussmaker
・ Captain Germán Olano Moreno Air Base


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Captain Future (magazine) : ウィキペディア英語版
Captain Future (magazine)

''Captain Future'' was a science fiction pulp magazine launched in 1940 by Better Publications, and edited initially by Mort Weisinger. It featured the adventures of Captain Future, a super-scientist whose real name was Curt Newton, in every issue. All but two of the novels in the magazine were written by Edmond Hamilton; the other two were by Joseph Samachson. The magazine also published other stories that had nothing to do with the title character, including Fredric Brown's first science fiction sale, "Not Yet the End". ''Captain Future'' published unabashed space opera, and was, in the words of science fiction historian Mike Ashley, "perhaps the most juvenile"〔 of the science fiction pulps to appear in the early years of World War II. Wartime paper shortages eventually led to the magazine's cancellation: the last issue was dated Spring 1944.
== Publication history and contents ==
Although science fiction (sf) had been published before the 1920s, it did not begin to coalesce into a separately marketed genre until the appearance in 1926 of ''Amazing Stories'', a pulp magazine published by Hugo Gernsback. By the end of the 1930s, the field was booming.〔Edwards & Nicholls (1992), pp. 1066–1068.〕 Better Publications, a pulp magazine publisher which had acquired ''Thrilling Wonder Stories'' in 1936, launched three new magazines as part of this boom. The first two were ''Startling Stories'', which appeared in January 1939, and ''Strange Stories'', which began the following month; both were edited by Mort Weisinger, who was also the editor of ''Thrilling Wonder Stories.''〔Ashley (2000), pp. 250−255.〕 Edmond Hamilton, an established science fiction writer, met with Leo Margulies, Better Publication's editorial director, in early 1939, and they subsequently planned the launch of a new magazine with the lead character of Curt Newton, a super-scientist who lived on the moon and went by the name "Captain Future". Margulies announced the new magazine at the first World Science Fiction Convention, held in New York in July 1939, and the first issue, edited by Weisinger, appeared in January of the following year.〔Moskowitz (1974), p. 109.〕〔 Captain Future's companions in the series included an enormously strong robot named Grag, an android named Otho, and the brain of Simon Wright, Newton's mentor. Joan Randall, Newton's girlfriend, was also a regular character. Better Publications followed up the magazine launch with a companion comic, ''Startling Comics'', which appeared in May 1940; Captain Future was the protagonist of the lead story.〔Ashley (2000), pp. 152−153.〕 Weisinger left in 1941 to edit comics following the adventures of Superman, and was replaced by Oscar J. Friend.〔
''Captain Future'' was a hero pulp: these were pulps which were built around a central character, with every issue containing a lead story featuring that character. Every issue of ''Captain Future'' contained a novel about Curt Newton. Hamilton was willing to write the lead novel for every issue, but was concerned that he might be drafted, so Margulies made arrangements for other writers to contribute the lead stories. Hamilton escaped the draft, but Margulies had already made arrangements for other writers to work on the series, and so two of the seventeen lead novels in the magazine were written by Joseph Samachson, instead of by Hamilton. The house name "Brett Sterling" was invented to conceal the identity of the new writer; it was used for both of Samachson's contributions, as well as some of Hamilton's.〔 Hamilton also wrote regular features that provided background material on the stories: "Worlds of Tomorrow" provided information about the planets featured in the stories, and "The Futuremen" covered Newton's companions.〔〔Gombert (2009), p. 284.〕 In addition to the novels about Curt Newton, ''Captain Future'' published both new and reprinted science fiction stories that were unconnected with the lead character. Fredric Brown's first sf sale, "Not Yet the End", appeared in the Winter 1941 issue; and Weisinger reprinted David H. Keller's ''The Human Termites'' and Laurence Manning's ''The Man Who Awoke'', both abridged, in the first few issues of the magazine; these had originally appeared in 1929 and 1933, respectively, and were from back issues of ''Wonder Stories'', which Better Publications had acquired the rights to in 1936. The magazine was unashamedly focused on straightforward space opera: a typical plot saw Captain Future and his friends save the solar system, or perhaps the entire universe, from a villain.〔 Sf historian Mike Ashley describes the magazine as "perhaps the most juvenile" of the World War II crop of science fiction pulps.〔Ashley (1978), p. 57.〕 Wartime paper shortages killed the magazine in mid-1944, but more Captain Future novels saw print in ''Startling Stories'', some over the next two years, with more following in 1950 and 1951.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Captain Future (magazine)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.