Post by Robert CarnegiePost by WolfFanPost by James NicollThe Golden Age of SF (But Not the One You're Thinking Of)
What were you reading when you were 12?
https://reactormag.com/the-golden-age-of-sf-but-not-the-one-youre-thinking-of/
Hmm.
Tv tie-ins: Stingray, Captain Scarlet, Joe 90, Voyage to the Bottom of the
Sea
Enid Blyton: her books were set in a not-quite-parallel universe
W.E. Johns: his books were in a somewhat different not-quite-parallel
universe; he also perpetuated a few books where the protags accidentally let
a kitten loose on Mars and it Grew. And was quite annoying.
Burroughs’ Mars and Venus books
RAH’s juvies, starting with Between Planets, Space Cadet, and The Rolling
Stones
Asimov’s robot and Foundation books.
A lot of Clarke, and Chandler, and E.E. Smith.
A ton of Tom Swift, by ‘Victor Appleton’ and ‘Victor Appleton II’;
the nuclear powered submarine helicopter made anything in Joe 90 and Captain
Scarlet look tame.
_Captain Scarlet_ was run from a permanently airborne
aircraft carrier. In the 2000s or so, there was one
in _Doctor Who_, exactly as a tribute to that, I assume.
The CS one was 2 years behind the S.H.I.E.L.D, Helicarrier.
https://www.comics.org/issue/19382/
https://readcomiconline.li/Comic/Strange-Tales-1951/Issue-135?id=33247#12
August, 1965 issue, on sale in May
Not to take anything away from Cloudbase, which was pretty fab.
https://www.spectrum-headquarters.com/cloudbase.html later
https://www.spectrum-headquarters.com/skybase_central/skybase.htm
I was already familiar with the Sky City of the Hawkmen of Mongo, from watching
the "Flash Gordon" serials on kids' afternoon TV, shown in the early 1960s. WPIX,
Ch 11, transmitted those on shows hosted by the late Chuck McCann.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/09/obituaries/chuck-mccann-zany-comic-in-early-childrens-tv-dies-at-83.html
Re: 12, 13 or even 14:
https://quoteinvestigator.com/2020/10/14/golden-age/
My Golden Age would have been the tail end of 1968 and most of 1969.
That coincided with my being given access to the adult stacks in my
local; public library. Prior to `67 or `68 I was confined to the Children's Room,
which did have some juvenile SF, such as the Heinleins, Nortons, "Paul
French" Asimovs, John Christophers, etc. I remember reading SF in my
brother's copies of "Boys Life," the Scouting magazine.
See:
https://file770.com/finding-heinlein-in-boy%E2%80%99s-life/
for links, in both the article and the comments.
My comic book reading was heavily canted towards DC's "Superman"
family of mags, and the Julius Schwartz - edited superhero and SF titles:
FLASH, GREEN LANTERN, HAWKMAN, ATOM, JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA,
and MYSTERY IN SPACE featuring "Adam Strange."† That strip didn't last through
1966, but by 1969 The Man of Two Worlds was appearing in reprinted form in,
aptly, STRANGE ADVENTURES. There were new stories in #222, and #226, the
last being a Gardner Fox text story, with illustrations by Murphy Anderson.
https://thedorkreview.blogspot.com/2012/01/adam-stranges-magic-maker-of-rann.html
Should this be added to Fox's isfdb page?
† Adam is a 1960s Gulliver Jones or John Carter, though his Mars is the planet Rann
in, originally, the Alpha Centauri system. Alanna, super-hot daughter of scientist Sardath
is his Dejah Thoris. Instead of astral projection, he visits Rann via trans-luminal teleport-
ray - the Zeta-Beam. Sleek art by Carmine (The Flash) Infantino.
--
Kevin R