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Murder in the Library: The Post-Pulp Digests, Mystery Magazines, Ezines & More

Short Fiction Beyond the Pulps

       

When the pulps started to die out, the markets for short story crime and mystery writers, particularly those of a hard-boiled bent, started to dry up as well. Fortunately, there were a handful of outlets left, mostly digests such as Ellery Queen, that published everything from cozies to hardcore noir in the same issue.

And then, in the mid-fifties, there was a rebirth of sorts, spurred by the launch of Manhunt in 1955. Manhunt and its imitators focussed on hard-boiled crime. Most lasted only a few years, but a handful (most notably Manhunt and Mike Shayne’s Mystery Magazine) lasted long enough to have a major impact on the genre, and several of the shorter-lived ones (Trapped, Guilty, etc.) proved a sturdy training ground for writers as diverse as Harlan Ellison, Donald Westlake, Lawrence Block, Robert Silverberg and Ed McBain to sow their literary wild oats and hone their craft.

Two of the more general crime and mystery digests, Ellery Queen and Alfred Hitchcock, are still going strong. Add to this, the current boom in themed anthologies, and the rough, unruly on-line crime fiction and the e-publishing scenes, and the short story market is suddenly looking better than it has in years. Current outlets for fiction are in brown; defunct, expired, pushing up the daisies magazines are in red.

One of the more interesting developments is the evolution of several long-running titles from print to downloadable ezines to web sites and blogs.

For magazines which are primarily non-fiction (but may occasional feature fiction), see Murder in the Library: The Crime Mags.

Of course, I could be wrong about a lot of these, so if you know better, please let me know….

American editions:
The Saint Detective Magazine

(Spring 1953 – Oct 1958, King-Size Publications)
The Saint Mystery Magazine
(November 1958 – Apr 1966)
The Saint Magazine
(May 1966-October 1967)
The Saint Magazine
(June 1984-August 1984)
3 issues

British editions:
The Saint Detective Magazine

(November 1954-December 1959)
The Saint Mystery Magazine
(January 1960-March 1966)
The Saint Magazine
(April 1966-November 1966)

The Saint Detective Magazine was named after, and often included, a reprinted or original story featuring Leslie Chartis’ gentleman-adventurer, Simon Templar, aka The Saint.” The U.S. edition, originally published by King-Size, began in 1953, was re-named The Saint Mystery Magazine in 1958, and folded in 1967, with a three-issue revival in 1984. The UK edition began in 1954 as The Saint Detective Magazine, became The Saint Mystery Magazine in 1960, and folded in 1966, according to The Saintly Bible, Dan Bodenheimer’s exhaustive site.
After King-Size collapsed in 1959, the American edition was published by Great American Publications through most of the ’60s (Anthony Boucher, then editor of The Year’s Best Detective Stories, referred to SMM in the early ’60s as “consistently the second-best crime fiction magazine, after EQMM” — I always pick up any issues I find with Avram Davidson stories, and H.S. Santesson’s extensive connections in the speculative-fiction community meant that the likes of Theodore Sturgeon, Fritz Leiber, and Poul Anderson more often appeared in SMM than in the other contemporary crime-fiction magazines). There was a very short-lived revival in the ’80s, as well, that unfortunately lasted about as long as Charlie Chan Mystery Magazine. By the way, most, if not the vast majority, of Simon Templar stories in the magazine were originals written by other hands (much like the Mike Shayne stories in MSMM) written from outlines provided by Saint creator Leslie Yin, a Chinese/British/American who decided being Leslie Charteris was a bit safer when mocking the Establishment in the 1930s …or perhaps his publishers decided for him. The American edition was distinctly different from the British one, and there were also a small number of non-English editions: namely French and Dutch. (Todd Mason)

 
Compiled by Kevin Burton Smith. Thanks to Todd Mason, Richard Moore and Robert Silverberg for a wad of the info here.

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