![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Lowndes) and a story in the previous issue of Unknown. Bok had just started professionally publishing fiction in 1942 (although there had been a few amateur pieces in Ray Bradbury’s fanzine Futuria Fantasia during 19) and there were a couple of stories in each of Future Combined with Science Fiction and Weird Tales, a novella in Science Fiction Quarterly ( Future’s companion magazine, and also edited by Robert W. The Sorcerer’s Ship by Hannes Bok is the debut novel 3 of the well-known artist. (That said, I soon-and sadly-reverted to the tiny type of a scanned issue on my iPad for the ability to highlight text for quoting later). ![]() 2 After holding it and smelling that wood-cuttings aroma, and looking at the contents and the artwork, etc., I knew that I had to read it. Each of these two-column pages (the Rice story has three for some reason) is probably equal to three in a paperback book. It is one of the large format (bedsheet) Unknowns and it is a hefty publication, with 128 eight and a half-inch by eleven and a half-inch (215 x 290mm, roughly A4 size) pages. I hadn’t planned on reading this issue but I recently bought a few pulps and this was one of them. by Hannes Bok, Frank Kramer, Kolliker (2), Edd Cartier, M.novelette by Theodore Sturgeon and James H.Fred Smith, Once There Was A Magazine- p. ![]()
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