Page:Weird Tales Volume 29 Number 1 (1937-01).djvu/129

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Weird Tales
127

Robert E. Howard's Conan stories they wish to sell. . . . As an old-time reader of Weird Tales it goes without saying I think it's a grand magazine. I would not be such a constant reader if it hadn't proved itself years ago. Please print this."


WT Is Tops

Kristine Karkau, of Buffalo, writes: "My dear man! Now what's up the old editorial sleeve? Has y'all done had a change of heart? Don't tell me you've up and cut off the lovely ladies from the covers for good? Or are you just giving the other side of the 'nudes question' a chance? J. Allen St. John sure knows how to draw some dead-lookin' folksies, that's a fac'. (P. S. Who's the lumpy lady in the foreground?) Anyways, he's good, for real! Give us now another story by C. L. Moore and let St. John draw the illustration for it. F'instance. What do you suppose he'd draw up one of them thar Shambleau critters to look like? Ugh! Do one—Mr. St. John—you're O. K. Let the horrors multiply and may the nightmares gallop where they list. I don't believe there has ever been a better issue of Weird Tales than the October. Every story is the last word in excellence. The Tree of Life was the best, in my opinion, with all the rest of the stories running neck and neck for place. I couldn't say any one of them was better than the rest. I am really sincere when I say that no other magazine can ever hope to equal or even approach the all-around excellence of WT. Only one thing is lacking—an author's page. With that, it would be perfect. By the way, what happened to that idea? I s'pose it's gone where the woodbine twineth, as most good ideas do. Just think how much the millions that have read and liked Mr. Howard's stories would have appreciated a picture andbiography of him! . . . Keep up the good work. Your magazine is tops."


Dorothy Quick's Stories

A. R. Brown, of East Hampton, New York, writes: "I've been waiting for a long time to see another story by Dorothy Quick in your pages. I thought The Horror in the Studio that she wrote the best weird story I ever read, and The Lost Door is even better. Don't wait so long before you have another by her. The Lost Door gets my vote,

NEXT MONTH
The Globe of
Memories

By Seabury Quinn

Here is one of the best stories ever written by the creator of Jules de Grandin—a story of stealthily creeping terror which rises by gradations to a climax of sheer horror. This story has just about everything. It is a love story sweet as the same author's "The Phantom Farmhouse," horror equal to that of "Witch-House" or "The House of Horror," and with it all the flutter of cloaks and clash of swords found in the best stories of the Dark Ages.


The scene of this startling weird tale is laid in two different ages, seven centuries apart. Beginning and ending in our own times, the tale dips into the Middle Ages, and achieves a climax of horror unusual in so romantic a story. This fascinating novelette will be published complete


in the next issue of

WEIRD TALES

on sale December 1st

To avoid missing your copy, clip and mail this coupon today for SPECIAL SUBSCRIPTION OFFER. (You Save 25c)


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