Page:Weird Tales Volume 45 Number 3 (1953-07).djvu/96

There was a problem when proofreading this page.
96
Weird Tales

. . . So I finally decided to leave, and go where my altered appearance would cause no comment.

I wonder if—



THE EYRIE

(Continued from page 8)

The Editor, Weird Tales
9 Rockefeller Plaza, New York 20, N. Y.

Well, I think since I am one of the oldest readers of Weird Tales I shall at last write and get in my two cents worth.

I read the first issue of Weird Tales, I believe in 1925, and I have only missed one copy that I can remember, so believe me I have quite a collection of WT magazines. First off, I don't like the size of them now. The first issues were large and had much more reading than now, also I like the stories kept on the weird line. The heck with this Scientific reading! I say keep Weird Tales weird. Also what ever happened to the true experience department that used to be in Weird Tales, a department where folks could write their true experiences? That was a fine department, and I for one would like to have it back.

Mrs. J. F. Post,
West Asheville, N. C.



The Editor, Weird Tales
9 Rockefeller Plaza, New York 20, N. Y.

I read five or six different publications each month, but the one magazine I am always waiting for is Weird Tales. It's been my favorite for quite a while and I altvays have been fickle when it came to reading habits. This is different and I hope it always will be.

Edward Kisch,
Simi, California

▶ Space does not permit in this issue tor us to use any of the letters which we received on the subject of an exchange mart for old issues of WEIRD TALES. We hope to pass on various ideas in our next issue.

▶ This Issue, by the way, will be the first in our small handy size; it will be easier to read, convenient to carry and—as always in the past—full of the best in fantasy fiction. The Editor, WEIRD TALES.


DOUBLEDAY & COMPANY

The Golden Apples of the Sun by Ray Bradbury • A collection of Bradbury shorts which will certainly serve to keep him in the position to which he has been raised as one of the best imaginative writers of the day. His people are human and his ingenuity terrific. We are distinctly conscious of a trend toward the fantastic and supernatural in the fiction market—books as well as magazines, which is where Weird Tales come in. Bradbury is leader in that field; we are proud that many of his stories have appeared in our pages.


PELLEGRINI & CUDAHY

Worlds of Tomorrow. Stories selected and with a foreword by August Derleth • A brilliant anthology in which between Paul Anderson's "The Tinkler" and Lewis Padgett's "Line of Tomorrow" are gathered a diverting group of tales with a certain freshness of approach and originality of concept.


WORLD PUBLISHING COMPANY

Space Service. An anthology edited by Andre Norton • who has emerged as an authority on teen-age science fiction. He has chosen stories by T. R. Cogswell, Gordon R. Dickson, Walt Sheldon, etc.


DOUBLEDAY SCIENCE FICTION

West of the Sun by Edgar Pangborn • Adventure on the planet Lucifer, eleven time years distant from Earth.