Total Pulp Experience. These exciting pulp adventures have been beautifully reformatted for easy reading as an eBook and features every story, every editorial, and every column of the original pulp magazine.
Explore the amazing worlds of tomorrow with Dynatmic Science Fiction! This pulp magazine published its first issue with December 1952, when the science fiction boom was nearing its peak. It came from a small publishing company, Columbia Publications, in Massachussets. Columbia Publications started producing pulp magazines in 1934 with the debut of Double Action Western Magazine and continued publishing a wide variety of magazines, detective, romance, western, sports, air adventure and mystery. Unfortunately Dynamic Science Fiction failed to find an audience and only six issues were published in its entirety. The sixth and final issue was the January 1954 issue. During that unfortunately short run, some of science-fiction's biggest names appeard in the magazine. Lester del Rey, Alfred Coppel, Poul Anderson, Arthur C. Clarke, James Blish, and others appeared in its pages. Dynamic Science Fiction returns in vintage pulp tales, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
Feature Novelet
The Chapter Ends
by Poul Anderson
But one man, old Kormt, was determined not to leave Earth... ever...
Novelet
The Final Figure
by Sam Merwin Jr.
The general had to know MacReedy’s prophecy of the next weapon...
The Lobby — Feature
Where you and I talk things out
Readin’ and Writhin’ — Book Reviews
by Katherine MacLean and the editor.
Desire No More — Short Story
by Algis Budrys
Isherwood was determined to be the first rocket pilot...
The Plot-Forms of Science Fiction — Feature
by. James Gunn
Continuing a thorough survey of science-fiction, as she is written.
The Unwilling Professor — Short Story
by Arthur Porges
He had come prepared, but not for anything like this!
Inside Science Fiction — Feature
by Robert A. Madle
News, fan magazine review’s, and reminiscences of twenty years back.
... So They Baked a Cake — Short Story
by Winston Marks
After years of glamorizing the sordid, I wanted to get away from people.