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S - Index Page

Below are the Magazines featured on the site.

 

Click an image to take you to the individual Magazine Page.

 

Some of the Magazines will only have pictures as part of a Reference guide.  Others will have the full issue which you can click on to view.

 

If anyone has any of the missing issues or any issue of a Magazine not yet featured on the site and you are willing to share then please get in touch.

 

We are always looking for any type of magazine from any country to build up a comprehensive reference library.

 

Thank you.

Screen On! Magazine was an obscure British genre bi-monthly and was published by Danacell, London.

   Smash Hits was a British pop music based magazine, aimed at teenagers and young adults and was originally published in the

UK by EMAP. 

   Spunky was a Tennybop Magazine from Australia that was popular in the 1970's

Starlog was a monthly science-fiction film magazine published by Starlog Group Inc. The magazine was created by publishers Kerry O'Quinn and Norman Jacobs.

Published for the Rank Theatre Division Ltd this was a Monthly magazine that concentrated on the film industry.

Page 1 - Sounds - 5th January 1980.jpg

Sounds Magazine was a weekly magazine published in the UK from 10th October 1970 - 6th April 1991

Starburst was launched in December 1977 by editor Dez Skinn with his own company Starburst Publishing Ltd. The name Starburst was settled on after rejecting other names, including Starfall, as Skinn considered it too negative.

The Starlog Photo Guidebooks were exactly what they sound like - thin, 8 1/2 x 11" paperbacks filled with stills from science fiction movies and TV shows, with descriptive captions and articles. 

Page 1 - Suzy Tops - Number 75 - 11th Fe

Suzy was first published on the 11th September 1982 and is considered a Hybrid between a comic and a magazine. Published by DC Thomson, Suzy launched after Tracy comic but was more glossy, colourful and contained celebrity interviews and regular features alongside comic strips and picture stories.  this was in the tradition of comics such as Judy or Bunty.

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