Wonder Stories, March 1931

Overview:

  • Title: Wonder Stories, March 1931
  • Author: Hugo Gernsback
  • Year: 1931
  • Publisher: Stellar Publishing Corporation
  • Price: $0.25
  • Pages: 148
  • Binding: pulp
  • Type: MAGAZINE
  • Title Reference: The Green Torture
  • Notes:
    • Page numbers run 1057-1200.
    • Contents page states publication on the 3rd of the preceding month.
    • Library of Congress copyright record shows publication date 1931-02-01
    • Cover illustrates "The Green Torture."
    • Cover art is not credited; the artwork is signed "Paul."
    • Interior art is credited at the start of each story.
    • Story art for "The Return from Jupiter (Part 1 of 2)" on pages 1062-1063 is credited to and signed "Paul."
    • Story art for "The World Without Name" on pages 1092-1093 is credited to "Marchioni"; the artwork is signed "M Marchioni."
    • Story art for "The Terrors of Aryl" on page 1102 is credited to "Marchioni"; the artwork is signed "M Marchioni."
    • Story art for "Back to 20,000 A.D." on page 1120 is credited to "Marchioni"; the artwork is signed "M Marchioni."
    • Story art for "The Synthetic Monster" on pages 1152-1153 is credited to "Marchioni"; the artwork is signed "M Marchioni."
    • Story art for "The Green Torture" on pages 1162-1163 is credited to and signed "Paul."
    • Story art for "From out of the Earth" on page 1168 is credited to "Marchioni"; the artwork is signed "M Marchioni."
    • Drawn portraits (uncredited) of the authors appear with each story; they are unsigned except for that of Repp which is signed "B."
    • "What Is Your Science Knowledge?" is a list of questions about science facts. With each is listed the story page number on which the answer can be found. It is titled thus on the contents page, but (probably in error) as "What Is Your Knowledge of Science?" at the start of the feature.
    • "The Reader Speaks" is a letters column.
    • "Science Questions and Answers" is also a letters feature, but deals more narrowly with science questions.
    • Bleiler (G), magazine section, pg. 591, adds "In letter section, 'A Vision of the Future' by Time Traveller, which claims to be a veridical account of mental travel to the future, via a host mind."