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[[Image:Galaxy Magazine.jpg|thumb|An issue of ''Galaxy'']] |
[[Image:Galaxy Magazine.jpg|thumb|An issue of ''Galaxy'']] |
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− | '''''Galaxy''''' was a science fiction [[magazine]] on [[Earth]] in the [[1950s]]. It featured the work of some of the genre's greatest writers including [[Robert Heinlein]], [[Isaac Asimov]], and [[Theodore Sturgeon]]. "[[Court Martial]]" was one of the stories written for it. The cost of a copy was thirty-five [[ |
+ | '''''Galaxy''''' was a science fiction [[magazine]] on [[Earth]] in the [[1950s]]. It featured the work of some of the genre's greatest writers including [[Robert Heinlein]], [[Isaac Asimov]], and [[Theodore Sturgeon]]. "[[Court Martial]]", by [[Samuel T. Cogley (author)|Samuel T. Cogley]], was one of the stories written for it. The cost of a copy was thirty-five [[cent]]s. |
It was the main competition to ''[[Incredible Tales]]'' and was held up by [[Herbert Rossoff]] as a superior publication. [[Douglas Pabst]] thought it was a "rag". ({{DS9|Far Beyond the Stars}}) |
It was the main competition to ''[[Incredible Tales]]'' and was held up by [[Herbert Rossoff]] as a superior publication. [[Douglas Pabst]] thought it was a "rag". ({{DS9|Far Beyond the Stars}}) |
Revision as of 16:14, 7 February 2010
Galaxy was a science fiction magazine on Earth in the 1950s. It featured the work of some of the genre's greatest writers including Robert Heinlein, Isaac Asimov, and Theodore Sturgeon. "Court Martial", by Samuel T. Cogley, was one of the stories written for it. The cost of a copy was thirty-five cents.
It was the main competition to Incredible Tales and was held up by Herbert Rossoff as a superior publication. Douglas Pabst thought it was a "rag". (DS9: "Far Beyond the Stars")
The cover image of Galaxy seen in the episode "Far Beyond the Stars" was based on a matte painting of the Starbase 11 planet in the Star Trek: The Original Series episodes "Court Martial" and "The Menagerie, Part I".