This one is awfully low-key and tasteful in comparison to its competitors! Still, there's a lot of good fiction within its pages. Robert E. Chambers, the son of fantasy writer Robert W. Chambers, offers a Foreign Legion story entitled "Fear of Hell. Bethel's "Fangs of the Jungle," a lost-race novelette set in Guatemala, and "The Devil's Ambassador," which I at first took to be a science fiction story, since it has an illustration of a bizarre plane designed like Satan, and the blurb, "Satan's courier -- Lucifer of the air lanes -- rode the heavens like an evil bird of prey: what a devil's broth brewed in the junk-pile of Mars!
However, it's a wacky, way-out air tale, very G As well as stories by Robert W. Chambers, Robert Hichens and W. Smoke of Battle type: novel part: complete date: June year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: vol: number: pages: Included is the conclusion of P.
Wodehouse's "Thank you, Jeeves! Department of Literature. Robert W. Silver Heels [Gitana]. Silver Knees was published in hard cover as Gitana. Part 2 - Warpaint and Rouge by Robert W. Chambers and illustrated by Norman Price.
Deviation type: short story illustrator: Harry H. This the National Farm Journal for May Serial beginning in the November 14, Liberty Magazine.
Illustrated by Norman Price. Operator 13 [Secret Service Operator 13]. Skin Deep part: 2 type: serial date: September year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages:. Ring-around-a-rosie part: 3 type: serial date: October year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages:. Lady Green-sleeves part: 5 type: short story date: December year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages:. Chambers switched his publishing alliegance to William Randolph Hearst's Cosmopolitan magazine.
It began with the publication of The Common Law which was Chamber's most successful society novel. This assocation would last him over a decade as was the assocation with The Saturday Evening Post.
During the last decade or so of his life from to , as his literary star waned, Chambers's work would appear in many magazines but often return to those owned by Hearst who had a fondness for the writer. It was also with Cosmopolitan Pictures that a majority of the films based on his work would appear, many starring Hearst's great love, Marion Davies.
In the first edition Paul Schlicht told his readers that the intention was to produce a "first-class family magazine". He added: "There will be a department devoted exclusively to the interests of women, with articles on fashions, on household decoration, on cooking, and the care and management of children, etc. Within a year Cosmopolitan had a circulation of 25, A new editor, E. Walker, who had previously worked for Harper's Monthly, became the new editor.
He introduced serial fiction, book reviews and colour illustrations. In four years Walker tripled circulation and Cosmopolitan became of of America's leading magazines. In John Brisben Walker purchased Cosmopolitan. In Walker announced that Cosmopolitan would sponsor a free correspondence school. He proudly announced: "No charge of any kind will be made to the student. All expenses for the present will be borne by the Cosmopolitan.
No conditions, except a pledge of a given number of hours of study. Surprised by the response, Walker was unable to finance the venture and had to ask students to contribute 20 dollars a year for their education. The Cosmopolitan also began employing top illustrators including James M. Cosmopolitan offered three serials and ten short stories per issue employing man of America's best novelists.
The other three sections contained a complete short novel, a normal length novel and a digest of current non-fiction books. Sales of Cosmopolitan during the Second World War reached over 2,, copies. In the s there was a decrease in the demand for fiction. Sales of the magazine dropped dramatically. The size of the Cosmopolitan was reduced and although circulation was only just over a million in , the magazine was still a profitable concern.
The Common Law continued type: serial illustrator: Charles Dana Gibson part: 3 date: January year: publication Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages: type: serial illustrator: Charles Dana Gibson part: 4 date: February year: publication Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages: This issue also touts a new pictorial of the C.
Gibson girl for the R. Chambers story "The Common Law. Charles Dana Gibson - Oddly, the book has only eleven chapters. Chambers 2 First-hand accounts by General Nelson A. Miles of his 'successful' campaigns against the Western Indians i. Lords of Creation type: article illustrator: date: August year publication: Hampton's Magazine issue: volume: 27 number: pages: Magazine article.
The Daughter of the Revolution type: illustrator: date: September year: publication: Hampton's Magazine issue: volume: 27 number: pages: Magazine article. Blue Bird Weather type: Part 1 date: November year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: 51 number: pages: serial of the novel of the same name Blue Bird Weather type: Part 2 date: December year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: 52 number: pages: Turning Point type: serial illustrator: Charles Dana Gibson Part 1 date: December year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: 52 number: pages: Turning Point was illustrated by Charles Dana Gibson in a series of two page spread.
The serial was later published in book form under the title "Japonette. Turning Point continued type: serial Part 2 date: January year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages: Part 3 date: February year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages: Part 4 date: March year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages: RWC serials overlapped and the magazine used the cover of this one to advertise the next month's new serial.
Part 5 date: April year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages: Part 6 date: May year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages:. And Mrs. The Streets of Ascalon type: serial Part 1 date: May year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages: The powerhouse combination of Robert W.
Chambers and Charles Dana Gibson is touted on the cover. This serial ran from May to December, Part 2 date: June year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages: Part 3 date: July year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages: Part 4 date: August year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages: Part 5 date: September year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages: Part 6 date: October year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages: Part 7 date: November year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages: Part 8 date: December year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: pages: The December issue is also the beginning of the serial The Business of Life by Robert W.
Chambers, and Illustrated by one of the most famous artists of the time, Charles Dana Gibson. John A. Ward, "Tetherstones" by Ethel M. Ayres, illus. Chambers, illus. Wogehouse, Guy Bolton, Mr. Williams, Sam H. Also fiction by Samuel Merwin, Robert W. Chambers, Ethel M. Great condition, cover art by Frank L. Stories by and pictures of:, Zane Grey, O. Smith, Dr. James Henshall etc McNary U.
Henry van Dyke, Irvin S. Chambers, Mrs. Francis E. Unknown part: type: date: June year: publication: Cosmopolitan issue: volume: number: page:. May not have a Chambers story in it but an interview with D. Chambers and Upton Sinclair touted on the cover of this mid's arts magazine or an early men's magazine.
While this issue may seem like a men's magazine, Art Lover's was an arts magazine of the time, as you can see by the September issue which featured H. The Mystery Lady by Robert W. Illustrated by Mead Schaeffer. Department of Literature. Robert W. Title, type, date, year, publication. Little Red Foot type: serial part: date: January year: publication: Hearst's International Magazine issue: volume: number: page:.
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