A popular American pulp-fiction magazine, Weird Tales
published the work of many important science-fiction, fantasy, and
horror writers, among them a number of Australians. It's history is a
convoluted one, however, being published by a number of different
companies and in a variety of different forms. Founded in 1923 by J. C.
Henneberger and J. M. Lansinger (Rural Publishing) ran into financial
problems after only thirteen issues and closed down for several months
before being revived by Henneberger under the auspices of a new company -
the Popular Fiction Publishing Co. Under the editorship of Farnsworth
Wright the magazine survived the great depression, flourishing under
the same company until being sold to William J. Delaney in 1938.
Between
1938 and its second closure in September 1954 the magazine was
published by Weird Tales Inc, a subsidiary of Short Stories Inc. During
those 16 years, however, it managed only marginal success. Although the
only regular magazine outlet for supernatural fiction its publisher
pulled out of the business. The rights to the magazine were eventually
acquired by Leo Margulies (Renown Publishing) who revived it in
1973.Only four pulp-sized issues were published by Margulies and editor
Sam Mosowitz prior to the death of the Margulies in 1975. The
rights to Weird Tales were bought by Robert E. Weinberg from Margulies's
widow, and he eventually formed Weird Tales Limited to protect and
license the name.
The fifth Weird Tales incarnation was published as paperback quarterly by Kensington Publishing (possibly though its Zebra imprint). Under editor by Lin Carter, who leased the rights
from Weinberg, four issues were published (1981-1984) before it too was closed down. Weinberg then licensed the Weird Tales name to the Bellerophon Network, a
publishing company owned by Brian Forbes. The magazine was poorly
funded and distributed, however, and failed after only 2 issues.
The next company to publish Weird Tales was the Terminus Publishing Co of Pennsylvania, which acquired the rights in 1985. The initial editors were George
H. Scithers, Darrell Schweitzer and John Gregory Betancourt. In 1994, four years after Betancourt left to focus on his newly established company Wildside Press, Weinberg refused to renew the licence with Terminus. This forced the company to published a retitled magazine, Worlds of Fantasy and Horror (with the numbering reverting back to Volume 1, No 1). After four issues the magazine lapsed, and it was not until 1998 that Scithers (by then the sole publisher) merged the magazine with publisher Warren Lapine (DNA Publications). Through Lapine's influence the licence was renewed and Weird Tales was revived in the summer of 1998 with issue #313. The new numbering system incorporated the four Worlds of Fantasy and Horror issues.
With Lapine as publisher and Scithers and Schweitzer as editors the magazine continued through until acquired by John Betancourt's Wildside Press in 2005. Bettancourt on-sold the magazine in 2012 to Nth Dimension Media, a New York City-based company owned by Marvin Kaye and John Harlacher.