Authentic Memories 2:
‘The Magazine of Tomorrow’
I first encountered the British sf magazine Authentic
Science Fiction in 1978, when over the course of several visits to the
Vintage Magazine Shop in London I found three issues (Nos. 1, 41, and 55). Authentic
was published between 1951 and 1957, and ran to 85 issues in total. I wanted
more – but how to get them? If I had to depend on what could be found in the
shops I knew in London, then it would take a very long time indeed to build my
collection.
The solution was, of course, through mail-order.
I didn’t know any dealers – but that was soon to change. I had seen a reference
to the British Science Fiction Association – and joined. (The BSFA is, I am
glad to say, still with us – and still has me as a member.) I was welcomed and sent
a little pale-blue membership card (long since lost, alas) and my first mailing
of the Association’s duplicated magazines Vector (its serious-minded journal)
and Matrix, much more informal, which acted as a forum for members (and which
used an eye-challenging microscopic font). Both were great fun to read – and
often informative, too.
I noticed that Matrix published letters
from members, so wrote in to say I wanted some old British sf magazines. I promptly
received a list from a dealer in second-hand sf books and magazines – and
became a regular customer. He offered a batch of Authentics for sale, which
I snapped up. There were several of the single novel issues: Ten Years to
Oblivion by Clem Macartney (No. 12); Beam of Terror by Roy Sheldon
(No. 13); The Moon Is Heaven by H.J. Campbell (No. 16); and two by a
name I recognised as a steady contributor to the Nova magazines, Francis G.
Rayer: Coming of the Darakua (No. 17) and Earth Our New Eden
(No. 20).
As its numbering advanced, I could trace Authentic’s
development. What started as a line of paperback novels gradually took on the
characteristics of a monthly magazine. A contents page listed an editor: L.G.
Holmes. A column by American fan Forrest J. Ackerman was introduced, and
readers’ letters were printed. There was also a technical editor, H.J. Campbell,
who eventually succeeded Holmes as editor. From No. 29 (January 1953) Authentic
changed its format and emerged as a ‘proper’ sf magazine with each issue
consisting of several stories, editorial, non-fiction pieces, news, readers’
letters, and book reviews. Cover artwork improved hugely, although the first
few were garish and frequently oddly bizarre given their science fictional
context. They tended to illustrate a particular story symbolically or obliquely
rather than through straightforward representation. But I liked them.
H.J. Campbell declared No. 33 (May 1953) a
special issue to commemorate both that year’s British SF Convention and the
coronation of Elizabeth II, boasting that Authentic was ‘beginning to
rival the Romans when it comes to laying milestones’. The cover for No. 35 (July
1953) was the first of the series “From the Earth to the Stars”: ‘Accurate,
scientific, exciting! This is the way it will happen.’ Over the next couple of
years I accumulated a complete run of Authentic from No. 29 to its final
issue No. 85 (dated October 1957). I would lay out my copies in rows and survey
the magazine’s run from crude beginning through mature development to sudden
demise. But apart from what I worked out by reading the editorials and taking
note of changes to the logo, how the content changed and developed with
different emphases on fiction and non-fiction, style of artwork, it wasn’t
until three years later, in 1981, that I was able to discover more detail about
Authentic and its origins, and especially about H.J. (Bert) Campbell
(1925-83).
I had been given a copy of the third volume of
Mike Ashley’s The History of the Science Fiction Magazine (1976).
Ashley described how Authentic had been the creation of Gordon
Landsborough, Hamiltons’ new publishing director. He inaugurated a programme of
two sf pocketbook novels per month, which he labelled the ‘Authentic Science
Fiction Series’. The series proved popular and the label stuck. Under
Landsborough’s editorship as ‘L.G. Holmes’ Authentic gradually turned
into a slim paperback magazine – each issue presenting a single novel usually written
by one of Hamiltons’ coterie of authors under a house pseudonym. Prolific author
Roy Sheldon was the equally prolific H.J. Campbell; Jon J. Deegan was Robert G.
Sharp; Lee Stanton was almost certainly Rick Conroy. Much later I was
astonished to read that Clem Macartney was W.D. Flackes (1921-93), a journalist
whose reports from Ireland I remembered watching on television. As well as his
contribution to Authentic he seems to have published two more paperback sf
novels with Hamiltons during 1951-52 – and then no more.

Campbell’s editorial page was soon renamed “H.J.
Campbell Writes” and given a header showing an avuncular figure, bearded and
duffle-coated, sitting at his desk and writing with a quill pen – all in the
guise, as it seemed to me, of an old-fashioned sea captain or lighthouse keeper.
Campbell remained editor until No. 65 (January 1956), when he left in order to
go into full-time scientific research. His successor was E.C. Tubb (1919-2010).
Ted Tubb was already well known to readers of Authentic as a prolific
contributor – probably even more so than some realised, as issues frequently featured
two or three of his stories under various pseudonyms. This would not change!
Tubb immediately began to re-emphasise the
magazine’s fiction content, reducing the number of scientific articles before
getting rid of them altogether. Covers had started to carry the strapline THE
MAGAZINE OF TOMORROW, and this was left in place until Authentic was
changed to a larger format and completely redesigned with a new logo from No.
78 (March 1957). Covers had been dominated by the attractive artwork of J.E.
Mortimer and E.L. Blandford, but now they were, with two exceptions, to be the
work of Josh Kirby. Full of action and incident, they reflected the magazine’s
new strapline ACTION – SCIENCE – ROMANCE – ADVENTURE printed in a yellow strip
across the top of the cover (for some reason ROMANCE was dropped from the next
issue onwards).
There were to be only eight issues of the new Authentic.
When No. 85 (October 1957) appeared, there was no hint that it would be the
last. Mike Ashley stated that Hamiltons took the decision to fold Authentic
and concentrate on the more profitable Panther Books. It was ironic that Authentic
had started as a paperback, and had become a magazine almost by accident.
Authentic in personality as well as name, it not only entertained but held out for
a future that would never be – except for those who fell under its spell and learned
to dream.
(John Howard)