Flying Aces (magazine)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Flying_Aces_(magazine) an entity of type: Thing

Flying Aces was a monthly American periodical of short stories about aviation, one of a number of so-called "flying pulp" magazines popular during the 1920s and 1930s. Like other pulp magazines, it was a collection of adventure stories, originally printed on coarse, pulpy paper but later moved to a slick format. The magazine was launched in October 1928 by Periodical House, Inc. It featured stories written and illustrated by known authors of the day, often set against the background of World War I. Later issues added non-fiction aviation articles, as well as articles and plans for model airplanes. The latter became more prominent, and eventually the magazine was renamed Flying Models, and catered exclusively to aeromodeling hobbyists. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Flying Aces (magazine)
rdf:langString Flying Aces
xsd:integer 22666776
xsd:integer 1120774193
rdf:langString Arch Whitehouse
rdf:langString Joe Archibald
rdf:langString July 1943 cover of Flying Aces
rdf:langString October 1928
rdf:langString Monthly
rdf:langString Cover has a drawing of a large two-engine propeller driven aircraft.
rdf:langString Flying Aces July 1943 cover.png
rdf:langString Harold Goldsmith
rdf:langString Helen Wisner
rdf:langString Herb Powell
rdf:langString Neil Coward
rdf:langString Periodical House, Inc.
rdf:langString Flying Aces
rdf:langString Flying Aces was a monthly American periodical of short stories about aviation, one of a number of so-called "flying pulp" magazines popular during the 1920s and 1930s. Like other pulp magazines, it was a collection of adventure stories, originally printed on coarse, pulpy paper but later moved to a slick format. The magazine was launched in October 1928 by Periodical House, Inc. It featured stories written and illustrated by known authors of the day, often set against the background of World War I. Later issues added non-fiction aviation articles, as well as articles and plans for model airplanes. The latter became more prominent, and eventually the magazine was renamed Flying Models, and catered exclusively to aeromodeling hobbyists.
rdf:langString April 1945
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 13473
rdf:langString July 1943 cover of Flying Aces

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