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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:War_Birds
rdfs:label
War Birds
rdfs:comment
War Birds was a pulp magazine published by Dell from 1928 to 1937. It was the first pulp to focus on stories of war in the air, and soon had competitors. A series featuring fictional Irishman Terence X. O'Leary, which had started in other magazines, began to feature in War Birds in 1933, and in 1935 the magazine changed its name to Terence X. O'Leary's War Birds for three issues. In these issues the setting for stories about O'Leary changed from World War I to the near future; when the title changed back to War Birds later that year, the fiction reverted to ordinary aviation war stories for its last nine issues, including one final O'Leary story. The magazine's editors included Harry Steeger and Carson W. Mowre.
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n11:Cover_of_War_Birds_March_1928.jpg
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dbc:Magazines_disestablished_in_1937 dbc:Pulp_magazines dbc:Magazines_published_in_New_York_(state) dbc:Magazines_established_in_1928
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dbr:Rudolph_Belarski dbr:William_Edmund_Barrett dbc:Magazines_established_in_1928 dbr:Popular_Publications dbr:Lester_Dent dbr:Arthur_Guy_Empey dbr:War_Stories_(magazine) dbr:Frederick_C._Painton dbr:Dell_Publishing dbr:George_Rozen dbr:Flying_Aces_(magazine) dbc:Magazines_disestablished_in_1937 dbr:Aces_(magazine) dbr:Royal_Flying_Corps dbr:Battle_Stories dbc:Pulp_magazines dbr:Sidney_Riesenberg dbr:Robert_J._Hogan_(author) n16:Cover_of_War_Birds_March_1928.jpg dbr:Harry_Steeger dbc:Magazines_published_in_New_York_(state) dbr:Arthur_J._Burks dbr:Robert_Sidney_Bowen
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n11:Cover_of_War_Birds_March_1928.jpg?width=300
dbo:abstract
War Birds was a pulp magazine published by Dell from 1928 to 1937. It was the first pulp to focus on stories of war in the air, and soon had competitors. A series featuring fictional Irishman Terence X. O'Leary, which had started in other magazines, began to feature in War Birds in 1933, and in 1935 the magazine changed its name to Terence X. O'Leary's War Birds for three issues. In these issues the setting for stories about O'Leary changed from World War I to the near future; when the title changed back to War Birds later that year, the fiction reverted to ordinary aviation war stories for its last nine issues, including one final O'Leary story. The magazine's editors included Harry Steeger and Carson W. Mowre.
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