Fantastic Novels Magazine PULP Sept 1950 cover by Norman Saunders ; interior art by Frank R Paul and Lawrence.

6 • What Do You Think? (Fantastic Novels Magazine, September 1950) • [What Do You Think?] • essay by Mary Gnaedinger
10 • Polaris and the Goddess Glorian (Complete Novel) • [Polaris Janess • 3] • serial by Charles B. Stilson (book publication as Polaris and the Immortals 1968)
10 •  Polaris and the Goddess Glorian (Complete Novel) • interior artwork by Frank R. Paul [as by Paul]
39 •  Polaris and the Goddess Glorian (Complete Novel) [2] • interior artwork by Frank R. Paul [as by Paul]
61 •  Polaris and the Goddess Glorian (Complete Novel) [3] • interior artwork by Frank R. Paul [as by Paul]
84 •  Polaris and the Goddess Glorian (Complete Novel) [4] • interior artwork by Frank R. Paul [as by Paul]
110 • Friend Island • (1918) • short story by Francis Stevens
111 •  Friend Island • interior artwork by Lawrence
118 • Mimic • (1942) • short story by Donald A. Wollheim
118 •  Mimic • interior artwork by Lawrence
128 •  Letter (Fantastic Novels Magazine, September 1950) • [Letters: Robert Silverberg] • essay by Robert Silverberg [as by Bob Silverberg]

Fantastic Novels Magazine was a pulp science fiction and fantasy magazine that was published in the United States from 1940 to 1951. It was launched by the Munsey Company, which had previously published Argosy, one of the first pulp magazines. Fantastic Novels was a companion to another Munsey publication, Famous Fantastic Mysteries, and it focused on reprints of classic science fiction and fantasy stories.

The magazine featured stories by well-known authors such as H.G. Wells, Jules Verne, and Edgar Rice Burroughs, as well as lesser-known writers. It also included original artwork and illustrations, making it a popular choice among fans of speculative fiction.

Despite its short run, Fantastic Novels Magazine had a significant impact on the science fiction and fantasy genre, and its reprints helped to introduce classic works to a new generation of readers. The magazine was eventually discontinued in 1951, but it remains a notable part of the history of science fiction and fantasy literature.