Hugh Hefner,PLAYBOY Magazine,Aug 57,Sports Cars,Ray Russell,Herbert Gold,Hemingway pastiche,Dolores Donlon


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PLAYBOY MAGAZINE
By Hugh Hefner & various
Playboy Enterprises, Inc

August 1957. Vol 4 #8

▲ BEAUTIFUL VG+/-FINE CONDITION, with the usual surface wear & slight rubbing to covers from being read, displayed, handled and stored. SUBSCRIPTION card and Fold Out still attached. Some minor stress to spine and staples. Small split in cover at bottom of spine.

Playmate: Dolores Donlon

Pictorials: The View from the Penthouse - voyeuristic pictorial - shot from above - of a girl stripping down for nude sunbathing.

Features: Fiction, Incident off Land's End by Jacob Hay, Balance Sheet by Morton Fineman, and Do Nice Artistic Girls? by Herbert Gold; Humor, Take Your Seats by Ray Russell; pastiche, Hemingway by Jed Kiley; 2 pages of sports car cartoons, Denison's Sports Cars; Profile of magazine model Lionel Wiggam.

▲ [We have purchased several large PLAYBOY collections (including a complete one) recently and are listing them a bit at a time, so, please be patient. You are welcome to contact us and request specific issues you'd like us to list as we plod along]

Playboy is an American men's lifestyle and entertainment magazine. It was founded in Chicago in 1953, by Hugh Hefner and his associates, and funded in part by a $1,000 loan from Hefner's mother. Notable for its centerfolds of nude and semi-nude models (Playmates), Playboy played an important role in the sexual revolution and remains one of the world's best-known brands, having grown into Playboy Enterprises, Inc., with a presence in nearly every medium. In addition to the flagship magazine in the United States, special nation-specific versions of Playboy are published worldwide.

The magazine has a long history of publishing short stories by notable novelists such as Arthur C. Clarke,Ian Fleming, Vladimir Nabokov, Saul Bellow, Chuck Palahniuk, P. G. Wodehouse, Roald Dahl, Haruki Murakami, and Margaret Atwood. With a regular display of full-page color cartoons, it became a showcase for notable cartoonists, including Harvey Kurtzman, Jack Cole, Eldon Dedini, Jules Feiffer, Shel Silverstein, Erich Sokol, Roy Raymonde, Gahan Wilson, and Rowland B. Wilson. Playboy features monthly interviews of notable public figures, such as artists, architects, economists, composers, conductors, film directors, journalists, novelists, playwrights, religious figures, politicians, athletes, and race car drivers. The magazine generally reflects a liberal editorial stance, although it often interviews conservative celebrities[wiki]

▲ Please refer to scanned images- they are accurate and have not been edited or corrected and, as always, are worth at least a thousand words. ▲ NOTE: Due to a quirk with the scanner these magazine are much nicer than these particular scanned images.