Many, if not most, of the folks who visit my blog might remember that I
  first dove into the publishing arena with Japanese Giants, a fanzine I created when I was in ninth grade — Spring 1974, to be precise.
  It was an 18-page, offset-printed love letter to giant Japanese monsters,
  featuring part one of a Destroy All Monsters filmbook, reviews
  of the TV shows Ultraman and
  Johnny Sokko & His Flying Robot, a couple of editorials, and a bunch of art that several of my friends and I
  drew for the issue. Inspired by my good friend Greg Shoemaker's renowned
  Japanese Fantasy Film Journal, I hoped that Japanese Giants might go on to become prominent
  in the fanzine landscape of the mid-1970s. And it actually did, though not
  quite in the way I had foreseen.
  I sold a good number of the 200 printed copies of issue #1, but it wasn't
  enough to cover the full cost of producing it, and my allowance in those days
  couldn't quite make up the remainder. I sadly resolved to pack it in, but more
  or less out of the blue, a young gentleman named Brad Boyle from Salt
  Lake City, Utah, stepped in and offered to take the
  Japanese Giants torch and run with it. He produced issue #s 2,
  3, and 4 before he, too, let go of the reins. By this time, I had become
  friends with diehard daikaiju fans Ed Godziszewski and
  Bill Gudmundson, who thought that, as a trio, we should keep
  JG going. Ed was a few years older than Bill and me, and he had
  a real job with substantial disposable income. So, the three of us became the
  official Japanese Giants Guys, and the magazine continued — the last
  few issues under Ed's sole editorship — until issue #10.
Here are the covers of the full set of issues. Note that issue #8 — possibly the rarest of them — sold out quickly, and I have no idea whatever happened to my copy. What you are looking at gentlemen, is the cover of issue #8, as science has been able to reconstruct it for you...
Here are the covers of the full set of issues. Note that issue #8 — possibly the rarest of them — sold out quickly, and I have no idea whatever happened to my copy. What you are looking at gentlemen, is the cover of issue #8, as science has been able to reconstruct it for you...
  Here are a few links to sites with info and images from and about
  Japanese Giants:
•
  VANTAGE POINT INTERVIEWS: Documenting Giants from Japan! Stephen Mark
      Rainey on Creating the Celebrated Fanzine Japanese Giants
• TOHO KINGDOM Interview with Ed Godziszewski
• WIKIPEDIA: Japanese Giants








 