In English In the 1960s, Forrest J Ackerman organized the publication in the US of an English translation of the series. His wife Wendayne handled translation. Other translators on the series included Sig Wahrmann,
Stuart J. Byrne, and Dwight Decker. Number 1, containing German issues 1 and 2, was published by
Ace Books starting in 1969. As Managing Editor, Ackerman soon incorporated elements reminiscent of the science fiction pulp magazines of his youth, such as unrelated
short stories, serialized novels and a film review section. The series was a commercial success and was eventually being published three times per month. Ace ended its regular run of Perry Rhodan in August 1977 with double issue #117/118. This was followed by the publication of three novellas from earlier in the series which had not been translated and left out of the series by editorial decision. These were accompanied by three novellas from the Perry Rhodan spinoff series
Atlan. Ace concluded its run of translations with two more Atlan novels and a novel-length
In the Center of the Galaxy [German: Im Zentrum der Galaxis] ' by
Clark Darlton, which had appeared in German as issue 11 of the "Perry Rhodan Planet Novels" (or Planetenromane) spin-off series. When Ace cancelled its publication of the series in 1978, translator Wendayne Ackerman self-published the following 19 novels (numbered #119–137) under the business name Master Publications in a subscription-only edition. This was also cancelled in 1979. In the 1990s, Vector Enterprises restarted an American version. This version lasted for four printed issues and one electronic issue and translated #1800 to #1804. In 2006, Pabel-Moewig Verlag licensed
FanPro to publish an English translation of
Perry Rhodan: Lemuria. (Some material present in the German version, such as a history of generation spaceships in science fiction, was dropped from the American version.) Only the first volume was released. In 2015–16, Perry Rhodan Digital published English translations of the full six volume
Perry Rhodan: Lemuria story arc in
ebook format, making these available via
iTunes and other digital platforms.
Perry Rhodan NEO in English In April 2021,
light novel and manga publisher
J-Novel Club announced
Perry Rhodan NEO as one of three launch titles for its J-Novel Pulp imprint, dedicated to the best of European pulp fiction. Eight volumes, each containing two original German
Hefte, or "episodes", have been announced. J-Novel Club's release uses the cover art by
toi8 created for
Hayakawa Publishing's 2017 release. In line with J-Novel Club's light novel releases, new instalments are first serialized on J-Novel Club's website over a number of weeks for subscribers. The first part of each volume is free for visitors, requiring and requires no membership or subscription to read. Following web serialization, each volume is released as an
Ebook at all major digital book retailers. J-Novel Club members who purchase the books directly receive textless versions of the cover art as a bonus. Beginning with Volume 13, the English edition features newly commissioned art by toi8.
In other countries Translations of Perry Rhodan are currently available in Brazil (#1 to #536 and #650 to #847 as of August 2011), and also from 537 to 649; 1400 in before (at present, in December 2014), including the series Atlan, Planetary Novels and Perry Rhodan NEO (at present in the n. 28), all launched by the "Project Translation", Russia, China, Japan(#1 to #800 as of May 2011), France, the Czech Republic, and the Netherlands (#1 to #2000 as of September 2009). Apart from the US version, there were also editions in Canada, Great Britain (#1 to #39), Italy and Finland. However, the latter have been discontinued. The first language into which Perry Rhodan was translated was
Hebrew. In 1965, the first four episodes appeared in
Tel Aviv in a pirated translation, and which for unknown reasons ceased before publication of the fifth (it was not because it was detected by the German publishers, who only heard about it many years later). The few surviving copies of this 1965 translation are highly valued by Israeli collectors.
Cycles The original series is divided into the following cycles and "grand cycles". Only the grand cycles the Great Cosmic Mystery and Thoregon have official names. The other grand cycles were not planned as such. They were named by the readers in retrospect.
American publication history •
Ace Books • #1 to #5—Double issues. Each volume contains two episodes. The German novel between episodes 4a and 4b, #0009
Hilfe fuer die Erde/
Help for Earth, was initially skipped, but later printed as a Special Edition (
The Atom-Men Attack). • #6 to #108—Single issues. "Maga-book" format, or the style of a magazine in the format of a book. Two more skipped novels ("lost") were 0021,
Der Atomkrieg findet nicht statt/''The atomic war doesn't take place
(between 014 Venus in Danger
and 015 Thora's Flight
) and 0031 Der Kaiser von New York
/The Ruler of New York
(between 023 Peril on Ice Planet
and 024 Infinity Flight
). 0021 was finally printed as a Special, Menace of Atomigeddon
, and 0031 as Robot Threat: New York''. Letter page and film reviews began in #6. Would later include short stories—old and new—and reprints of classic serialized novels such as ''
Edison's Conquest of Mars by Garrett P. Serviss (reprinted as Pursuit to Mars
). Of special note is a lost chapter of the H.G. Wells novel The Time Machine'' that was published in this manner. Also serialized was
William Ellern's
New Lensman novel. • #109 to #118—double issues again, each one still separate. • Perry Rhodan Specials #1 to #5—Double issues. #1 to #3 are skipped episodes ("lost") published with an
Atlan episode. #4 are two
Atlan episodes and #5 (unnumbered) is a
Planetenroman. •
Master Publications • #119 to #136—Magazine size and format. • #137—Book format. To fill out remaining subscription orders, the book format also printed Stuart J. Byrne's
Star Man series (expanded into novellas from Byrne's novel of the same name). #137 was published with the first five episodes of
Star Man in one volume. The remaining
Star Man episodes were published as a separate volume. •
Vector Enterprises • #1800 to #1803—Magazine format. #1800 is published in a manner similar to the German series. 1801 to 1803 are large-sized magazine format. • #1804—Electronic format only. •
FanPro Games (American operation of German company FanPro) • Lemuria #1 "The Star Ark." Copies of the Ace books and the rarer magazine versions can be found in
online auction sites such as
eBay and fixed-price
online stores like
Amazon.com. Used bookstores often have some of the Ace books, but rarely the magazine versions. ==Cultural impact==