This is #84 of Famous Monsters of Filmland, by Warren Publishing, 1971, Forrest J Ackerman: Editor-in-Chief  This issue includes The Hunchbacks of Notre Dame, House of Dracula, The Devil Commands (Does Boris Obey?) The Raven, Girls & Ghouls Gallery, and a bunch of other regular and issue-specific features--as well as the full-page b&w photo of Frankenstein's monster as shown in the Main Photo. 

On my own personal scale, based on knowledge of antiques, paper ephemera, and how good these magazines could look given their age: This one is an 8. I'm going way out a limb because I am not a professional grader, but this is totally an 8. There is a smudge and a small wrinkle on the BACK cover at the top. The pages are only lightly tanned, and the cover has what I will call shelfwear -- the black part looks a little bit grayed (it could be a printing/ink problem, not shelfwear at all). The spine is in fantastic shape. The corners are more sharp than blunt. The magazine is a teensy bit bent on the right side, but if I put it under several heavy books for a few days and RETAKE the pictures, it probably won't be bent anymore.  Other than those things, this issue is as great shape as a magazine from 1971 (53 years old!) can be. 

Please look at all the photos and read everything I've written about the condition and description of this item. Contact me via eBay if you have any questions that the photos or description do not answer. If I can ship it to you safely for less, I will refund you any significant difference. 

I'm a highly rated seller and I ship quickly. It'll come to you from a smoke-free, pet-free house. Thanks for the consideration. 

Famous Monsters of Filmland is an American genre-specific film magazine, started in 1958 by publisher James Warren and editor Forrest "Forry" J Ackerman. Famous Monsters of Filmland directly inspired the creation of many other similar publications, including Castle of Frankenstein, Cinefantastique, Fangoria, The Monster Times, and Video Watchdog. In addition, there are hundreds, if not thousands, of FM-influenced horror, fantasy and science fiction film-related fanzines have been produced, some of which have continued to publish for decades.