Pulp Adventures #26


Book Description

This issue is another thrill-packed romp through the pulp jungle! Your guides ... Brother Bones in "Then and Now" by Ron Fortier Professor Moriarty in "The Picture of Oscar Wilde" by Michael Kurland "Black Mastiff" by Stanley C. Sargent "Lillian" by John E. Petty "The Doting Burglar" by Ben Hecht "Murder Is Fascinating" by Benton Brader "Birthday Bullets" by Richard Brister "The People of the Pit" by A. Merritt "Monster in the Maze" by Adam Beau McFarland "Despair" by H.P. Lovecraft "The Terrible Old Man" by H.P. Lovecraft




Pulp Adventures for Today! (full-size)


Book Description

Pulp Adventures for Today! is a high-speed, low-drag Role-playing game based on the science fiction stories of yesteryear, such as Flash Gordon, Buck Rogers, Tarzan of the Apes, John Carter of Mars, etc These rules are designed to be used with any sort of campaign which doesn't rely too much on realism The only things required to play Pulp Adventures for Today! are a group of friends, a handful of standard six-sided dice, a pencil, and your imagination So strap on your blaster, sharpen your saber, climb aboard your war zeppelin and look for adventure Included in this rulebook are: * Rules for character creation, * Skills and how to use them, * Equipment from the past through the future, * A small number of vehicles, * A sampling of critters, * And two sample campaign settings: Terra Reich, in which a horde of evil aliens invade Earth while WW2 is underway and The Atlantean Age, a more typical swords & sorcery setting.




Pulp Adventures #27


Book Description

"Angels and Animals" by Adam McFarlane Ship building in a bottle. "Jack Grey, Second Mate" by William Hope Hodgson Jack Grey keeps adversaries at bay, and quells a mutiny. "The Green Mask" by Dana Edward Johnson A masked crimefighter's first case could be his toughest. "Not What I Ordered" by Howard Hammerman Shrimp salad ... red wine ... revenge ... "A Case at Law" by William Dudley Pelley Someone needed killing ... and they got it. "Hole-in-the-Wall Barrett" by Max Brand A villain, a hero, and a damsel ... an old formula with a twist. "A Repeating Romeo" by May Belleville Brown Some loves never end, they just pause ... "My Sister's Husband" by Michael Bracken Rekindled romance or necrophilia? "Sneak Thief" by Richard Brister The kid chose the wrong alley to look down. "Thirty Days on the Island" by Raymond J. Brown Did Manhattan have enough hiding places for his little game? "Irregular Brethern" by H. Bedford-Jones A sermon of a different sort. "Gary Bullock, Journeyman Actor" Interview by Audrey Parente From science, to acting, to authoring a new SF fantasy novel.




The People of the Pit


Book Description

This early work by Abraham Grace Merritt was originally published in 1918 and we are now republishing it with a brand new introductory biography. 'The People of the Pit' is a fantasy adventure of two gold prospectors who discover mysterious people who live down a mine. It tells the tale of adventurous explorers who discover an unknown world. Abraham Grace Merritt - also known by his byline, A. Merritt - was born on the 20th January, 1884 in New Jersey, America. Merritt's stories typically revolved around conventional pulp magazine themes. His heroes are gallant Irishmen or Scandinavians, his villains treacherous Germans or Russians and his heroines often virginal, mysterious and scantily clad. Merritt married twice, once in the 1910s to Eleanore Ratcliffe, with whom he raised an adopted daughter, and again in the thirties to Eleanor H. Johnson.




Bloody Pulp


Book Description

A rookie detective investigates the murder of a bestselling mystery writer. Two shots on a snowy Seattle street, and a bestselling writer lies dead. When Brick Ransom is assigned to the case, the trail quickly leads to an up-and-coming hard-boiled mystery writer, his publisher, and one of Seattle's most powerful companies. But who did it? And why? And with the murders still happening, who will be next? Bloody Pulp is bloody good fun, with all of the mystery, suspense, humor, and over-the-top action Brick Ransom fans crave!




Pulp Adventures #32


Book Description

Nine stories of mystery, science fiction, horror - new and classic pulp fiction!Audrey Parente, editorClassic Pulp Fiction - "The Death Dancer" by Charles Boeckman: The "Atomic Goddess of Beauty" sees a strange case of murder explode!; "Roman Holiday" by Talbot Mundy: A tale of Christians and Romans - and Lions - in the reign of mad Caligula; "The Pigtail of Hi Wing Ho" by Sax Rohmer: Mystery in Chinatown ...New Pulp Fiction - The Mystery of Island X! by Bobby Nash: Lance Starr and his scrappy crew investigate mysterious goings-on on an island - only to discover the island IS the mystery!; "The Spawn of Lilthu" by William M. Hope: The "Welcome" mat was Thurl's invitation to a hellish fate; "The Wicked Big 'Monstah Ovah Bawstin'" by David Bernard: An FBI agent generates buzz with his biggest case; "Time and Tide" by Adam Beau McFarlane: The Black Island Tavern plays host to a sailor like no other; "Stranded At Saturn" by Jack Halliday: He dreamt of reaching the stars ... until he crash-landed ...; "A Snitch in Time" by Robert W. Walker: First-class seats for murder ...




Pulp Power


Book Description

A visual treasury of the iconic Street & Smith pulp novel covers of the 1930s and 1940s Pulp Power: The Shadow, Doc Savage, and the Art of the Street & Smith Universe gives fans a rare glimpse into the pre-war pulp novel decade of the 1930s, a period of bold action and adventure storytelling that ultimately led to the creation of the comic book and the superheroes we know and love today. This period, a pre-Batman, pre-Superman golden era of American creativity and artistic excellence, starred two main characters in leading roles: The Shadow and Doc Savage. In more than 500 novels written between 1930 and 1940, The Shadow, Doc Savage, and the Street & Smith universe of characters captivated a generation of Americans with their heroic exploits and inspired a new generation of writers to create a pantheon of comic book superheroes in their mold. Street & Smith, the renowned publisher of these novels, commissioned leading artists to provide bold and original cover artwork for their publications, and in Pulp Power, hundreds of these eye-catching covers are reproduced as a collection for the first time. Comics legend Dan DiDio provides context for the cover illustrations alongside a narrative discussion of the influence of the Street & Smith superhero universe on legendary creators such as Orson Welles, Truman Capote, Michael Chabon, George Lucas, Agnes Moorehead, James Patterson, Walter Mosley, Dwayne Johnson, Frank Miller, James Bama, Jim Steranko, Jim Lee, Gail Simone, and many more. The book also includes original line art illustrations from the volumes along with unique reproductions of Shadow ephemera. Pulp Power is the ultimate coffee table collectible book for all who love the world of superheroes.




The Pulp Adventure MEGAPACK®


Book Description

When you think of the pulp magazines that flourished in the first half of the 20th century, it’s hard not to think of adventure—the term “pulp fiction” these days has come to mean slam-bang action. That’s what this volume of our MEGAPACK® is here to celebrate: great adventure stories. Included are: HE SWALLOWS GOLD, by H. Bedford-Jones PLANE JANE by Frederick C. Davis ARCTIC ANGELS, by A. DeHerries Smith THE TAKING OF CLOUDY McGEE, by W.C. Tuttle ESPECIALLY DANCE HALL WOMEN by Alma and Paul Ellerbe ISLAND HONOR, by Murray Leinster NERVE ENOUGH, by Richard Howells Watkins BY ORDER OF BUCK BRADY, by W.C. Tuttle CODE, by L. Paul SALVAGE, by Roy Norton THE LUCKY LITTLE STIFF, by H.P.S. Greene WHEN EVERYBODY KNEW, by Raymond S. Spears THE SOUL OF HENRY JONES, by Ray Cummings THEN LUCK CAME IN, by Andrew A. Caffrey TOO MUCH PROGRESS FOR PIPEROCK, by W.C. Tuttle




A History of the Doc Savage Adventures in Pulps, Paperbacks, Comics, Fanzines, Radio and Film


Book Description

Doc Savage is not only the prototype of the modern fictional superhero; he was also a seminal force in creating multimedia crossovers. The character exploded onto the scene in 1933, with the Great Depression and the gathering clouds of war as a cultural backdrop. The series is examined in relation to historic events and changing audience tastes, with special attention on the horror and science-fiction elements. The artwork features illustrations, covers, and original art. Appendices cover Doc Savage paperbacks, pulp magazines, comic books, and fanzines, and a biographical appendix covers all major contributors to the series.




Doc Savage


Book Description

When William Harper Littlejohn unearths a shadowy figure transfixed in ice, the renowned archeologist understands that he has made the most momentous discovery of his brilliant career. For inscribed over the frozen form is this chilling warning: "IF I STILL LIVED, MANKIND WOULD TREMBLE " Who is this monster? Why does his name strike terror into the hearts of brave men? Can even Doc Savage control him once he breaks free of his icy tomb? From the Gobi Desert to war-torn Free China, the Man of Bronze and his fighting crew battle a threat so terrifying that it could change the course of human history....