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Character pulps


Hero pulps, also called single-character pulps, were magazines named for and featuring a lead novel about a single character. ShadowThe The Shadow was the first hero pulp magazine.

Background

Before the debut of ShadowThe The Shadow in 1931, pulp magazines comprised short stories and, often, serialized novels. Regular characters were not uncommon in the pulps before that time. Characters such as TarzanCharacter Tarzan, Zorro Zorro, ConanCharacter Conan and others appeared periodically, but not regularly in magazines named after them.

The success of StreetandSmith Street and Smith’s decision to name a pulp after a single character, and feature that character in a lead story each issue, triggered a rush of hero, or single-character, pulps. PhantomDetectiveThe The Phantom Detective and DocSavage Doc Savage followed in 1933. Soon news stands were stocked with pulps titled Operator5 Operator #5, DustyAyresandHisBattleBirds Dusty Ayres and His Battle Birds, SecretAgentX Secret Agent X, WuFangTheMysterious The Mysterious Wu Fang and CaptainFuture Captain Future.

The character pulps rode high for nearly 20 years. Then television, movies, comic books and paperbacks finally took their toll and the pulps vanished in the 1950s.

The phrase “character pulps” is a bit more inclusive than “hero pulps” since several of the magazines that fit this genre featured a villain as the title character. Among those pulps featuring villains were The Mysterious Wu Fang, Doctor Death and The Octopus.

Key character pulps

Though there were numerous small publishers that put out character pulps, the majority were published by Street and Smith, Popular Publications, Thrilling (Standard/Better Publications) and Ace (Magazine Publications/Periodical House).

Here is a rundown of their key character magazines:

StreetandSmith Street and Smith


ThrillingGroup Thrilling (Standard/Better Publications)

AceMagazines Ace Magazines (Magazine Pub/Periodical House)

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