Foreign pulps Reprints Review

Rex Brandon, Jungle Hunter: ‘Jungle Allies’

Here we have the second in the Rex Brandon, Jungle Hunter series from Bold Venture Press, Jungle Allies.

Jungle AlliesThis is a 12-volume series that was published in England from 1951-52 by Curtis Warren. They were written by Denis Hughes (1917-2008) who was a prolific writer mainly of western and science-fiction works. He is largely unknown because almost nothing appeared under his name but rather under a dozen pseudonyms. This one appeared under the name Marco Garon.

Full disclosure: I was sent a copy to review.

This time our hero Rex, a geologist and big-game hunter, is in the Belgian Congo, returning from a successful expedition. I was surprised that he had brought along N’gambi, the tracker from the previous story. They get close to a tributary of the Congo when they make a discovery that changes their plans.

Rex rescues a young man, Jeff Lambert, who is obviously in distress. He was part of an expedition that was largely wiped out by a series of unexpected events, including an elephant stampede and then being attacked by an unknown tribe. We soon get the whole story.

He was part of an expedition by an anthropologist, Professor Walt C. Cochran, looking for evidence of lost civilizations in the Congo. With them was a journalist, Naomi Jensen. A dying man in the jungle has passed along a map and the phrase “Chizma… People of the Sun… no white man lives to tell.” The professor has the expedition head in the direction shown by the map, but due to various events, including a bad bridge and an elephant stampede, almost all are killed. Then when it’s just the professor, Jeff, and Naomi, they are attacked by a strange tribe that carries off Naomi and appears to have killed the professor, leaving Jeff wounded.

Can Rex and N’gambi find and rescue Naomi? Especially after it seems Jeff is killed in a lion attack? Will they find this mysterious Chizma people? And who will return? This seems like many classic lost race tales set in the jungle.

I guess I have to point out that this was written in the 1950s, with the attitudes of the time. They aren’t what we would have now, though certainly better than what we might have seen in the 1920s or ’30s. But you can still enjoy this work.

Again, this is a short novel, and the story moves right along. The characters are rarely given any physical descriptions. I was a little surprised by the inclusion of N’gambi from the first novel, and wonder if he will become a regular character in the series.

The cover art and design for this one are excellent. They were clearly trying to harken back to the Doc Savage and Tarzan paperback covers and did an excellent job. The original artwork leaves a lot to be desired, and you can see it in black and white in the back of the book. I hope they continue to do these newer covers.

The plan is to get these out about every other month or so, thus it should be a couple of months before we see #3, Black Fury. I also recommend folks take a look at Bold Venture Press’s other recent reprint series, though all have been westerns. I’d like to see more action/adventure series. There are the westerns like Benedict and Brazos (up to about #30), the new O’Brien series, and the Masked Rider Western, along with the war-time Rat Bastards.

About The Pulp Super-Fan: Learn more about this blog, and its author, Michael R. Brown.
Contact Michael R. Brown using the contact page, or post a comment.

Archives

Categories