This will be one of at least three postings on U.K. author John S. Glasby (1928-2011). Glasby, surprisingly, had two parallel careers. After graduating from...
Category - Reprints
I picked up an anthology published by Centaur Press back in 1972: Swordsmen and Supermen. While not explicitly part of their “Time-Lost” series, as...
Capt. A.E. Dingle (1874-1947) was a popular pulp author of nautical tales from 1914 to around 1941. Born in poverty in the U.K., he went to sea at the age of...
So I recently received the 12th issue of Men’s Adventure Quarterly, the excellent magazine series focused on men’s adventure magazines. This time, the focus is...
Frank Eisgruber Jr.‘s Gangland’s Doom is one of the first book-length works on The Shadow, preceding Will Murray‘s The Duende History of The...
I have previously posted on Arthur O. Friel (1885-1959), who was an explorer and author of adventure fiction, much of it through Adventure. He had actually...
In early 2025, we got volume five of The Wild Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Will Murray. Murray has been doing new stories with Doc Savage, The Spider...
When it comes to reading the works of Robert E. Howard (1906-1936), my first time was through his Cthulhu mythos and related works. This was via a very nice...
Today begins PulpFest 2025, and we have The Pulpster #34, the convention book. This one comes in at 60 pages. Also, this will be my third year attending...
An interesting writer of pulp adventure fiction, Arthur O. Friel (1885-1959) focused on stories set in South America, which he knew well as an actual explorer...
