Golden Press, an imprint of Western Publishing, put out a lot of juvenile fiction in the 1940s, ’50s, and ’60s. In the area of juvenile...
Category - Review
Since 2012, Dynamite Entertainment has had the rights to do The Shadow comics. In addition to an on-going series (now ended), they have had several mini-series...
Probably the last hurrah for the classic juvenile book series was the Alfred Hitchcock and the Three Investigators series launched in 1964. Created for Random...
I recently posted on a new (to me) occult detective I discovered: Gees, real name Gregory George Gordon Green. Created by British author and editor Charles...
I have posted previously on Joseph Lovece‘s series, the “Steam Man of the West.” This is an original series inspired by the various...
As a fan of occult detectives, I was thrilled to learn of an early one I had never heard of when Altus Press reprinted a collection of the first stories of...
I had previously posted on Clive Cussler, the “master” of the techno thriller, who has gone from writing his Dirk Pitt novels to kicking off...
A classic pulp adventurer that I had heard of but never had the chance to read the stories of is Peter the Brazen. What I had heard sounded really interesting:...
Coming out a couple of years ago, Marvel‘s Mystery Men is a mini-series with pulp elements. (It’s not to be confused with Bob Burden‘s...
Altus Press has given us yet another complete collection of one of Johnston McCulley‘s lesser-known pulp characters, with Alias The Whirlwind. This is...