The Gernsback Days by Mike Ashley and Robert A.W. Lowndes is a big, 500-page book from Wildside Press that contains several related items. It is subtitled “A study...
A recent book I picked up is Tarzan of the Funnies by Robert R. Barrett. It was published in 2002 by Mad Kings Publishing and the House of Greystoke. This is a scholarly...
While I am not a big sword-and-sorcery fan, I have enjoyed Howard Andrew Jones‘s first two Hanuvar books. It was planned to be a series of five volumes. I have...
A new volume of pulp history I picked up is The Amazing Lomazow Collection, published by John Gunnison‘s Adventure House in 2025. This large-size, full-color book...
This past Aug. 7-10, 2025, PulpFest 2025 was held in Pittsburgh, again at the DoubleTree in Mars, Penn. This was my third time attending. In addition, there were three...
I previously posted on the Code Name: Intrepid series from Robert J. Mendenhall, available through his own imprint Blue Planet Press. CNI is a special team of military...
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 collection...
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 PulpFest, and my...
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 of the...
Barry Reese came out with several new books earlier this year, strangely under his own imprint, Reese Unlimited, instead of Pro Se Press. A standalone novel that was...
