For those not familiar with DC Comics‘ multiverse (alternate universes), a bit of background. DC Comics has been publishing their main three superheroes: Superman...
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 House by...
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 Henry Cannell...
I recently received the second new issue of The Bronze Gazette, #77, now published by Pulplications. This is the final issue for this year. They also did a special...
I have posted previously on Joseph Lovece‘s series, the “Steam Man of the West.” This is an original series inspired by the various “boy inventor” adventure series that...
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 occult...
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 several other series co...
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: a two...
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 Mystery Men that was the basis for...
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 the third such...