I have posted on Harry Dickson, the American Sherlock Holmes, a popular character and series in Europe. As I noted, he started as a German pastiche series, with Holmes...
We recently got a new collection of stories with Ravenwood, Stepson of Mystery from Airship 27. He was an occult detective who had a short-lived series that ran in the...
While I am not big on most biographies, I did have a couple on my want list tied to Walter B. Gibson (1897-1985), best known as the author of The Shadow, and Lester Dent...
After reading and enjoying The Python God and The Fortune Cave, the first two Thomas Adam Grey thrillers by Duane Laflin, I picked up the third one when it came out: The...
We now have the annual issue of Blood ‘n’ Thunder, the Blood ‘n’ Thunder 2025 Special Edition, from Murania Press, but instead of showing up just...
I have previously posted on The Burroughs Bibliophiles, a literary society devoted to the works of Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950). It was first established in 1947 by...
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 college, he...
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 it...
Five years after the previous Sgt. Janus book came out, we suddenly got the fourth one: Sgt. Janus and the House That Loved Death by Jim Beard. Again published by Flinch...
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 14 and...
