A long-running and well-done pulp fanzine I collect is John Gunnison‘s Pulp Collector. Published for 24 issues over a 10-year period, 1985-95, it was one...
Tag - Will Murray
Street & Smith kicked off the hero pulp trend with The Shadow in 1931. They eventually followed that with Doc Savage in 1933. While those were successful...
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:...
Well, another Windy City Pulp and Paper Convention for 2015 has come and gone, and with it we get another convention program book: Windy City Pulp Stories #15...
When I got back into the pulp world back in the ’90s, one fanzine I got was Pulp Adventures, published by Rich Harvey through his Pulp Adventures Press...
There are three books I think every fan of The Shadow should have: “Gangland’s Doom,” Frank Eisgruber Jr. (1973, 1985, 2007) “The...
Odyssey Publications was a small publisher of materials for pulp fans that existed in the late ’70s and early ’80s. Most may be aware of them due...
Probably one of the best-known pulp heroes, even among people who know nothing about pulp heroes, is The Shadow. The Shadow is the pulp world’s Batman to...
Recently Moonstone Books put out a great collection of Sherlock Holmes stories: “Sherlock Holmes: The Crossover Casebook.” As the title implies...
Blood ‘n’ Thunder is a journal aimed at late 19th and early 20th century pop culture. For the pulp fan, this means the pulp magazines, their...
