Our latest installment of Great Pulp Art takes a turn toward a dark corner of the pulps. It’s the November 1934 number of Popular Publications‘...
Category - Pulp Art
I was on Vimeo searching for something and happened to notice the Weird Tales logo leaping out at me from one of the video thumbnails. So I had to click it.
Adventure is often called the greatest of the pulp magazines because of its excellent fiction. Time magazine dubbed it the “No. 1 pulp” in 1935...
I don’t write much about the western pulp genre. While I enjoy a good movie western, I haven’t had the urge to read much in the way of western...
That also was true in the publishing world of the pulp era. Eighty-five years ago this month, Dell Publishing Co. introduced Wall Street Stories, with a cover...
We don’t usually get to wish pulp contributors a happy birthday, but we’d like to send our best wishes to pulp artist Gloria Stoll Karn. She turns...
Here’s a story on the Library of Congress Blog about how the library is preserving its collection of pulp magazine covers. The interiors of the magazines...
Sometimes “oops” can mean collectibility. Take, for instance, the famous “inverted Jenny” postage stamp. The stamp’s upside down...
Earlier this year, Steven Brower and Jim Simon published “Astounding, Mysterious, Weird & True, Vol. 1: The Pulp Art of Comic Book Artists,” a...
I remember reading a post by Roger Ebert about his love of science fiction pulps back in early 2012. Ebert, who died April 4 from cancer, was best known for...