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Om Ma-ni pad-me Hum The first of its kind, the complete adventures
of the Green Lama follows the adventures of Buddhist Jethro Dumont
and his aides as the battle the forces of evil in the western
world. Written by Kendell Foster Crossen, it's non-stop action in
the vein of The Shadow Never completely reprinted before, the
series is collected in three volumes. Each volume contains an
all-new introduction, focusing on a different aspect of the
character's life across several forms of popular media. Volume 1
contains in introduction by Will Murray and features the first five
stories: "The Case of the Crimson Hand," "The Case of the Croesus
of Murder," "The Case of Babies for Sale," "The Case of the Wave of
Death," and "The Case of the Man Who Wasn't There." GREEN LAMA is a
trademark controlled by, and licensed from, Argosy Communications,
Inc.
For the first time, the Ki-Gor series from the pages of Jungle
Stories is collected, complete, uncut and in order Volume 2
includes the next five stories: "Ki-Gor and the Paradise That Time
Forgot" (Fall 1940), "The Empire of Doom" (Winter 1940-41), "Lair
of the Beast" (Spring 1941), "Ki-Gor and the Temple of the
Moon-God" (Summer 1941), and "White Savage" (Fall 1941).
Presenting Tough Dick Donahue, the inter-state detective agency
operative who replaced the Continental Op after Dashiell Hammett
stopped writing for Black Mask Magazine. Collected for the first
time in a single volume is every one of the fifteen Donahue
stories: "Rough Justice" (November, 1930), "The Red-Hots"
(December, 1930), "Gun Thunder" (January, 1931), "Get A Load of
This" (February, 1931), "Spare the Rod" (August, 1931), "Pearls Are
Tears" (September, 1931), "Death's Not Enough" (October, 1931),
"Shake-Up" (August, 1932), "He Could Take It" (September, 1932),
"The Red Web" (October, 1932), "Red Pavement" (December, 1932),
"Save Your Tears" (June, 1933), "Song and Dance" (July, 1933),
"Champions Also Die" (August, 1933), and "Ghost of a Chance"
(March, 1935). This compendium also contains an all-new
introduction by Will Murray and a complete bibliography of the
works of Frederick Nebel as compiled by Rob Preston.
Four fantastic adventures by Doc Savage author Laurence Donovan
Known best for his work on Doc Savage, The Skipper, and other
series, Laurence Donovan also was the regular writer on the
long-running Phantom Detective series. During his stint on the
title, Donovan took the Phantom to places outside New York City and
involved him in adventures and in battle with villains which could
be seen as pseudo adventures of The Man of Bronze. This 650 page
edition includes four of his best, most Doc Savage-esque stories:
The Thousand Islands Murders An Island of men named Smith, and the
weird "Devil's Flare..". The World's Greatest Sleuth lands in the
middle of mystery and intrigue at Smith Island--and follows a grim
trail of blackmail and peril that challenges his keen
crime-fighting power Death Over Puget Sound Death and destruction
by a creature known as Black Wolf, and a timber trail of doom
follows in the wake of the grim "Echo Voice" murders The Phantom
Detective battles against desperate odds as he strives to halt a
startling tragedy of crime played on nature's stage Murder Moon
Over Miami Who is The Iron Judge? And what is his connection to a
literal viper pit of killers? When greed turns a playground city
into the grim scene of a vast murder game, The Phantom Detective
battles a menace of death and destruction that stalks Corpse Cay
Streamlined Murder A murderous army of killer apes The Phantom
Detective races to pursue the greedy perpetrators of shocking
crimes when mystery stalks in the wake of the death of an aging
silk tycoon
Completely revised and expanded, Rick Lai's authoritative
chronology has been heavily updated to include Lester Dent's radio
scripts and new data unearthed from the recent restored Doc Savage
reprint editions.
A Millennium of Terror This is the complete history of the grim
saga of the house of Harcourt and the fearful doom which for nine
centuries overshadowed it... Running for six parts in the pages of
Dime Mystery Magazine in 1935, this epic has never been reprinted
before. Includes an all-new introduction by John Pelan.
From the author of Doc Savage Never before reprinted, this edition
collects all three of William Bogart's stories of Johnny Saxon, a
pulp writer-turned-P.I. Loaded with numerous references to the pulp
publishing world, its authors and characters, it's rounded out by
an all-new introduction by Doc Savage/Lester Dent expert Will
Murray. Includes the following book-length stories: "Hell on
Friday," "Murder is Forgetful," and "The Queen City Murder Case."
And as a bonus: Bogart's article on advice for new writers.
Most fans of Western fiction know Paul S. Powers as one of the
foundation authors of the famous pulp magazine of the 1930s and
1940s, Wild West Weekly. Now, here for the first time, are twelve
Paul Powers stories written in the years after Wild West Weekly
stopped publication. Six of these stories were published in
magazines such as Exciting Western, Thrilling Western, The Rio Kid
Western and Thrilling Ranch Stories. The other six are brand new
stories - never before published - that were discovered in 2009.
Altogether they make for an outstanding collection of western
stories that represent the glory years of the Western short story
and the best of Powers' prolific pulp Western career.
Another complete series collection from Altus Press, this time
focusing on the classic Doc Savage clone Jim Anthony, complete and
uncut from the pages of the Super-Detective pulp magazine from
1940-43. Volume 1 contains the first three adventures, collecting
the Rado Ruric trilogy: "Dealer in Death," "Legion of Robots" and
"Madame Murder." These also include editor notes and
correspondence, and this edition contains an all-new introduction
by Will Murray.
For the first time, Dan Cushman's exotic locale hard-boiled
adventure stories are collected in two editions. This volume
collects the first six adventures of Armless O'Neil, from 1945-48
issues of JUNGLE STORIES and ACTION STORIES: "Seekers of the
Glittering Fetish," "Black Mahogany," "Jackal Kill," "Five Suns to
Angola ," "Dread Safari," and "Blood-Spoor of the Devil-Stones."
For 40 years, pulp historian Will Murray has been writing about Doc
Savage and Lester Dent in the pages of many fanzines. Long out of
print and very tough to find, the best of these articles have been
updated and collected in this new book. Includes over 450 pages of
Doc info, spread across over 50 articles.
For the first time, all five Doctor Death pulp adventures are
collected in two volumes in this series authorized by the Ward
estate. Volume 2 contains the two unpublished stories from 1935:
"Waves of Madness" and "The Red Mist of Death," both complete for
the first time. Includes an all new introduction by Matthew Moring.
Known best for his work on Popular Publications' The Spider, pulp
scribe Norvell Page proved he was no slouch when it came to penning
gangster and G-man epics This book collects all eleven stories Page
wrote for "Ace G-Man Stories" between 1936 and 1939, which are
reprinted here for the first time
Om Ma-ni pad-me Hum The first of its kind, the complete adventures
of the Green Lama follows the adventures of Buddhist Jethro Dumont
and his aides as they battle the forces of evil in the western
world. Written by Kendell Foster Crossen, it's non-stop action in
the vein of The Shadow Never completely reprinted before, the
series is collected in three volumes. Each volume contains an
all-new introduction, focusing on a different aspect of the
character's life across several forms of popular media. Volume 2
contains in introduction by comics historian Michelle Nolan and
features the next five stories: "The Case of the Death's-Head
Face," "The Case of the Clown Who Laughed," "The Case of the
Invisible Enemy," "The Case of the Mad Magi," and "The Case of the
Vanishing Ships." GREEN LAMA is a trademark controlled by, and
licensed from, Argosy Communications, Inc.
It's 1933 and pulp writer Lester Dent has created a new hero who
uses gadgets to solve mysteries and fight crime. No, it's not Doc
Savage, but Lee Nace, the Blond Adder This volume collects for the
first time all five Lee Nace adventures from the pages of Ten
Detective Aces. The majority of these have not seen the light of
day since their original publication nearly 80 years ago We've gone
back to the original manuscripts to restore deleted passages and
also included Lester Dent's original character Bible for the Blond
Adder series. Rounded out by an all-new introduction by pulp
historian Will Murray, it's the must-own pulp publication of the
year.
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