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‘Amazing Stories’ (July 1940)

Frank R. Paul is such a monument in science fiction art […]

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‘Sports Novels Magazine’ (June 1951)

With major league baseball season well under way and th […]

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‘The Shadow’ (May 1, 1942)

It’s not one of the icon covers from Street & […]

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‘Aces’ (November 1931)

There was a period during my elementary school years wh […]

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‘Amazing Stories’ (October 1949)

Today’s installment of Great Pulp Art is a Hallow […]

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‘Oriental Stories’ (February/March 1931)

The first three covers of Oriental Stories must have al […]

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‘New Western Magazine’ (August 1947)

I don’t write much about the western pulp genre. […]

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‘Adventure’ (September 1913)

Adventure is often called the greatest of the pulp maga […]

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‘Dime Mystery Magazine’ (November 1934)

Our latest installment of Great Pulp Art takes a turn t […]

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‘Amazing Stories’ (September 1928)

Scientifiction. It’s not a word that just rolls o […]

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‘Amazing Stories’ (July 1940)

Frank R. Paul is such a monument in science fiction art that it’s almost a no-brainer to include him in the Great Pulp Art series. It wasn’t until this past weekend when I picked up a copy of Frank R....

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‘Sports Novels Magazine’ (June 1951)

With major league baseball season well under way and the college world series in a couple of weeks, I thought this installment of Great Pulp Art should echo that. The pulp magazines reflected what the...

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‘The Shadow’ (May 1, 1942)

It’s not one of the icon covers from Street & Smith’s The Shadow pulp. But ever since it turned up on the paperback racks in 1974 on the cover of Pyramid Book’s “The Shadow #3: The Mobsmen on the...

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‘Aces’ (November 1931)

There was a period during my elementary school years where my in-class doodling depicted biplanes swarming around one another, much like you often see gnats doing. But unlike the gnats, the subjects of...

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‘Amazing Stories’ (October 1949)

Today’s installment of Great Pulp Art is a Halloween one. Having spent a lot of time watching TV while growing up, I had a regular dose of horror and science fiction movies from the 1940s, ’50s and...

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‘Oriental Stories’ (February/March 1931)

The first three covers of Oriental Stories must have almost jumped off the newsstand for someone browsing for reading material in late 1930 and early ’31. They are bright, rainbow-colored and visually...

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‘New Western Magazine’ (August 1947)

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 fiction. But that doesn’t prevent me from enjoying the...

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‘Adventure’ (September 1913)

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, upon Adventure‘s 25th anniversary. Adventure first...

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‘Dime Mystery Magazine’ (November 1934)

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‘ Dime Mystery Magazine. Just a year early, the pulp had...

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‘Amazing Stories’ (September 1928)

Scientifiction. It’s not a word that just rolls off your tongue. But that’s the portmanteau that Hugo Gernsback created back in 1926 before science fiction was known as science fiction. (Scientifiction...

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