Showing posts with label Frank Carl Young. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frank Carl Young. Show all posts

Saturday, December 14, 2024

Saturday Morning Western Pulp: West, November 1940


This is a pulp that I own. That’s my copy in the scan, complete with store stamp. I’m not sure who did the cover art. The most likely suspect is Richard Lyon, but I’m not confident enough to say it’s his work.

The lead novel in this issue (and it’s actually long enough to be considered a novel this time) is “Black Diamonds” by A. Leslie, who was really A. Leslie Scott. This novel was published in hardcover in 1942 under the title THE COWPUNCHER, as by Bradford Scott, another of Leslie Scott’s pseudonyms. In this century, it was published in paperback and as an e-book by Leisure, a large print hardcover by Center Point, and remains available as an e-book and trade paperback from Amazon Encore. I read the e-book edition a couple of weeks ago, and you can find my review of it here. It’s an excellent Western novel. I think I like the title “Black Diamonds” a little better than THE COWPUNCHER, though. I suspect Scott changed it for the story’s book publication because he thought it didn’t sound enough like a Western.

I decided to go ahead and read the three short stories from the pulp. The first, “Fugitive”, is by Frank Carl Young, a forgotten pulpster who wrote more than a hundred Western stories for various pulps between 1931 and 1952. I don’t recall ever reading anything by him until now. “Fugitive” is about a young cowboy on the run from the law who makes a home for himself working on a ranch owned by a friendly young couple. Naturally, his past catches up to him and causes trouble. The slight plot twist in the end of this one won’t catch many readers by surprise, but the writing is very good and it’s an entertaining story.

Scott Carleton was a house-name used primarily on the long-running Buffalo Billy Bates series in POPULAR WESTERN, but it appears on a few stand-alone stories, too, like this issue’s “Necktie Party”, about a young cowboy falsely accused of rustling and facing a lynching. This is a pretty well-written story for the most part, but the bit of business on which the plot ultimately turns is just too far-fetched for me to buy it. Willing suspension of disbelief got stretched to the breaking point in this one.

I don’t know anything about William Mahoney except that, according to the Fictionmags Index, he published 19 stories between 1931 and 1942, most of them in the gang pulps but with a few Westerns scattered among them. His story “Trouble Rider” in this issue reads a little like a hardboiled crime yarn with a pretty complicated plot and a harrowing torture scene that’s pretty strong stuff for a Western pulp. The protagonist is a cowboy framed for the murder of a mining tycoon in Arizona. He has to venture south of the border and get mixed up in a scheme involving blackmail, an old crime, and Mexican politics in order to clear his name. It’s a little offbeat, but I enjoyed it quite a bit and would be interested in reading Mahoney’s other Western yarns, or some of his gang pulp stories, for that matter.

Overall, I’d say this is a very good issue of WEST, but that’s due mainly to the fact that 80% of its pages are occupied by a top-notch Leslie Scott novel. But two of the three back-up stories are entertaining, too, and the third one has some nice lines in it even though in the end I thought it was a little ridiculous. If you happen to have a copy of this one, it’s well worth reading.

Saturday, October 29, 2022

Saturday Morning Western Pulp: Popular Western, September 1936


A great cover by A. Leslie Ross on this issue of POPULAR WESTERN, and by coincidence, the lead novel is by A. Leslie Scott, writing under his A. Leslie pseudonym. Other authors on hand in this issue are Syl MacDowell (as himself and as Tom Gunn with a Sheriff Blue Steele novelette), Tom Curry, Galen C. Colin, Miles Overholt, Gunnison Steele (Bennie Gardner), Frank Carl Young, Eugene A. Clancy, Dabney Otis Collins, Claude Rister (as Buck Billings), Charles D. Richardson Jr., and house-names Jackson Cole, Buck Benson, and Sam Brant. Not an all-star lineup, maybe, but with Scott, Curry, Gardner, Overholt, and MacDowell, probably pretty good reading.

Saturday, August 13, 2022

Saturday Morning Western Pulp: Leading Western, January 1949


This issue of LEADING WESTERN sports a cover that looks more like it came off an issue of SPICY WESTERN STORIES. And since they were from the same publisher, maybe it did. I don't know the artist. Bryce Walton, Frank Carl Young, and D.D. Sharp are the authors using their real names in this one. The rest are the usual combination of house-names and probable pseudonyms. For example, Hal Burke, author of the cover-featured story "Dames + Guns = Trouble", is credited with only that one story in the Fictionmags Index. Was that simply his only sale? Certainly possible. But I think it's equally likely he was really Walton, Young, or Sharp. Doubtful that we'll ever know.

Saturday, July 09, 2022

Saturday Morning Western Pulp: All Western Magazine, December 1941


I certainly could be wrong, but the cover on this issue of ALL WESTERN MAGAZINE looks like Sam Cherry's work. If it is by Cherry, it's one of his earliest pulp covers. ALL WESTERN tends to get overlooked in lists of the top Western pulps, but Dell kept it going for a long time, with decent covers and plenty of stories by top-notch authors. This issue includes stories by L.P. Holmes, Norman A. Fox, Claude Rister, Rolland Lynch, Frank Carl Young, and a couple of writers I haven't heard of, Mart Walsh and Gan Rork. Rork has only two stories listed in the Fictionmags Index and Walsh only one, so those might be real names or might not be.

Saturday, June 18, 2022

Saturday Morning Western Pulp: Thrilling Western, August 1935


I think that's a roulette wheel behind the cowboy in this cover by R.G. Harris, adding to our list of unsafe activities in the Old West. I've heard of losing your shirt while gambling, but I think he's carrying it to an extreme. This issue of THRILLING WESTERN includes stories by Ray Nafziger (writing as Grant Taylor), Syl MacDowell, Allan K. Echols, Claude Rister, Cliff Walters, Wilton West, Frank Carl Young, and house-name Jackson Cole. With the exception of Nafziger, MacDowell, and Echols, none of those are remembered much today, but I'm sure it was an entertaining issue.  

Saturday, October 02, 2021

Saturday Morning Western Pulp: Thrilling Western, July 1938


Looks like roulette was just as dangerous in the Old West as playing poker, at least according to the cover on this issue of THRILLING WESTERN. I don't know who did the art. The line-up of authors in this issue is solid: Philip Ketchum, J. Allan Dunn, and Tom Curry are the big names, accompanied by Mojave Lloyd (almost surely a pseudonym, but the author's real identity has never been determined, as far as I know), Frank Carl Young, house-name John M. Easterly, and Fridtjof Michelson, not a name you'd think of as belonging to a Western writer, but he wrote for several Western pulps and did some detective yarns, as well.