Showing posts with label Fred Gipson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fred Gipson. Show all posts

Saturday, March 25, 2023

Saturday Morning Western Pulp: Star Western, October 1943


I feel like I should know who painted this cover, but I don't. Maybe one of you can help me out. STAR WESTERN was always one of the top pulps in the genre. This issue features six novelettes by Walt Coburn, Harry F. Olmsted, Les Savage Jr., Tom Roan, William R. Cox, and Fred Gipson. That's right, Mr. Old Yeller his own self, who wrote a bunch of stories for the Western pulps. At one point, I was talking to an academic press about editing a collection of them, but nothing ever came of it. That's a great bunch of writers in this issue of STAR WESTERN, which was nothing unusual back in those days.

Saturday, November 16, 2019

Saturday Morning Western Pulp: .44 Western, January 1944



That feller’s gonna read ’em from the book, shore enuff. He looks like he’s got almost as much bark on him as the varmint who was on last week’s cover. And speaking of reading . . . inside this issue of .44 WESTERN are stories by Fred Gipson (who was a prolific pulpster before becoming forever known as the author of OLD YELLER), John G. Pearsol, Lee Floren, John H. Latham, C.K. Shaw, and Harry Van Demark, all familiar names to readers of Western pulps.

Saturday, June 25, 2016

Saturday Morning Western Pulp: Famous Western, March 1943


We're right in the middle of a saloon gunfight on the cover of this issue of FAMOUS WESTERN. Looks like the work of H.W. Scott to me, but I could be wrong about that. Inside are stories by Chuck Martin, Archie Joscelyn, Lee Floren (twice, once under his name and once as Cliff Campbell), and Fred Gipson, the author of OLD YELLER his own self, among other, lesser-known scribblers. Edited by Robert W. Lowndes, of course.

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Saturday Morning Western Pulp: Dime Western, October 1942


That's a striking cover from one of the leading Western pulps. DIME WESTERN always had a great line-up of authors, and this issue is no exception: Walt Coburn, Harry F. Olmsted, Bart Cassidy (who was probably also Harry F. Olmsted), Tom Roan, William R. Cox, and Fred Gipson, who was a prolific contributor to the Western pulps long before he wrote about a dog named Old Yeller. You can't go wrong with DIME WESTERN.