This issue of SPEED ADVENTURE STORIES sports a fine cover by H.J. Ward and a pretty strong line-up of authors. Tom W. Blackburn, best remembered as a top-notch Western author, of course, leads things off. I don't own this issue so I don't know if Blackburn's yarn is a Western, but I'm sure it's good regardless. Also on hand are Dale Clark, Stanley Vickers, house-name Clark Nelson, as well as Victor Rousseau with three stories, one each as by V.R. Emanuel (his actual initials and last name), Clive Trent, and Hugh Speer.
Sunday, February 15, 2026
Sunday Morning Bonus Pulp: Speed Adventure Stories, September 1944
This issue of SPEED ADVENTURE STORIES sports a fine cover by H.J. Ward and a pretty strong line-up of authors. Tom W. Blackburn, best remembered as a top-notch Western author, of course, leads things off. I don't own this issue so I don't know if Blackburn's yarn is a Western, but I'm sure it's good regardless. Also on hand are Dale Clark, Stanley Vickers, house-name Clark Nelson, as well as Victor Rousseau with three stories, one each as by V.R. Emanuel (his actual initials and last name), Clive Trent, and Hugh Speer.
Sunday, August 25, 2024
Sunday Morning Bonus Pulp: Speed Detective, September 1943
I haven't seen too many tennis court shootouts on pulp covers. In fact, this one painted by H.J. Ward for an issue of SPEED DETECTIVE is the only one I recall. There are some familiar names inside, including Robert Leslie Bellem (twice, once as himself and once as Jerome Severs Perry, one of my favorite pseudonyms), Laurence Donovan (as Larry Dunn), house-names William Decatur and Randolph Barr, and Harold de Polo and Arthur Feldman, both real names as far as I know. There's a story by Lloyd Sanders, too, but it's his only credit in the Fictionmags Index, so he could be one of the Trojan Publications regulars. Or not.
Sunday, August 04, 2024
Sunday Morning Bonus Pulp: Super-Detective Stories, May 1935
This early issue of SUPER-DETECTIVE STORIES sports a nice dramatic cover by H.J. Ward, and there are some fine authors inside: Richard Sale, James P. Olsen, Emile C. Tepperman, the mysterious Margie Harris (has any of Harris's work ever been reprinted?), and lesser-known Sam Kellman, John Mallory, and Charles Molyneaux Brown. This was Kellman's only credit, so it's possible that was a pseudonym. Sale, Olsen, and Tepperman are enough to make this issue worth reading if I owned a copy, which I don't.
Friday, February 17, 2023
Murder in Music - Cary Moran (Edwin Truett Long)
| Art by Delos Palmer |
| Art by H.J. Ward |
| Art by H.J. Ward |
“Case of the Limber Corpse”, from the May 1937 issue of SPICY DETECTIVE STORIES, is the final story in the Jarnegan series. In this one, Jarnegan’s investigation into the murder of a munitions magnate is complicated by an angry hillbilly father who wants to force Jarnegan into a shotgun wedding with his daughter . . . and then use that shotgun to blow Jarnegan’s head off. As with the other stories, it’s a fairly complex plot that features another murder and various beautiful, semi-dressed women.
These aren’t fair play mystery stories. With the third person objective style, the reader is seldom if ever privy to Jarnegan’s thoughts and Long blatantly conceals some of the clues. Other clues are introduced and then promptly forgotten, probably a result of the speed with which Long wrote these yarns. However, none of that detracts from the snappy patter, the hardboiled characters and plots, and the headlong pace of the action. I thoroughly enjoyed this collection and wouldn’t mind reading the rest of the stories in the series. Long was an inconsistent writer, but more often than not, I find his stories to be a lot of fun. In looking up his listing on the Fictionmags Index, I noticed that he passed away in 1945, when he was only 41 years old. I’m curious as to why he died so young, and it’s a shame we lost the stories he might have written if he’d lived.
Sunday, January 22, 2023
Sunday Morning Bonus Pulp: Spicy-Adventure Stories, February 1938
H.J. Ward provides another typically lurid cover on this issue of SPICY-ADVENTURE STORIES. Inside are some of the usual Spicy authors: Robert Leslie Bellem (as Jerome Severs Perry), E. Hoffmann Price, Hugh B. Cave (an Eel story as Justin Case), Edwin Truett Long (as Dale Boyd and Charles Daw), and two authors not known to be house-names, Ross Flynn and Wyreck Brent. However, both guys published only a few stories and only in various Spicy pulps, so I wouldn't put too much faith in those being their real names.
Sunday, September 18, 2022
Sunday Morning Bonus Pulp: Private Detective Stories, June 1937
This is the first issue of PRIVATE DETECTIVE STORIES, from the same folks who brought us SPICY DETECTIVE, SPICY WESTERN, etc. It’s available in an e-book edition from Radio Archives, and I’ve been reading it recently, a story or two at a time between editing projects.
The headliner in this pulp, not surprisingly, is Robert Leslie Bellem’s legendary
private eye character Dan Turner. The Turner yarn in this debut issue is a
novelette called “Murder on the Sound Stage”, one of the longer Turner yarns I’ve
read. Unfortunately, that uninspired title goes with the old plot about an
actor being murdered on set when somebody fires a gun with a live round in it
at the same time as a gun with a blank in it goes off. The victim had known
that his life was in danger and had summoned Dan to the studio to protect him,
but it was too late. The guy gets croaked right in front of Dan’s eyes . . .
but not until Dan has encountered a beautiful blonde with murderous intentions
of her own.
From there the action takes off hellity-blip and involves a beautiful brunette
Russian babe (the dead gink’s wife) and a redhead who works as an extra in the
galloping snapshots. All the ruckus takes place in the space of one night, and
it’s a crowded night because Bellem crams in a lot. There are two more murders—or
was it three?—and Turner gets bashed on the conk at least once before
everything gets wrapped up in a fairly improbable manner.
As usual, there’s a considerable amount of enjoyment to be found in Bellem’s
fast-paced prose. The guy could sling words, no doubt about that. And his plots
were often complex and well-constructed. That’s not really the case here, and
that’s what keeps this yarn from belonging in the top rank of Dan Turner
stories. Worth reading, but a lot of them are better.
Next up is a true crime feature by C.A.M. Donne (Donald Cameron), “Vengeance of
the Severed Hands”, about a husband who murders his wife and dismembers her to
get rid of the body. I have no idea if it’s actually true or if Cameron, who
wrote quite a bit for the Spicies, just made it all up. But it's written well
enough that I didn’t skip it, which I often do with non-fiction features in
pulp magazines.
“Pair of Tramps” is bylined Mort Lansing, but that’s a pseudonym for the very
prolific Edwin Truett Long, who was one of Trojan Publishing’s stalwarts,
writing under numerous pseudonyms and house-names. The protagonist in this one
is a down-on-his-luck former private detective named Bane, who had to go on the
run when he was framed for a crime by a local gambler. He’s come back to the
city from which he fled to try to borrow some money from his former girlfriend,
who happens to be the mistress of the gambler who framed him. That doesn’t work
out, but Bane then meets a beautiful redhead, a former showgirl who happens to
be up to her pretty neck in a murder case involving her husband, her rich
father-in-law, and a knife in the neck.
I generally enjoy Long’s work, but “Pair of Tramps” is an excellent story,
probably the best thing by him that I’ve read so far. The action never lets up,
the plot is satisfyingly twisty, and the prose is top-notch, the sort of terse
poetry that reminded me a great deal of Paul Cain’s work. Not as good as Cain,
mind you, but almost as good as Cain is pretty darned good.
I’ve probably read some stories by Howard Wandrei writing as Robert A. Garron
in various Spicy pulps, but as with Long’s story, Wandrei’s “Wrong Number” in
this issue really impressed me. The tough, likable protagonist of this one,
private detective Noel Athens, is hired to find the daughter of a newspaper
tycoon. The girl has run off with a gangster. Yes, it’s a wandering daughter
job, and the plot is pretty straightforward, but the writing is excellent, enough
so that I’m going to keep my eyes open for more stories by Wandrei. (I have a
couple of collections of his science fiction and fantasy stories under his own
name and will get around to those eventually, I hope.)
“Nailed With Silver”, a novelette by E. Hoffmann Price, introduces Jeff Dargan,
a private eye who went on to star in several more yarns published in PRIVATE
DETECTIVE STORIES. In this one, he’s in Saint Augustine, Florida, enjoying a
break after wrapping up a jewel robbery case, when he suddenly finds himself up
to his neck in more trouble involving a beautiful brunette who wants Dargan to
help her get some evidence for her divorce case against her husband, a sugar
tycoon who owns a company based in Cuba. Well, there’s a murder, of course,
along with another beautiful woman, some crooked politicians, and shoot-outs
and fistfights galore. Price was another stalwart of the Spicy pulps, along
with his prodigious output elsewhere, and I’ve never read a story of his that
wasn’t at least enjoyable. I wasn’t sure about “Nailed With Silver” at first.
The plot seemed pretty muddled. But then darned if Price didn’t pull everything
together so that it made sense. I would up liking this one quite a bit.
Allan K. Echols is best remembered for his Westerns, I think, but he wrote quite
a few detective yarns, too. His story “Sweet and Hot” wraps up this issue. It
concerns a fixed horse race that turns out not to be fixed, a $20,000 bet, and
a private detective framed for murder. While it’s not a particularly memorable
story, it’s well-written and moves right along.
So, all of this plus a brutally effective cover by H.J. Ward makes this a
pretty good first issue of PRIVATE DETECTIVE STORIES, setting it up for a nice
long run. The stories by Long, Wandrei, and Price are really good, and the
Bellem yarn is entertaining if not top of the line. I had a great time reading
the ebook version of this memorable pulp debut.
Sunday, March 27, 2022
Sunday Morning Bonus Pulp: Spicy-Adventure Stories, November 1938
Looks like the Skipper traded Gilligan for a different little buddy. I'm talking about the monkey, of course. This is another good cover by H.J. Ward on one of the Spicy pulps. The stories inside this issue of SPICY-ADVENTURE STORIES are all by stalwarts of the Spicy line: Robert Leslie Bellem, E. Hoffmann Price, Victor Rousseau (as Hugh Speer), Edwin Truett Long (as Jose Vaca), Laurence Donovan (as Larry Dunn), and Wyatt Blassingame (as William B. Rainey).
Saturday, August 07, 2021
Saturday Morning Western Pulp: Spicy Western Stories, May 1940
Many of the usual suspects are on hand for this issue of SPICY WESTERN STORIES. The cover is by H.J. Ward. Inside are stories by Laurence Donovan (twice, once under his own name and once as Larry Dunn), Edwin Truett Long (also twice, as Luke Terry and Dale Boyd), James P. Olsen as James A. Lawson, and a couple of little-known authors who might or might not have been pseudonyms or house-names, George Vail and Carson West.
Sunday, December 13, 2020
Sunday Morning Bonus Pulp: Spicy-Adventure Stories, January 1937
A lurid but eye-catching cover by H.J. Ward on this issue of SPICY-ADVENTURE STORIES. This one has a particularly good line-up of authors inside: Robert E. Howard (writing as Sam Walser) with one of his Wild Bill Clanton stories, Robert Leslie Bellem (of course) as both himself and Ellery W. Calder, Hugh B. Cave as Justin Case, Victor Rousseau as Lew Merrill, Edwin Truett Long as Clint Morgan, and a couple of authors writing under (apparently) their real names, Alan Anderson and Carson West. I love all the Spicy pulps, although they're best in small doses. I can read two or three stories in a row and still find them very enjoyable.