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Pulp magazine



 
 
Pulp magazines (or pulp fiction; often referred to as "the pulps") were inexpensive fiction
Fiction

Fiction is an imaginative form of narrative, one of the four basic rhetorical modes. Although the word fiction is derived from the Latin fingo, fingere, finxi, fictum, "to form, create", works of fiction need not be entirely imaginary and may include real people, places, and events....
 magazines. They were widely published from the 1920s through the 1950s. The term pulp fiction can also refer to mass market paperback
Paperback

Paperback, softback, or softcover describe and refer to a book by the nature of its bookbinding. The book covers of such books are usually made of paper or cardboard, and are usually held together with adhesive rather than stitches or Staple s....
s since the 1950s.

Terminology and history
The name "pulp" comes from the cheap wood pulp
Wood pulp

Pulp is a dry fibrous material prepared by chemically or mechanically separating fibers from wood or fiber crops.Pulp can be either fluffy or formed into thick sheets....
 paper on which such magazines were printed.






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Pulp Mag Flynns Detective Fic
Pulp magazines (or pulp fiction; often referred to as "the pulps") were inexpensive fiction
Fiction

Fiction is an imaginative form of narrative, one of the four basic rhetorical modes. Although the word fiction is derived from the Latin fingo, fingere, finxi, fictum, "to form, create", works of fiction need not be entirely imaginary and may include real people, places, and events....
 magazines. They were widely published from the 1920s through the 1950s. The term pulp fiction can also refer to mass market paperback
Paperback

Paperback, softback, or softcover describe and refer to a book by the nature of its bookbinding. The book covers of such books are usually made of paper or cardboard, and are usually held together with adhesive rather than stitches or Staple s....
s since the 1950s.

Terminology and history


The name "pulp" comes from the cheap wood pulp
Wood pulp

Pulp is a dry fibrous material prepared by chemically or mechanically separating fibers from wood or fiber crops.Pulp can be either fluffy or formed into thick sheets....
 paper on which such magazines were printed. Magazines printed on better paper and usually offering family-oriented content were often called "glossies" or "slicks". Pulps were the successor to the "penny dreadful
Penny Dreadful

Penny Dreadful was a term applied to nineteenth century British fiction publications, usually lurid serial stories appearing in parts over a number of weeks, each part costing a penny....
s", "dime novel
Dime novel

Dime novel, though it has a specific meaning, has also become a catch-all term for several different forms of late 19th century and early 20th century U.S....
s", and short fiction magazines of the nineteenth century
1800s

Events and trends...
. Although many respected writers wrote for pulps, the magazines are perhaps best remembered for their lurid and exploitative stories
Exploitation fiction

Exploitation fiction is a type of literature that includes novels and magazines that exploitation sex, violence, drugs, or other elements meant to attract readers primarily by arousing prurient interest without being labeled as obscene or pornography....
, and for their similarly sensational cover art. Modern superhero
Superhero

A superhero is a Character "of unprecedented physical prowess dedicated to act of derring-do in the public interest". Since the debut of the prototype superhero Superman in 1938, stories of superheroes?ranging from brief episodic adventures to continuing years-long sagas?have dominated American comic books and crossed over into other mass...
 comic book
Comic book

A comic book is a magazine or book of narrative artwork and dialog and descriptive prose. The style was introduced in 1934. Despite the term, comic books do not necessarily feature humorous subject-matter; in fact, it is often serious and action-oriented....
s are sometimes considered descendants of "hero pulps"; pulp magazines often featured illustrated novel-length stories of heroic characters such as the Shadow
The Shadow

The Shadow is a collection of serialized dramas, originally on 1930s radio and then in a wide variety of media, that follow the exploits of Character vigilante The Shadow....
, Doc Savage
Doc Savage

Doc Savage is a fictional character, one of the pulp heroes of the 1930s and 1940s. He was created by writer Lester Dent....
, and the Phantom Detective
The Phantom Detective

The Phantom Detective was the second pulp hero character published after The Shadow. The first issue was dated February 1933, a month before Doc Savage - March 1933....
.

Pulp covers, printed in color on higher-quality (slick) paper, were famous for their half-dressed damsels in distress
Damsel in distress

The subject of the damsel in distress, or persecuted maiden, is a classic theme in world literature, art, and film. She is usually a young, nubile woman placed in a dire predicament by a villain or a monster and who requires a hero to dash to her rescue....
, usually awaiting a rescuing hero
Hero

A hero , in Greek mythology and folklore, was originally a demigod, the offspring of a mortal and a deity,their Greek hero cult being one of the most distinctive features of Religion in ancient Greece....
. Cover art played a major part in the marketing of pulp magazines, and a number of the most successful cover artists became as popular as the authors featured on the interior pages. Among the most famous pulp artists were Frank R. Paul
Frank R. Paul

Frank Rudolph Paul was an illustrator of US pulp magazines in the science fiction field. He was born in Vienna, Austria and died in Teaneck, New Jersey....
, Virgil Finlay
Virgil Finlay

Virgil Finlay was a pulp magazines fantasy, science fiction and horror fiction illustrator. While he worked in a range of media, from gouache to oils, Finlay specialized in, and became famous for, beautifully detailed pen-and-ink drawings accomplished with abundant stippling, cross-hatching, and scratchboard techniques....
, Edd Cartier
Edd Cartier

Edward Daniel Cartier, better known as Edd Cartier was an United States pulp magazine illustrator. He was born in North Bergen, New Jersey....
, Margaret Brundage
Margaret Brundage

Margaret Brundage, born Margaret Hedda Johnson was an United States illustration and painting who is remembered chiefly for having illustrated the pulp magazine Weird Tales....
 and Norman Saunders
Norman Saunders

Norman Blaine Saunders was a prolific commercial artist who produced paintings for pulp magazines, paperbacks, men's adventure magazines, comic books, and trading cards....
. Covers were important enough to sales that sometimes they would be designed first; authors would then be shown the cover art and asked to write a story to match.

Later pulps began to feature a few interior illustrations, depicting elements of the stories. The drawings were printed in black ink on the same cream-colored paper used for the text, and had to use specific techniques to avoid blotting on the coarse texture of the cheap pulp. Thus, fine lines and heavy detail were usually not an option. Shading was by crosshatching or pointillism
Pointillism

Pointillism is a style of painting in which small distinct points of primary colors create the impression of a wide selection of secondary and intermediate colors....
, and even that had to be limited and coarse. Usually the art was black lines on the paper's background, but Finlay and a few others did some work that was primarily white lines against large dark areas.

Pulps were typically seven inches wide by ten inches high, about half an inch thick, having around 128 pages. In their first decades, they were most often priced at ten cents, while competing slicks were twenty-five cents.

The first "pulp" is considered to be Frank Munsey
Frank Munsey

Frank Andrew Munsey was an United States newspaper and magazine publisher and author. He was born in Mercer, Maine, Maine but spent most of his life in New York City....
's revamped Argosy Magazine of 1896, about 135,000 words (192 pages) per issue on pulp paper with untrimmed edges and no illustrations, not even on the cover. While the steam powered printing press had been in widespread use for some time, enabling the boom in dime novels, prior to Munsey, no-one had combined cheap printing, cheap paper and cheap authors in a package that provided affordable entertainment to working-class people. In six years Argosy went from a few thousand copies per month to over half a million.

Street & Smith
Street & Smith

Street & Smith or Street & Smith Publications, Inc. was a New York City publisher specializing in inexpensive paperbacks and magazines referred to as pulp fiction and dime novels....
 were next on the market. A dime novel and boys weekly publisher, they saw Argosys success, and in 1903 launched The Popular Magazine
The Popular Magazine

The Popular Magazine was an early American literary magazine that ran for 612 issues from November 1903 to October 1931. It featured short fiction, novellas, serialized larger works, and even entire short novels....
, which was billed as the "biggest magazine in the world" by virtue of being two pages longer than Argosy. It should be noted that due to differences in page layout
Page layout

Page layout is the part of graphic design that deals in the arrangement and style treatment of elements on a page. Beginning from early illuminated pages in hand-copied books of the Middle Ages and proceeding down to intricate modern magazine and catalog layouts, proper page design has long been a consideration in printed material....
, the magazine had substantially less text than
Argosy. The Popular Magazine introduced the use of color covers to the pulp world. The magazine began to take off when, in 1905, the publishers acquired the rights to serialize a new work, Ayesha
Ayesha (novel)

Ayesha, the Return of She is a gothic novel by the popular Victorian era author H. Rider Haggard, published in 1905, as a sequel to his far more popular and well known novel, She ....
, by H. Rider Haggard
H. Rider Haggard

Sir Henry Rider Haggard Order of the British Empire , was a prolific writer of adventure novels set in exotic locations, predominantly Africa. He was also involved in agricultural reform around the British Empire....
, a sequel to his very successful novel
She
She (novel)

She: A History of Adventure is a novel by H. Rider Haggard, first serialized in The Graphic from October 1886 to January 1887. In reprints it was extraordinarily popular in its time, and has remained in print to the present day....
. In 1907, they raised the cover price to fifteen cents and added thirty pages per issue; this, along with a solid stable of authors, proved a successful formula and circulation began to approach that of Argosy. This demonstrated that the market could support multiple competitors. Street and Smith's next key innovation was the introduction of specialized genre pulps, each magazine focusing on one genre such as detective stories, romance, etc.

At their peak of popularity in the 1920s and 1930s, the most successful pulps could sell up to one million copies per issue. Among the best-known titles of this period were
Adventure
Adventure (magazine)

Adventure was first published in November 1910 as a monthly pulp magazine. In 1915 the publishers attempted to reach women readers with a new title , but it went back to its male readership and original title in 1917....
, Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories

Amazing Stories was an American science fiction magazine launched in April 1926 by Hugo Gernsback's Experimenter Publishing. It was the first magazine devoted solely to science fiction....
, Black Mask, Dime Detective, Flying Aces, Horror Stories
Horror Stories (magazine)

Horror Stories was a U.S. pulp magazine that published tales of the supernatural, horror, and macabre. The first issue was published in 1935, three years after the weird menace genre had begun with Dime Mystery Magazine....
, Marvel Tales
Marvel Tales

Marvel Tales is the title of three United States comic-book series published by Marvel Comics, the first of them from the company's 1950s predecessor, Atlas Comics ....
, Oriental Stories
Oriental Stories/The Magic Carpet (magazine)

Oriental Stories, later retitled The Magic Carpet Magazine, was a pulp magazine of 1930-34, an offshoot of the famous Weird Tales....
, Planet Stories
Planet Stories

Planet Stories was a pulp science fiction magazine, published by Fiction House with a total of 71 issues appeared between 1939 and 1955. It featured a particular kind of romantic, swashbuckling adventure in a science fiction context, and was renowned for its colorful covers, typically featuring a young woman in rather scanty apparel....
, Spicy Detective, Startling Stories
Startling Stories

Startling Stories was a pulp magazines science fiction magazine which also published a lot of science fantasy. A companion magazine to Thrilling Wonder Stories and Captain Future magazine, it published 99 issues from 1939 to 1955....
, Thrilling Wonder Stories
Wonder Stories

File:Air wonder stories 192907.jpgWonder Stories was an early science fiction magazine which was published under several titles from 1929 to 1955....
, Unknown
Unknown (magazine)

Unknown was a pulp magazine fantasy fiction magazine, edited by John W. Campbell, that was published from 1939 to 1943. Unknown was closely associated with the science fiction magazine Astounding Science Fiction, which was also edited by Campbell at the time; many authors and illustrators contributed to both magazines....
and Weird Tales
Weird Tales

Weird Tales is an United States fantasy and horror fiction pulp magazine first published in March 1923 in literature. The magazine was set up in Chicago by J.C....
.

The Second World War paper shortages had a serious impact on pulp production, starting a steady rise in costs and the decline of the pulps. Beginning with
Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine in 1941, pulp magazines began to switch to digest size
Digest size

Digest size is a magazine size, smaller than a conventional size magazine but larger than a standard paperback book, approximately 5? x 8? inches, but can also be 5? x 8? inches and 5? x 7? inches....
; smaller, thicker magazines. In 1949, Street & Smith closed most of their pulp magazines in order to move upmarket and produce slicks. The pulp format declined from rising expenses, but even more due to the heavy competition from comic book
Comic book

A comic book is a magazine or book of narrative artwork and dialog and descriptive prose. The style was introduced in 1934. Despite the term, comic books do not necessarily feature humorous subject-matter; in fact, it is often serious and action-oriented....
s, television
Television

Television is a widely used telecommunication mass-media for transmitting and receiving moving , either monochrome or color, usually accompanied by sound....
, and the paperback
Paperback

Paperback, softback, or softcover describe and refer to a book by the nature of its bookbinding. The book covers of such books are usually made of paper or cardboard, and are usually held together with adhesive rather than stitches or Staple s....
 novel. In a more affluent post-war America, the price gap compared to slick magazines was far less significant. In the 1950s Men's adventure
Men's adventure

Men's adventure is a literary genre of magazines that had its heyday in the 1950s and 1960s. Catering to a male audience, these magazines featured pinup photography and lurid tales of adventure that typically featured wartime feats of daring, exotic travel, or conflict with wild animals....
 magazines began to replace the pulp.

The 1957 bankruptcy of the American News Company, then the primary distributor of pulp magazines, has sometimes been taken as marking the end of the "pulp era;" by that date, many of the famous pulps of the previous generation, including
Black Mask, The Shadow
The Shadow

The Shadow is a collection of serialized dramas, originally on 1930s radio and then in a wide variety of media, that follow the exploits of Character vigilante The Shadow....
, Doc Savage
Doc Savage

Doc Savage is a fictional character, one of the pulp heroes of the 1930s and 1940s. He was created by writer Lester Dent....
, and Weird Tales
Weird Tales

Weird Tales is an United States fantasy and horror fiction pulp magazine first published in March 1923 in literature. The magazine was set up in Chicago by J.C....
, were defunct. Most all of the few remaining pulp magazines are science fiction
Science fiction

Science fiction is a broad genre of fiction that often involves speculations based on current or future science or technology. Science fiction is found in books, art, television, films, games, theatre, and other media....
 or mystery
Mystery fiction

Mystery fiction is a loosely-defined term that is often used as a synonym of detective fiction — in other words a novel or short story in which a detective solves a crime....
 magazines now in formats similar to "digest size", such as Analog Science Fiction and Fact
Analog Science Fiction and Fact

Analog Science Fiction and Fact is an United States science fiction magazine. As of 2007, it is the longest continually published magazine of that genre....
 and Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine
Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine

Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine is a monthly digest size fiction magazine specializing in crime fiction, particularly detective fiction. Launched in 1941 by The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, EQMM is named for the author Ellery Queen, who wrote novels and short stories about a fictional detective named Ellery Queen....
. The format is still in use for some lengthy serials, like the German science fiction weekly
Perry Rhodan
Perry Rhodan

Perry Rhodan is the name of science fiction series published since 1961 in Germany, as well as the name of the main character.Perry Rhodan is a space opera, dealing with several Science fiction themes of science fiction....
(over 2450 issues as of 2009).

Over the course of their evolution, there were a huge number of pulp magazine titles; Harry Steeger of Popular Publications claimed that his company alone had published over 300, and at their peak they were publishing 42 titles per month. Many titles of course survived only briefly. While the most popular titles were monthly, many were bimonthly and some were quarterly.

The collapse of the pulp industry has changed the landscape of publishing in that pulps were the single largest sales outlet for short stories; combined with the decrease in slick magazine fiction markets, people attempting to support themselves by writing fiction must now generally write novels or book-length anthologies of shorter pieces.

Genres

Pulp magazines often contained a wide variety of genre fiction
Genre fiction

Genre fiction is a term for fiction written with the intent of fitting into a specific literary genre in order to appeal to readers and fans already familiar with that genre....
, including, but not limited to, fantasy
Fantasy literature

Fantasy literature is fantasy in written form. Historically speaking, the majority of fantasy works have been literature. Since the 1950s however, a growing segment of the fantasy genre has taken the form of films, television programs, graphic novels, video games, music, painting, and other media....
/sword and sorcery
Sword and sorcery

Sword and sorcery is a Fantasy subgenres generally characterized by swashbuckling heroes engaged in exciting and violent conflicts. An element of Romance is often present, as is an element of Magic and the supernatural....
, gangster, detective
Detective

A detective is an investigator, either a member of a police agency or a private person. The latter may be known as private investigators . Informally, and primarily in fiction, a detective is any licensed or unlicensed person who solves crimes, including historical crimes, or looks into records....
/mystery
Mystery fiction

Mystery fiction is a loosely-defined term that is often used as a synonym of detective fiction — in other words a novel or short story in which a detective solves a crime....
, science fiction
Science fiction

Science fiction is a broad genre of fiction that often involves speculations based on current or future science or technology. Science fiction is found in books, art, television, films, games, theatre, and other media....
, adventure
Adventure novel

The adventure novel is a genre of novel that has adventure, an exciting undertaking involving risk and physical danger, as its main theme. Adventure has been a common theme since the earliest days of written fiction....
, westerns (also see Dime Western
Dime Western

A Dime Western is a modern term for Western themed dime novels, which spanned the era of the 1860s—1900s. Most would hardly be recognizable as a modern western, having more in common with James Fennimore Cooper's Leatherstocking saga, but many of the standard elements originated here: a cool detached hero, a frontiersman , a fragile...
), war
War

...
, sports, railroad, men's adventure
Men's adventure

Men's adventure is a literary genre of magazines that had its heyday in the 1950s and 1960s. Catering to a male audience, these magazines featured pinup photography and lurid tales of adventure that typically featured wartime feats of daring, exotic travel, or conflict with wild animals....
 ("the sweats"), romance
Romance novel

The romance novel is a literary genre developed in Western culture, mainly in English-speaking countries. Novels in this genre place their primary focus on the relationship and Romance between two people, and must have an "emotionally satisfying and optimistic ending." Through the late 20th and early 21st centuries, these novels are co...
, horror/occult
Occult

The word occult comes from the Latin word occultus , referring to "knowledge of the hidden". In the medical sense it is used to refer to a structure or process that is hidden, e.g....
 (including "weird menace
Weird menace

Weird menace is the name given to a sub-genre of horror fiction that was popular in the pulp magazines of the 1940s and 1950s. The weird menace pulps, also known as "shudder pulps", generally featured stories in which the hero was pitted against evil or sadistic villains, with graphic scenes of torture and brutal murder....
"), and Série Noire (French crime mystery). The American Old West
American Old West

For cultural influences and their development, see Western .The American Old West or Wild West comprises the history, geography, peoples, lore, and cultural expression of life in the Western United States , most often referring to the period of the latter half of the 19th century, between the American Civil War and the end of th...
 was a mainstay genre of early turn of the century
Turn of the century

Turn of the century, in its broadest sense, refers to the transition from one century to another. The term is most often used to indicate a non-specific time period either before or after the beginning of a century - for instance, if a statement describes an event as taking place "at the turn of the 18th century", this means it took place s...
 novels as well as later pulp magazines, and lasted longest of all the traditional pulps.

Many classic science fiction and crime novels were originally serialized
Serial (literature)

The term "serial" refers to the intrinsic property of a succession — namely, its sequence. In literature, the term is used as a noun to refer to a format by which a story is told in contiguous installments in sequential issues of a single periodical publication....
 in pulp magazines such as
Weird Tales
Weird Tales

Weird Tales is an United States fantasy and horror fiction pulp magazine first published in March 1923 in literature. The magazine was set up in Chicago by J.C....
, Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories

Amazing Stories was an American science fiction magazine launched in April 1926 by Hugo Gernsback's Experimenter Publishing. It was the first magazine devoted solely to science fiction....
, and Black Mask.

Notable original characters

While the majority of pulp magazines were anthology
Anthology

An anthology, literally a "garland" or "collection of flowers", is a collection of literary works, originally of poems. In genre fiction and especially science fiction, anthology is used to categorize collections of shorter works such as short story and short novels, usually collected into a single volume for publication....
 titles featuring many different authors, characters and settings, some of the most enduringly popular magazines were those that featured a single recurring character (these were often referred to as "hero pulps", because the recurring character was almost always a larger-than-life hero in the mold of Doc Savage or the Shadow).
Phantom Detective 5 36
Popular regular pulp fiction characters included:

  • Biggles
    Biggles

    James Bigglesworth, better known in flying circles as "Biggles", is a fictional character Aviator and adventure novel created by W. E. Johns....
  • Big Nose Serrano
  • Bran Mak Morn
    Bran Mak Morn

    Bran Mak Morn is a hero of several pulp magazine short stories by Robert E. Howard. In the stories, most of which were first published in Weird Tales, Bran is the last king of Howard's romanticized version of the tribal race of Picts....
  • Buck Rogers
    Buck Rogers

    Anthony "Buck" Rogers is a fictional character who first appeared in 1928 as Anthony Rogers, the hero of two novellas by Philip Francis Nowlan published in the magazine Amazing Stories....
  • Adam Zero
    Adam Zero

    Adam Zero is a ballet with music written by the United Kingdom composer Arthur Bliss, in 1946....
  • Captain Future
    Captain Future

    Captain Future was both a science fiction magazine and a fictional character. The character was the creation of science fiction writer Edmond Hamilton....
  • Conan the Barbarian
    Conan the Barbarian

    Conan the Barbarian is a fictional character often associated with the Fantasy subgenres sword and sorcery . This antiheroic character has been credited with being the most famous fictional barbarian, and one of the most well known iconic figures in American fantasy....
  • Dan Turner, Hollywood Detective
    Dan Turner, Hollywood Detective

    Dan Turner, also known as the Hollywood Detective, was a fictional Private investigator created by Robert Leslie Bellem. His first appearance was in the second issue of the pulp magazine Spicy Detective, dated June 1934, and he continued to appear regularly in that magazine until its demise in February 1947....
  • Doc Savage
    Doc Savage

    Doc Savage is a fictional character, one of the pulp heroes of the 1930s and 1940s. He was created by writer Lester Dent....
  • Doctor Death
    Doctor Death (magazine)

    Doctor Death was the title of a short-lived pulp magazine science fiction magazine published by Dell Magazines in 1935, as well as the name of the main character featured in that magazine....
  • Dr. Yen Sin
    Dr. Yen Sin

    Dr. Yen Sin was a short-lived pulp magazine science fiction magazine published by Popular Publications during 1936. It superseded a similar magazine from the same publishers entitled The Mysterious Wu Fang, which had ceased publication in February 1936....
  • Domino Lady
    Domino Lady

    The Domino Lady was a masked Pulp magazine heroine who first appeared in the May 1936 issue of Saucy Romantic Adventures. All of her stories were published under the penname "Lars Anderson" owned by the publisher, Fiction Magazines....
  • Flash Gordon
    Flash Gordon

    Steven "Flash" Gordon is the hero of a science fiction adventure comic strip originally drawn by Alex Raymond, which was first published on January 7, 1934....
  • Fu Manchu
    Fu Manchu

    Dr. Fu Manchu is a fictional character first featured in a series of novels by English author Sax Rohmer during the first half of the 20th century....
  • G-8
    G-8 (character)

    G-8 was an heroic aviator and spy during World War I in pulp magazine. He started in his own title G-8 and His Battle Aces, published by Popular Publications....
  • Green Lama
    Green Lama

    The Green Lama was an United States pulp magazine hero of the 1940s. In many respects a typical costumed crime-fighter of the period, the Green Lama's most unusual feature was the fact that he was a practising Buddhism....
  • Hopalong Cassidy
    Hopalong Cassidy

    Hopalong Cassidy is a cowboy-hero, created in 1904 by Clarence E. Mulford and appearing in a series of popular stories and novels. In print, the character appears as a rude, rough-talking 'galoot'....
  • John Carter of Mars
  • Jules de Grandin
    Jules de Grandin

    Jules de Grandin is a fictional occult detective created by Seabury Quinn for Weird Tales. Assisted by Dr. Trowbridge , de Grandin fought ghosts, werewolves, satanists, etc. in over ninety stories between 1925 and 1951....
  • Ka-Zar
    Ka-Zar

    Ka-Zar is the name of two jungle-dwelling fictional characters. The first appeared in pulp magazines of the 1930s, and was adapted for his second iteration, as a comic book character for Timely Comics, the 1930s and 1940s predecessor of Marvel Comics....
  • Kull
  • Lord Lister AKA Raffles
  • Nick Carter
    Nick Carter (literary character)

    Nick Carter is a fictional character who first appeared in a dime novel entitled The Old Detective's Pupil; or, The Mysterious Crime of Madison Square on September 18, 1886....
  • Operator No. 5
    Operator No. 5

    Operator No. 5 was a pulp hero that appeared in his own ten cent pulp magazine, originally Operator #5 but soon renamed Secret Service Operator #5, which was published by Popular Publications between 1934 and 1939....
  • Secret Agent X
    Secret Agent X

    Secret Agent X was the title of a United States pulp magazine published by A. A. Wyn's Ace Magazines, and the name of the main character featured in the magazine....
  • Sexton Blake
    Sexton Blake

    Sexton Blake is a fictional detective who appeared in many British comic strips and novels throughout the 20th century, described by Professor Jeffrey Richards on the BBC in 'The Radio Detectives' in 2003 as "the poor man's Sherlock Holmes"....
  • Solomon Kane
    Solomon Kane

    Solomon Kane is a fictional character created by the pulp magazine-era writer Robert E. Howard. A 17th century Puritan, Solomon Kane is a somber-looking man who wanders the world with no apparent goal other than to vanquish evil in all its forms....
  • Tarzan
    Tarzán

    Tarz?n was a half-hour syndicated series that aired 1991 in television?1994 in television. In this version of the show, Tarzan was portrayed as a blond environmentalist, with Jane turned into a French ecologist....
  • The Avenger
    The Avenger

    The Avenger is a fictional character whose original adventures appeared between September 1939 and September 1942 in the pulp magazine The Avenger, published by Street and Smith Publications....
  • The Black Bat
    The Black Bat

    The Black Bat was the name of two unrelated characters featured in different pulp magazine series in the 1930s....
  • The Continental Op
    The Continental Op

    The Continental Op is a fictional character created by Dashiell Hammett. A private investigator employed as an operative of the Continental Detective Agency's San Francisco office, he never gives his name and so is known only by his job description....
  • The Eel
    The Eel (fictional character)

    The Eel is a Pulp magazine character, a gentleman thief of "courageous action and questionable morals," created by Hugh B. Cave, writing under the pseudonym Justin Case....
  • The Phantom Detective
    The Phantom Detective

    The Phantom Detective was the second pulp hero character published after The Shadow. The first issue was dated February 1933, a month before Doc Savage - March 1933....
  • The Shadow
    The Shadow

    The Shadow is a collection of serialized dramas, originally on 1930s radio and then in a wide variety of media, that follow the exploits of Character vigilante The Shadow....
  • The Spider
    The Spider

    The Spider was the violent, relentless hero of a pulp magazine series produced by Popular Publications from 1933 to 1943. There were 118 stories in the pulps and another one, "Slaughter Incorporated" published privately later on....
  • Zorro
    Zorro

    Zorro is a fictional character created in 1919 by pulp magazine writer Johnston McCulley. He has been featured in several books, films, television series and other media....


Kilgore Trout
Kilgore Trout

'Kilgore Trout' is a fictional character created by author Kurt Vonnegut. He was originally created as a fictionalized version of author Theodore Sturgeon , although Trout's consistent presence in Vonnegut's works has also led critics to view him as the author's own "alter ego." Trout is also the titular "author" of the novel Venus on the Hal...
, the perennial character in the work of Kurt Vonnegut
Kurt Vonnegut

Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. was a prolific and genre-bending American novelist known for works blending satire, black comedy and science fiction, such as Slaughterhouse-Five , Cat's Cradle , and Breakfast of Champions .He was also known for his Humanism beliefs and being honorary president of the American Humanist Association....
, is a fictional pulp fiction writer.

Authors

Another way pulps kept costs down was by paying authors less than other markets; thus many eminent authors started out in the pulps before they were successful enough to sell to better-paying markets, and similarly, well-known authors whose careers were slumping or who wanted a few quick dollars could bolster their income with sales to pulps. Additionally, some of the earlier pulps solicited stories from amateurs who were quite happy to see their words in print and could thus be paid token amounts.

There were also career pulp writers, capable of turning out huge amounts of prose on a steady basis, often with the aid of dictation
Dictation

Dictation can refer to:*Dictation , when one person speaks while another person transcribes what is spoken.*A dictation machine, a device used to record this speech for Transcription ....
, either to stenographers or machines, and typists. Before he became a novelist, Upton Sinclair
Upton Sinclair

Upton Sinclair, Jr. , was a Pulitzer Prize-winning prolific United States author who wrote over 90 books in many genres and was widely considered to be one of the best investigators advocating Socialism views....
 was turning out at least eight thousand words per day seven days a week for the pulps, keeping two stenographers fully employed. Pulps would often have their authors use multiple pen names so that they could use multiple stories by the same person in one issue, or use a given author's stories in three or more successive issues, while still appearing to have varied content.

One advantage pulps provided to authors was that they paid
upon acceptance for material instead of on publication; since a story might be accepted months or even years before publication, to a working writer this was a crucial difference in cash flow
Cash flow

Cash flow is the balance of the amounts of cash being received and paid by a business during a defined period of time, sometimes tied to a specific project....
.

Authors featured

Well-known authors who wrote for pulps include:

  • Poul Anderson
    Poul Anderson

    Poul William Anderson was an American science fiction author who wrote during a Golden Age of Science Fiction of the genre. Anderson also authored several works of fantasy....
  • Isaac Asimov
    Isaac Asimov

    Isaac Asimov , was a Russian-born United States author and professor of biochemistry, best known for his works of science fiction and for his popular science books....
  • Robert Leslie Bellem
    Robert Leslie Bellem

    Robert Leslie Bellem was a prolific United States pulp magazine writer, best known for his creation of Dan Turner, Hollywood Detective. He was born in either 1894 or 1902, and died in 1968....
  • Alfred Bester
  • Robert Bloch
    Robert Bloch

    Robert Albert Bloch was a prolific United States writer, primarily of crime fiction, horror fiction and science fiction. He was the son of Raphael "Ray" Bloch , a bank cashier, and his wife Stella Loeb , a social worker, both of Germans-Jewish descent....
  • Leigh Brackett
    Leigh Brackett

    Leigh Douglass Brackett was an United Statesn author and screenwriter, known for her work on famous films such as The Big Sleep , Rio Bravo , The Long Goodbye and Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back ....
  • Ray Bradbury
    Ray Bradbury

    Ray Douglas Bradbury is an United States literature, fantasy, Horror fiction, science fiction, and mystery writer.Best known for his dystopian novel Fahrenheit 451 and The Martian Chronicles, Bradbury is widely considered one of the greatest and most popular American writers of speculative fiction of the twentieth century....
  • Max Brand
    Max Brand

    Frederick Schiller Faust was an United States author known primarily for his thoughtful and literary Westerns. Faust wrote mostly under pen names, but today is primarily known by only one, Max Brand....
  • Fredric Brown
    Fredric Brown

    Fredric Brown was an United States science fiction and mystery fiction writer....
  • Edgar Rice Burroughs
    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Edgar Rice Burroughs was an United States author, best known for his creation of the jungle hero Tarzan and the heroic Mars adventurer John Carter , although he produced works in many genres....
  • William S. Burroughs
    William S. Burroughs

    William Seward Burroughs II was an United States novelist, essayist, social critic, Painting and spoken word performer.Much of Burroughs's work is semi-autobiographical, drawn from his experiences as an opiate addict, a condition that marked the last fifty years of his life....
  • Ellis Parker Butler
    Ellis Parker Butler

    Ellis Parker Butler was an United States author.Butler was born in Muscatine, Iowa. He was the author of more than 30 books and more than 2,000 stories and essays, and is most famous for his short story "Pigs is Pigs", in which a bureaucratic stationmaster insists on levying the livestock rate for a shipment of two pet guinea pigs, which s...
  • Hugh B. Cave
    Hugh B. Cave

    Hugh Barnett Cave was a prolific writer of Pulp magazine who also excelled in other genres....
  • Paul Chadwick
    Paul Chadwick (author)

    Paul Chadwick was a pulp magazine author who wrote many stories under his own name and various pseudonyms. As was the case with many prolific contributors to the pulps, he wrote in a number of different literary genre including detective fiction, science fiction and Western ....
  • Raymond Chandler
    Raymond Chandler

    Raymond Thornton Chandler was an United States crime fiction, who had an immense stylistic influence upon the modern private eye story, especially in the style of the writing and the attitudes now characteristic of the genre....
  • Arthur C. Clarke
    Arthur C. Clarke

    Sri Lankabhimanya Sir Arthur Charles Clarke, Order of the British Empire was a British people science fiction author, inventor, and Futurology, most famous for the novel 2001: A Space Odyssey , written in collaboration with director Stanley Kubrick, a collaboration which also produced the 2001: A Space Odyssey ; and as a host and comment...
  • Joseph Conrad
    Joseph Conrad

    Joseph Conrad was a Polish novelist, writing in English. Many critics regard him as one of the greatest novelists in the English language, despite his not having learned to speak English fluently until he was in his twenties ....
  • Stephen Crane
    Stephen Crane

    Stephen Crane was an United States novelist, short story writer, poet and journalist. Prolific throughout his short life, he wrote notable works in the literary realism tradition as well as early examples of American Naturalism and Impressionism ....
  • Ray Cummings
    Ray Cummings

    Ray Cummings Cummings worked with Thomas Edison as a personal assistant and technical writer from 1914 to 1919. His most highly regarded work was the novel The Girl in the Golden Atom published in 1922....
  • Jason Dark
    Jason Dark

    Jason Dark is the pseudonym of Helmut Rellergerd , writer of the most widely read popular horror detective fiction in the German language....
  • Lester Dent
    Lester Dent

    Lester Dent was a prolific pulp magazine author of numerous stories, best known as the main author of the series of stories about the superhuman scientist and adventurer, Doc Savage....
  • August Derleth
  • Philip K. Dick
    Philip K. Dick

    Philip Kindred Dick was an United States science fiction novelist, short story writer, and essayist. Dick explored sociological, political and metaphysics themes in novels dominated by monopoly corporations, Authoritarianism, and altered states of consciousness....
  • Arthur Conan Doyle
    Arthur Conan Doyle

    Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle, Deputy Lieutenant was a Scotland author most noted for his stories about the Detective fiction Sherlock Holmes, which are generally considered a major innovation in the field of crime fiction, and for the adventures of Professor Challenger....
  • Lord Dunsany
  • C. M. Eddy, Jr.
    C. M. Eddy, Jr.

    Clifford Martin Eddy, Jr. was an United States author best known for his Horror fiction and science fiction short story....
  • C. S. Forester
    C. S. Forester

    Cecil Scott Forester was the pen name of Cecil Louis Troughton Smith , an England novelist who rose to fame with tales of adventure and military crusades....
  • Arthur O. Friel
    Arthur O. Friel

    Arthur Olney Friel was one of the most popular writers for the adventure Pulp magazine. He began appearing in Adventure magazine in 1919 with stories set in the Amazon jungle featuring the characters Pedro and Louren?o, two rubber-industry workers who undergo harrowing experiences in the impenetrable jungle surrounding the Javary River, an...
  • Erle Stanley Gardner
    Erle Stanley Gardner

    Erle Stanley Gardner was an United States lawyer and author of crime fiction, who also published under the pseudonyms A.A. Fair, Kyle Corning, Charles M....
  • Walter B. Gibson
    Walter B. Gibson

    Walter Brown Gibson was an United States author and a professional magic best known for his work on The Shadow. Gibson, under the pen-name Maxwell Grant, wrote Shadow stories at an amazing rate to satisfy public demand during the character's golden age in the 1930s and 1940s....
  • David Goodis
    David Goodis

    David Goodis was an United States noir fiction writer.Born in Philadelphia, Goodis had two younger brothers, but one died of meningitis at the age of three....
  • Zane Grey
    Zane Grey

    Zane Grey was an United States author best known for his popular adventure novels and stories that presented an idealized image of the rugged Old West....
  • Edmond Hamilton
    Edmond Hamilton

    Edmond Moore Hamilton was a popular author of science fiction stories and novels during the mid-twentieth century. Born in Youngstown, Ohio, Ohio, he was raised there and in nearby New Castle, Pennsylvania....
  • Dashiell Hammett
    Dashiell Hammett

    Samuel Dashiell Hammett was an United States author of hardboiled detective fiction novels and short stories. Among the enduring characters he created are Sam Spade , Nick and Nora Charles , and the Continental Op ....
  • Robert A. Heinlein
    Robert A. Heinlein

    Robert Anson Heinlein was an United States novelist and science fiction writer. Often called "the dean of science fiction writers", he is one of the most popular, influential, and controversial authors of the genre....
  • O. Henry
    O. Henry

    O. Henry was the pen name of United States writer William Sydney Porter . O. Henry short stories are known for wit, wordplay, warm characterization and clever twist endings....
  • Frank Herbert
    Frank Herbert

    Franklin Patrick Herbert, Jr. was a critically acclaimed and commercially successful American list of science fiction authors. Although also a short story author, he is best known for his novels, most notably Dune and its five sequels....
  • Robert E. Howard
    Robert E. Howard

    This article is about writer Robert E. Howard. For the Medal of Honor recipient, try Robert L. Howard.Robert Ervin Howard was an United States author who wrote pulp fiction in a diverse range of genres....
  • L. Ron Hubbard
    L. Ron Hubbard

    Lafayette Ronald Hubbard was an American science fiction writer who devised a self-help system called Dianetics, first published in 1950, which he developed over the next three decades into a set of doctrines and rituals he called Scientology....
  • Donald Keyhoe
    Donald Keyhoe

    Donald Edward Keyhoe was an United States United States Marine Corps officer with some flight experience, writer of many aviation articles and stories in a variety of leading publications, and manager of the promotional tours of aviation pioneers, especially of Charles Lindbergh....
  • Rudyard Kipling
    Rudyard Kipling

    Joseph Rudyard Kipling was an English author and poet. Born in Mumbai, British India , he is best known for his works of fiction The Jungle Book , Kim , many short stories, including The Man Who Would Be King ; and his poems, including Mandalay , Gunga Din , and If? ....
  • Henry Kuttner
    Henry Kuttner

    Henry Kuttner was an United States author of science fiction, fantasy fiction and horror fiction....
  • Harold Lamb
    Harold Lamb

    Harold Albert Lamb was an United States historian, screenwriter, short story writer, and novelist.Born in New York, he attended Columbia University, where his interest in the peoples and history of Asia began....
  • Louis L'Amour
    Louis L'Amour

    Louis L'Amour was an United States author. L'Amour's books, primarily Western fiction , remain popular, and most have gone through multiple printings....
  • Fritz Leiber
    Fritz Leiber

    Fritz Reuter Leiber Jr. was an influential United States writer of fantasy fiction, horror fiction and science fiction. He was also an expert chess player and a champion fencing ....
  • Murray Leinster
    Murray Leinster

    Murray Leinster was a nom de plume of William Fitzgerald Jenkins, an award-winning United States writer of science fiction and alternate history ....
  • Elmore John Leonard
  • Jack London
    Jack London

    Jack London was an American author who wrote The Call of the Wild, White Fang, and The Sea Wolf along with many other popular books....
  • H. P. Lovecraft
    H. P. Lovecraft

    Howard Phillips Lovecraft was an United States author of horror fiction, fantasy fiction, and science fiction, known then simply as weird fiction....
  • Giles A. Lutz
    Giles A. Lutz

    Giles Alfred Lutz was a prolific author of fiction in the Western . Born in March 1910 in Missouri, United States, Lutz for many years wrote short stories about the American West that were published in pulp magazines....
  • John D. MacDonald
    John D. MacDonald

    John Dann MacDonald was an American author.A prolific writer of crime and suspense novels, many of them set in his adopted home of Florida, McDonald's best-known works include the popular and critically-acclaimed Travis McGee series, and his novel The Executioners, which was adapted into the film Cape Fear ....
  • Horace McCoy
    Horace McCoy

    Horace McCoy was an American writer, whose hard-boiled novels took place during the Great Depression. His best-known novel is They Shoot Horses, Don't They? , which was made into a They Shoot Horses, Don't They? in 1969, fourteen years after McCoy's death....
  • Johnston McCulley
    Johnston McCulley

    Johnston McCulley was the author of hundreds of stories, fifty novels, numerous screenplays for film and television, and the creator of the character Zorro....
  • Merriam Modell
    Merriam Modell

    Merriam Modell was a Jewish-United States author of Pulp fiction , who wrote under the pen-name Evelyn Piper.A graduate of Cornell University, Modell travelled extensively in her younger years, and for a longer period of time, up to 1933, lived in Germany....
  • C.L. Moore
  • Walt Morey
    Walt Morey

    Walter Morey , is an award-winning author of numerous works of children's fiction, mostly set in the U.S. Pacific Northwest and Alaska, the places where Morey lived for all of his life....
  • Talbot Mundy
    Talbot Mundy

    Talbot Mundy was an English writer. He also wrote under the pseudonym Walter Galt.Born in London, at age 16 he ran away from home and began an odyssey in India, Africa, and other parts of the Near and Far East....
  • Philip Francis Nowlan
    Philip Francis Nowlan

    Philip Francis Nowlan was an United States science fiction author.After graduating from the University of Pennsylvania he worked as a newspaper columnist....
  • Emil Petaja
    Emil Petaja

    Emil Petaja was an American science fiction and fantasy writer whose career spanned seven decades. He was the author of 13 published novels, nearly 150 short stories, numerous poems, and a handful of books and articles on various subjects....
  • E. Hoffmann Price
  • Seabury Quinn
    Seabury Quinn

    Seabury Grandin Quinn was a pulp magazine author most famous for his stories of the occult detective Jules de Grandin, published in Weird Tales with great success....
  • John H. Reese
    John H. Reese

    John Henry Reese was a Western fiction and Crime fiction author from Sweetwater, Nebraska. He won the prestigious 1952 New York Herald Tribune#Awards for his first children's book, Big Mutt....
  • Sax Rohmer
    Sax Rohmer

    Arthur Henry Sarsfield Ward , better known as Sax Rohmer, was a prolific England novelist. He is most remembered for his series of novels featuring the master criminal Dr....
  • Rafael Sabatini
    Rafael Sabatini

    Rafael Sabatini was an Italy/United Kingdom writer of novels of romance novel and adventure novel....
  • Richard S. Shaver
  • Robert Silverberg
    Robert Silverberg

    Robert Silverberg is a prolific United States author, best known for writing science fiction. He is a multiple winner of both the Hugo Award and Nebula Awards....
  • Upton Sinclair
    Upton Sinclair

    Upton Sinclair, Jr. , was a Pulitzer Prize-winning prolific United States author who wrote over 90 books in many genres and was widely considered to be one of the best investigators advocating Socialism views....
  • Clark Ashton Smith
    Clark Ashton Smith

    Clark Ashton Smith was a poet, sculpture, Painting and author of fantasy fiction, horror fiction and science fiction short story. It is for these stories, and his literary friendship with H....
  • E. E. Smith
    E. E. Smith

    E. E. Smith, also Edward Elmer Smith, Ph.D., E.E. "Doc" Smith, Doc Smith, "Skylark" Smith, and Ted was a Food engineering and early science fiction author who wrote the Lensman series and the Skylark series, among others....
  • Guy N. Smith
    Guy N. Smith

    Guy Newman Smith is an England writer of horror fiction....
  • Jim Thompson
    Jim Thompson (writer)

    James Myers Thompson was a United States writer of novels, short stories and screenplays, largely in the hardboiled style of crime fiction.Thompson wrote more than thirty novels, the majority of which were original paperback book publications by pulp magazine houses, from the late-1940s through mid-1950s....
  • Thomas Thursday
    Thomas Thursday

    Thomas Thursday was a lesser-known pulp writer who ended up having one of the longest careers writing for the pulp magazines. His first published short story, "A Stroke of Genius," appeared in Top-Notch ....
  • Mark Twain
    Mark Twain

    Samuel Langhorne Clemens , better known by the pen name Mark Twain, was an United Statesmerican author and humorist. Twain is most noted for his novels Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, which has since been called the Great American Novel, and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer....
  • Jack Vance
    Jack Vance

    John Holbrook Vance is an United States fantasy literature and science fiction author. Most of his work has been published under the name Jack Vance....
  • H. G. Wells
    H. G. Wells

    Herbert George Wells , known by his pen name H. G. Wells, was an England author, best known for his work in the science fiction genre. Wells and Jules Verne are each sometimes referred to as "The Father of Science Fiction"....
  • Tennessee Williams
    Tennessee Williams

    Tennessee Williams was an American playwright who received many of the top theatrical awards. He moved to New Orleans in 1939 and changed his name to "Tennessee", the state of his father's birth....
  • Cornell Woolrich
    Cornell Woolrich

    Cornell George Hopley-Woolrich was an United States novelist and short story writer. His biographer, Francis Nevins Jr., rated Woolrich the fourth best Crime fiction of his day, behind only Dashiell Hammett, Erle Stanley Gardner and Raymond Chandler....


Sinclair Lewis
Sinclair Lewis

Sinclair Lewis was an United States novelist, short-story writer, and playwright. In 1930, he became the first American to be awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, "for his vigorous and graphic art of description and his ability to create, with wit and humor, new types of characters." His works are known for their insightful and critical vi...
, first American winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature
Nobel Prize in Literature

The Nobel Prize in Literature is awarded annually, since 1901, to an author from any country who has, in the words from the will of Alfred Nobel, produced "in the field of literature the most outstanding work in an ideal direction" ....
, worked as an editor for
Adventure (magazine)
Adventure (magazine)

Adventure was first published in November 1910 as a monthly pulp magazine. In 1915 the publishers attempted to reach women readers with a new title , but it went back to its male readership and original title in 1917....
, writing filler paragraphs (brief facts or amusing anecdotes designed to fill small gaps in page layout), advertising copy, and a few stories.

Publishers


  • A. A. Wyn's Magazine Publishers
    A. A. Wyn's Magazine Publishers

    A. A. Wyn's Magazine Publishers was a publishing house established and owned by A. A. Wyn. It began in the 1930s as a pulp magazine publisher, and included titles such as Ace Mystery and Ace Sports....
  • Clayton Publications
  • Columbia/Blue Ribbon/Double Action
  • Culture Publications, originators of the Spicy line of titles, such as Spicy Detective Stories
  • Dell Publishing
    Dell Publishing

    Dell Publishing was an American publisher of books, magazines, and comic books. It was founded in 1921 by George T. Delacorte Jr.. During the 1920s, 30s, and 40s, Dell was one of the largest publishers of magazines, including pulp magazines....
  • Frank A. Munsey Co.
    Frank Munsey

    Frank Andrew Munsey was an United States newspaper and magazine publisher and author. He was born in Mercer, Maine, Maine but spent most of his life in New York City....
  • Harold Hersey
    Harold Hersey

    Harold Hersey was a pulp editor and publisher, and published western poetry. His pulp industry observations were published in hardback as Pulpwood Editor ....
  • Hugo Gernsback
    Hugo Gernsback

    Hugo Gernsback , born Hugo Gernsbacher, was a Luxembourg American inventor, writer and magazine publisher, best remembered for publications that included the first science fiction magazine....
  • Popular Publications
    Popular Publications

    Popular Publications was one of the largest publishers of pulp magazines during its existence, at one point publishing 42 different titles per month....
  • Red Circle
    Red Circle

    Red Circle may refer to one of the following:* Red Circle Coffee, a brand name of medium roast arabica coffee* The Adventure of the Red Circle, a Sherlock Holmes story....
  • Street & Smith
    Street & Smith

    Street & Smith or Street & Smith Publications, Inc. was a New York City publisher specializing in inexpensive paperbacks and magazines referred to as pulp fiction and dime novels....
  • Better/Standard/Thrilling (The Thrilling Group)
    Thrilling Publications

    Thrilling Publications was a pulp magazine publisher run by Ned Pines. It was in operation from 1931 until 1955, when Pines closed most of his pulp magazines....


Today

In 1994, Quentin Tarantino
Quentin Tarantino

Quentin Jerome Tarantino is an American film director, screenwriter, Film producer, cinematographer and actor. He rose to fame in the early 1990s as an independent film filmmaker whose films used nonlinear and aestheticization of violence....
 directed a critically-acclaimed film titled
Pulp Fiction
Pulp Fiction (film)

Pulp Fiction is a 1994 in film United States crime film by director Quentin Tarantino, who cowrote its screenplay with Roger Avary. The film is known for its rich, eclecticism dialogue, irony Black comedy, nonlinear storyline, and host of cinematic and popular culture references....
. The working title
Working title

A working title, sometimes called a production title, is the temporary name of a product or project used during its development, usually a film, novel, video game, or music album....
 of the film was
Black Mask, in homage to the pulp magazine of that name, and embodied the seedy, violent, often crime-related spirit found in pulp magazines. The film helped to add the term pulp fiction to the vocabulary of many Americans
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 who grew up in the decades after pulp magazines fell out of fashion.

After the year 2000, several small independent publishers released magazines which published short fiction, either short stories or novel-length presentations, in the tradition of the pulp magazines of the early twentieth century. These included
Blood 'N Thunder and High Adventure. There was also a short lived magazine which revived the title Argosy. These were specialist publications printed in limited press runs. These were pointedly not printed on the brittle, high-acid wood pulp paper of the old publications, and were not mass market publications targeted at a wide audience. In 2004, Lost Continent Library published "Secret of the Amazon Queen" by E.A.Guest, their first contribution to a "New Pulp Era", featuring the hallmarks of pulp fiction for contemporary mature readers: violence, horror and sex. E.A.Guest was likened to a blend of pulp era icon Talbot Mundy and Stephen King by real-life explorer David Hatcher Childress.

Moonstone Books
Moonstone Books

Moonstone Books is an USA comic book, graphic novel, and prose fiction publisher based in Chicago, Illinois focused on pulp fiction comic books and prose anthologies as well as horror and western tales....
, a comic book and prose anthology publisher, began publishing original pulp tales featuring characters such as The Phantom
The Phantom

The Phantom is an American Adventure comic strip created by Lee Falk, also creator of Mandrake the Magician. A popular feature adapted into many forms of media, including television and film, it stars a costumed crimefighter operating from the African jungle....
, Zorro
Zorro

Zorro is a fictional character created in 1919 by pulp magazine writer Johnston McCulley. He has been featured in several books, films, television series and other media....
, The Spider
The Spider

The Spider was the violent, relentless hero of a pulp magazine series produced by Popular Publications from 1933 to 1943. There were 118 stories in the pulps and another one, "Slaughter Incorporated" published privately later on....
, The Avenger
The Avenger

The Avenger is a fictional character whose original adventures appeared between September 1939 and September 1942 in the pulp magazine The Avenger, published by Street and Smith Publications....
, Domino Lady
Domino Lady

The Domino Lady was a masked Pulp magazine heroine who first appeared in the May 1936 issue of Saucy Romantic Adventures. All of her stories were published under the penname "Lars Anderson" owned by the publisher, Fiction Magazines....
and more in 2001.

In 2002, issue 10 of
McSweeney's Quarterly
Timothy McSweeney's Quarterly Concern

Timothy McSweeney's Quarterly Concern is a literary journal, first published in 1998, edited by Dave Eggers. The first issue featured only works rejected by other magazines, but thereafter the journal began to include pieces written with McSweeney's in mind....
was guest edited by Michael Chabon
Michael Chabon

Michael Chabon is an American author and "one of the most celebrated writers of his generation," according to the The Virginia Quarterly Review....
. Published as
McSweeney's Mammoth Treasury of Thrilling Tales, it is a collection of "pulp fiction" stories written by some recent well-known authors such as Stephen King
Stephen King

Stephen Edwin King is an United States author of contemporary horror fiction, fantasy fiction and science fiction.Having sold an estimated List of bestselling fiction authors of his books, King is best known for his work in horror fiction, in which he demonstrates a thorough knowledge of the genre's history....
, Nick Hornby
Nick Hornby

Nick Hornby is an England novelist and essayist. He was brought up in Maidenhead and was educated at Maidenhead Grammar School and Jesus College, Cambridge....
, Aimee Bender
Aimee Bender

Aimee Bender is an United States novelist and short story writer, known for her surreal plots and characters....
, and Dave Eggers
Dave Eggers

Dave Eggers is an United States writer, Editing, and Publishing....
. Chabon, in explaining the impetus of his vision for the project, writes in the Treasury's introduction, "I think that we have forgotten how much fun reading a short story can be, and I hope that if nothing else, this treasury goes some small distance toward reminding us of that lost but fundamental truth."

The British comic
2000AD is popularly seen as a pulp comic for its hard-hitting anthology format.

The Scottish
Scotland

conventional_long_name = ScotlandAlba|common_name= Scotland|image_flag = Flag of Scotland.svg|flag_width = 130px...
 publisher DC Thomson publishes "My Weekly Compact Novel" every week. It
is literally a pulp novel, though it does not fall into the hard-edged genre most associated with pulp fiction.

See also

  • Gay (male) pulp fiction
  • Hard Case Crime
    Hard Case Crime

    Hard Case Crime is an American publisher of paperback hardboiled crime novels founded in 2004 by Charles Ardai, also known as the founder of the Internet service Juno Online Services, and Max Phillips....
  • Lesbian pulp fiction
    Lesbian pulp fiction

    Lesbian pulp fiction refers to any mid-20th century Pulp magazine with overtly lesbian themes and content. Lesbian pulp fiction was published in the 1950s and 60s by many of the same publishing houses that other subgenres of Pulp magazine including Westerns, Romance novel, and detective story....
  • Science fiction magazine
    Science fiction magazine

    A science fiction magazine is a publication that offers primarily science fiction, either in a hard copy periodical format or on the Internet....
  • Serial (film)
    Serial (film)

    |}Serials, more specifically known as Movie serials or Film serials, were short subjects originally shown in theaters in conjunction with a feature film that were related to pulp magazine Serial ....


External links

  • Stories from pulp magazines
  • [news://alt.pulp Usenet group alt.pulp]
  • .


Cover art scans, indices, character summaries

  • Pulp cover art side by side with their magazines. Also buying!
  • Large pulp collection viewable and for sale.
  • Online collection of 8000+ pulp and pin-up genre magazine cover scans/photos.
  • scans of the covers of post-1945 German language pulp magazines
  • , with links to indices and bibliographies.
  • : Jess Nevins
    Jess Nevins

    John J. Nevins, MA/MS, is an United States author and librarian, born c. 1966 and raised in Boston, Massachusetts. He is the author of the World Fantasy Award-nominated Encyclopedia of Fantastic Victoriana , and other works on Victoriana and Pulp magazine....
    ' compendium of over 1700 pulp characters.
  • Reviews of hundreds of pulp novels and short stories
  • Canadian pulp art and fiction collection.
  • Covers and inside details of most SF pulps and digests.
  • from The George Kelley Paperback and Pulp Fiction Collection at the
  • A catalog of pulp magazines that is build by collector contributions


Fiction

  • modern-day revival of the old pulps featuring a brand new generation of sci-fi heroes, currently running two web serials
  • Stories scanned from pulp magazines of the early to mid 1900s.
  • Original stories inspired by the Pulps of yesteryear.
  • A few stories scanned in their original context - not retyped.
  • New adventure fiction and artwork, sultry and savage femmes in pictorials, and acclaimed pulp-related features, all in PDF format.


Other