Is that a great big cat, or are those little-bitty spacemen? I don't know, but it's a striking cover by Robert Gibson Jones anyway. Several of the usual suspects are on hand in this issue of AMAZING STORIES, including Richard S. Shaver, Chester S. Geier, Berkeley Livingston, Frances M. Deegan, Don Wilcox, and surely the best-known name in the issue, at least as far as we remember them today, the great Edmond Hamilton. There's also a short story by William Hamling, who would go on to be the publisher of the Fifties digests IMAGINATION and IMAGINATIVE TALES, as well as hundreds if not thousands of pseudonymous soft-core novels by Robert Silverberg, Lawrence Block, Donald Westlake, Evan Hunter, and many other authors who became famous in other fields. It never hurts to recall that Hamling was a science fiction guy starting out.
Sunday, August 03, 2025
Sunday Morning Bonus Pulp: Amazing Stories, June 1945
Is that a great big cat, or are those little-bitty spacemen? I don't know, but it's a striking cover by Robert Gibson Jones anyway. Several of the usual suspects are on hand in this issue of AMAZING STORIES, including Richard S. Shaver, Chester S. Geier, Berkeley Livingston, Frances M. Deegan, Don Wilcox, and surely the best-known name in the issue, at least as far as we remember them today, the great Edmond Hamilton. There's also a short story by William Hamling, who would go on to be the publisher of the Fifties digests IMAGINATION and IMAGINATIVE TALES, as well as hundreds if not thousands of pseudonymous soft-core novels by Robert Silverberg, Lawrence Block, Donald Westlake, Evan Hunter, and many other authors who became famous in other fields. It never hurts to recall that Hamling was a science fiction guy starting out.
Friday, July 04, 2025
Happy Fourth of July!
The art on this cover is by Robert Gibson Jones, who did a bunch of covers, most of them excellent, for FANTASTIC ADVENTURES. William Brengle, author of the lead novella, is a house-name, and the actual author behind this one is Howard Browne. Also on hand in this issue are William P. McGivern, Robert Bloch (twice, once as himself and once as Tarleton Fiske), Don Wilcox, Harold Lawlor, and Leroy Yerxa. That's a pretty good line-up. I don't own this issue, but you can find a PDF of it here, along with a bunch of other issues of FANTASTIC ADVENTURES. In the meantime, Happy Fourth of July to everyone reading this in the United States, and I hope it's a great day for you and everyone elsewhere in the world, too.
Sunday, July 09, 2023
Sunday Morning Bonus Pulp: Mammoth Adventure, May 1947
MAMMOTH ADVENTURE was one of the most short-lived Ziff-Davis pulps, running for only eight issues in 1946 and 1947. It appears to have been a decent adventure pulp, though, with some good covers, like this one by Z-D regular Robert Gibson Jones, and good authors. I'm not sure you can include Richard S. Shaver as one of those good authors, but hey, I haven't read that much by him and certainly am not an expert on him or his work. In fact, I didn't even know he wrote other things besides science fiction. But he has the lead story in this issue, probably because his name sold copies. Also on hand are another Ziff-Davis stalwart, Berkeley Livingston, with a story under his name and one under his Lester Barclay pseudonym; a couple of writers unknown to me, Phillip Sharp and Leonard Finley Hilts; and house-name Alexander Blade with a story where the actual author hasn't been identified. This issue is available on the Internet Archive if you want to check it out for yourself. I might, one of these days, or I might not.
Sunday, October 16, 2022
Sunday Morning Bonus Pulp: Mammoth Detective, September 1942
I've said it before, and it's still true: you can't trust mummies. This cover is by Ziff-Davis regular Robert Gibson Jones. I always like his covers, and this one is no exception. Inside this issue are a number of authors I also associate with Ziff-Davis: Howard Browne, William P. McGivern, Dwight V. Swain, David Wright O'Brien (as himself and as John York Cabot), and house-name Alexander Blade. But there are also some authors who I don't think of as your usual Z-D authors: Robert Leslie Bellem, G.T. Fleming-Roberts, George Armin Shaftel, and Harold Channing Wire. MAMMOTH DETECTIVE lived up to its name. There are well over 300 pages in this issue.
Saturday, September 03, 2022
Saturday Morning Western Pulp: Mammoth Western, October 1950
Robert Gibson Jones is probably best known for his covers on the Ziff-Davis pulp FANTASTIC ADVENTURES, but he did quite a few covers for Z-D's MAMMOTH WESTERN, as well, including this one which I like quite a bit. I'll always be fond of gun-totin' redheads, and this one is in an intriguing situation. "Robert Eggert Lee", author of the lead story "This Grave for Hire" (a nice title) was actually Ziff-Davis stalwart Paul W. Fairman. Also on hand in this issue are John Reese. writing as John Jo Carpenter, John Prescott, and Peter Germano writing as Barry Cord. Those are the Western writers of note in this issue, although there's also a story (and I'm sure a good one) by William P. McGivern, and yarns by the likes of Frances M. Deegan, Karl Kasky, and Larry Becker.
Friday, February 18, 2022
The Lake of Life - Edmond Hamilton
Most of you know that it’s hard to go wrong with Edmond Hamilton’s fiction. THE LAKE OF LIFE is a novel of his that I hadn’t heard of until recently. Originally serialized in the September, October, and November 1937 issues of WEIRD TALES, it was reprinted in 2019 by Armchair Fiction, the edition I read.
At first glance, THE LAKE OF LIFE bears a superficial resemblance to a Doc
Savage novel. The protagonist’s name is even Clark . . . Clark Stannard, an
adventurer and explorer who finds himself in financial straits and needs money
to help his family. Because of this, he agrees to take on a job for millionaire
Montgomery Burns—I’m sorry, I mean Asa Brand, but when you read this
description from Hamilton, you’ll see why I made that mistake: “The old man was
quite bald, and his hairless, yellowed skull and wrinkled hatchet face and
scrawny neck made him look like an ancient, unclean vulture.”
Anyway, Brand hires Clark Stannard to find the legendary Lake of Life, which is
supposedly located in deepest, darkest Africa behind a range of mountains known
as the Mountains of Death. The legendary part comes in because the water from
the Lake of Life is supposed to confer immortality on whoever drinks it, and
Brand is willing to pay a high price for eternal life. In order to accomplish
this, Stannard recruits a crew of five assistants (there’s that possible Doc
Savage influence again) who are highly competent but who have suffered some
sort of setback in life: Ephraim Quell, a sea captain who lost his ship in an
accident and was stripped of his captain’s license; Mike Shinn, a heavyweight
boxer whose career ended after he was paid to take a dive; John Morrow, an
former army officer dishonorably discharged for punching a superior officer in
a fight over a woman; gangster Blacky Cain, who had to leave the States because
the law is after him; and Link Wilson, a gunfighting Texan on the run from a
murder charge arising from a deadly shootout in a bordertown cantina.
Are all these stereotypes? Sure they are. Do I care? Not one bit, because
Hamilton uses them to tell a very fast-paced tale full of colorful settings and
breathless adventure and even a little bit of philosophy. Stannard and his crew
find a way through the Mountains of Death, of course, and discover the Lake of
Life, but at the same time they also discover a war between two lost races (a
favorite plot of Edgar Rice Burroughs, as most of you probably are thinking
right now). Our heroes get mixed up in that war, naturally, and equally
naturally, there are two beautiful young women on hand, one good, one maybe not
so good. Will Clark Stannard and his men survive the epic battles between one
group that wants to protect the Lake of Life and another that wants to use it
for evil?
I had an absolutely wonderful time reading this novel. It’s a Front Porch Book,
for sure. The plot is nothing we haven’t all seen before, but Hamilton does
such a superb job of spinning his yarn that I couldn’t stop turning the pages.
I’m shocked that this was never published as half of an Ace Double in the
Sixties, as some of Hamilton’s other pulp work was. If it had been, I’d have
been right there on my parents’ front porch with it, galloping through it on a
summer day with a big grin on my face. If you’ve read this far, you already know
whether or not you like this kind of stuff. If you do, I give THE LAKE OF LIFE
a very high recommendation.
A note on the cover of the Armchair Fiction edition: That’s actually a Robert
Gibson Jones cover from the August 1951 issue of FANTASTIC ADVENTURES. As soon
as I saw it, I thought to myself that it must have been a FANTASTIC ADVENTURES
cover. It just has that look. But it kind of fits THE LAKE OF LIFE, too, if you
squint your eyes and hold your mouth just right. I put that image at the top of
this review because I wanted it to pop up when I share the post on Facebook. I
figured the original WEIRD TALES covers by Margaret Brundage, which you can see
below, might catch me a jail term from the censors over there.
Saturday, December 11, 2021
Saturday Morning Western Pulp: West, September 1943
I find the cover on this issue of WEST interesting for a couple of reasons. First of all, the guy reminds me of Alfred E. Neuman of MAD MAGAZINE fame. Secondly, compare this cover to the cover from the January 1951 issue of MAMMOTH WESTERN painted by Robert Gibson Jones (below). It's not a direct swipe, but when I saw this WEST cover, I was reminded immediately of the MAMMOTH WESTERN cover. Had Jones seen the earlier cover and remembered it? Pure coincidence? I have no way of knowing, of course, but I find the similarity interesting. I'm sure the stories in this issue of WEST are pretty interesting, too. The authors on hand are all prolific pulpsters: Larry Harris, Dean Owen, Bill Gulick, Kenneth Fowler, and John A. Thompson. I met Gulick a couple of times. He continued writing and publishing into the 1990s, far past the end of the pulp era.
Sunday, May 03, 2020
Sunday Morning Bonus Pulp: Amazing Stories, November 1942
Robert Gibson Jones did a lot of great covers for various Ziff-Davis pulps. I like this one on the November 1942 issue of AMAZING STORIES. Inside are stories by Eando Binder (actually Earl and Otto Binder, but you knew that, of course), Robert Bloch, Raymond Z. Gallun, Emil Petaja, David Wright O'Brien writing as Duncan Farnsworth, and John Russell Fearn writing as Thornton Ayre. I've read all those authors except Fearn, and I'm thinking I'll read something by him soon.
Sunday, December 10, 2017
Sunday Morning Bonus Pulp: Fantastic Adventures, December 1952
Okay, maybe I'm crazy, or just a 12-year-old boy at heart, or both, but that cover by Robert Gibson Jones is just great! Riding in a sling under the neck of a giant bat while fighting spaceships with a smoking raygun! I mean, what could possibly be cooler? I don't know which story in this issue of FANTASTIC ADVENTURES it goes with, if any of them. Milton Lesser, who went on to become Stephen Marlowe, of course, is the only author in it I've heard of. The others are a mixture of house-names and writers I'm not familiar with. I'll bet I'd have a good time reading it anyway. Or I could just look at the cover and imagine my own story to go with it.





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