Results
AMAZING STORIES.
Chicago: Ziff-Davis Publishing Company, 1941. Octavo, single issue, cover by J. Allen St. John, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Feature story, a John Carter of Mars adventure, "The City of Mummies" by Edgar Rice Burroughs. This story is this first part of LLANA OF GATHOL. Also stories by Manly Wade Wellman, John Beynon and others. Heins p. 130. Tymm and Ashley, Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Weird Fiction Magazines, pp. 14-49.
THE RED STAR OF TARZAN [TARZAN AND THE FORBIDDEN CITY] in ARGOSY [complete in six issues].
New York: The Frank A. Munsey, Company, 1938. Octavo, six issues, cover illustration for the March 19 issue by Rudolph Belarski, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Complete six part serial "The Red Star of Tarzan." The editor had this serial re-written and expanded by Ben Nelson and Burroughs Mitchell. The novel, published in book form as TARZAN AND THE FORBIDDEN CITY, used Burroughs manuscript and not the serial version. Belarksi based his Tarzan cover painting on Johnny Weissmuller. Zeuscher, Edgar Rice Burroughs: The Bibliography, pp. 341-342.
ARGOSY.
New York: The Frank A. Munsey Company, 1932. Octavo, single issue, cover by Paul Stahr, pictorial wrappers. Pulp Magazine. Features part five of the serial "The Pirates of Venus" by Edgar Rice Burroughs. Also includes an Erle Stanley Gardner crime story. Heins, p. 146.
FANTASTIC ADVENTURES.
Chicago: Ziff-Davis Publishing Company, 1942. Octavo, single issue, cover by J. Allen St. John, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Feature story "War on Venus" by Edgar Rice Burroughs, part of ESCAPE ON VENUS. Heins p. 151.
FANTASTIC ADVENTURES.
Chicago: Ziff-Davis Publishing Company, 1941. Octavo, single issue, cover by J. Allen St. John, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Feature story "The Living Dead" by Edgar Rice Burroughs, part of ESCAPE ON VENUS. Also a William P. McGivern story. Heins p. 151.
THE BLUE BOOK MAGAZINE.
Dayton, OH: McCall Corporation, 1938. Octavo, single issue, cover by Herbert Morton Stoops, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Includes the conclusion of "Tarzan and the Elephant Men."
CAPTAIN FUTURE.
New York: Better Publications, Inc., 1941. Octavo, single issue, cover by Earle Bergey, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. "The Lost World of Time" by Edmond Hamilton. The only hero pulp magazine solely within the science fiction genre. Tymm and Ashley, Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Weird Fiction Magazines, pp. 155-157.
CAPTAIN FUTURE.
New York: Better Publications, Inc., 1942. Octavo, single issue, cover by Belarski, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. "Planets in Peril" by Edmond Hamilton. The only hero pulp magazine solely within the science fiction genre. Tymm and Ashley, Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Weird Fiction Magazines, pp. 155-157.
CAPTAIN FUTURE.
New York: Better Publications, Inc., 1941. Octavo, single issue, cover by Earle Bergey, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. "Star Trail to Glory" by Edmond Hamilton. Also a Fredric Brown short story. The only hero pulp magazine solely within the science fiction genre. Tymm and Ashley, Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Weird Fiction Magazines, pp. 155-157.
CAPTAIN FUTURE.
New York: Better Publications, Inc., 1943. Octavo, single issue, cover by Earle Bergey, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. "The Star of Dread" by Brett Sterling (pseudonym). The only hero pulp magazine solely within the science fiction genre. Tymm and Ashley, Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Weird Fiction Magazines, pp. 155-157.
ARGOSY.
New York: The Frank A. Munsey Company, 1940. Octavo, single issue, cover by Marshall Frantz, pictorial wrappers. Pulp Magazine. Includes part one of "Señor Flatfoot" by Cornell Woolrich, concerns a New York officer on an extradition mission south of the border. This story is not often reprinted.
ARGOSY.
New York: The Frank A. Munsey Company, 1940. Octavo, single issue, cover by Ralph Belarski, pictorial wrappers. Pulp Magazine. Includes part two of "The Green Flame" by Eric North (Bernard Cronin), a science fiction thriller set in Australia. Also "All At Once, No Alice" a classic disappearing woman story by Cornell Woolrich.
DETECTIVE FICTION WEEKLY.
New York: The Red Star News Company, 1936. Octavo, single issue, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Includes "Murder on My Mind" by Cornell Woolrich (this story was later revised as "The Morning After Murder.") Also fiction by Dale Clark, Max Brand, Robert Leitfred and others. "Detective Fiction Weekly maintained a strong personality in a crowded field, through a rigid weekly publication schedule, for two decades. It is greatly underrated today" - Cook, Mystery, Detective and Espionage Magazine, pp. 135-137.
DIME SPORTS MAGAZINE.
Chicago, IL: Popular Publications, Inc., 1940. Octavo, single issue, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. This issue has a David Goodis story, "Lug That Leather."
THRILLING ADVENTURES.
New York: Standard Magazines, Inc., 1942. Octavo, single issue, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Includes the David Goodis story "The Jaguar." Feature story is by H. Bedford-Jones writing as Gordon Keyne, "Appointment With Disaster."
THRILLING ADVENTURES.
New York: Standard Magazines, Inc., 1942. Octavo, single issue, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Includes the David Goodis story "The Jaguar." Feature story is by H. Bedford-Jones writing as Gordon Keyne, "Appointment With Disaster."
DETECTIVE FICTION WEEKLY.
New York: The Red Star News, Co., 1937. Octavo, cover by R. Belarski, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. "Detective Fiction Weekly maintained a strong personality in a crowded field, through a rigid weekly publication schedule, for two decades. It is greatly underrated today" - Cook, Mystery, Detective and Espionage Magazine, pp. 135-137.
DETECTIVE FICTION WEEKLY.
New York: The Red Star News, Co., 1939. Octavo, single issue, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Fiction by Richard Sale, Dale Clark, Paul Ernst and others. "Detective Fiction Weekly maintained a strong personality in a crowded field, through a rigid weekly publication schedule, for two decades. It is greatly underrated today" - Cook, Mystery, Detective and Espionage Magazine, pp. 135-137.
DETECTIVE FICTION WEEKLY.
New York: Frank A. Munsey Company, 1940. Octavo, single issue, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Includes Philip Ketchum, D.L. Champion, T.T. Flynn and others. "Detective Fiction Weekly maintained a strong personality in a crowded field, through a rigid weekly publication schedule, for two decades. It is greatly underrated today" - Cook, Mystery, Detective and Espionage Magazine, pp. 135-137.
DETECTIVE FICTION WEEKLY.
New York: The Red Star News, Co., 1933. Octavo, single issue, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Fiction by Carroll John Daly, "If It Is Murder," a Satan Hall story, and others. "Detective Fiction Weekly maintained a strong personality in a crowded field, through a rigid weekly publication schedule, for two decades. It is greatly underrated today" - Cook, Mystery, Detective and Espionage Magazine, pp. 135-137.
DETECTIVE FICTION WEEKLY.
New York: The Red Star News, Co., 1939. Octavo, single issue, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Includes Donald Barr Chidsey, John K. Butler, Philip Ketchum, Walter Ripperberger and others. "Detective Fiction Weekly maintained a strong personality in a crowded field, through a rigid weekly publication schedule, for two decades. It is greatly underrated today" - Cook, Mystery, Detective and Espionage Magazine, pp. 135-137.
DETECTIVE FICTION WEEKLY.
New York: The Red Star News, Co., 1939. Octavo, single issue, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Includes Richard Sale, Philip Ketchum, part of a "Lone Wolf" serial by Louis Joseph Vance and others. "Detective Fiction Weekly maintained a strong personality in a crowded field, through a rigid weekly publication schedule, for two decades. It is greatly underrated today" - Cook, Mystery, Detective and Espionage Magazine, pp. 135-137.
DETECTIVE FICTION.
Kokomo, IN: Popular Publications, Inc., 1951. Octavo, single issue, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. This title Detective Fiction is the final incarnation of Detective Fiction Weekly for the final six issues, this is the final issue. Includes "Lay Me Down and Die" by John D. MacDonald. Cook, Mystery, Detective and Espionage Magazines, pp. 135-137.
DETECTIVE MYSTERY NOVEL MAGAZINE.
New York: Best Publications, Inc., 1948. Octavo, single issue, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Includes a Johnston McCulley short story.
DETECTIVE TALES.
Chicago: Popular Publications, Inc., 1947. Octavo, single issue, pictorial wrappers. Pulp magazine. Detective Tales ran for eighteen years and was second only to Popular's Dime Detective in their detective magazine line-up. "It was a colorful, urgent, vigorous periodical, foaming with cheerful excesses; it was one of the classic pulp magazine." - Cook, Mystery, Detective and Espionage Magazines pp. 153-157.