Total Pulp Experience. These exciting pulp adventures have been beautifully reformatted for easy reading as an eBook and features every story, every editorial, and every column of the original pulp magazine.
Dan Fowler: G-Man! With a jaw like iron, flinty eyes that unflinchingly cut to the hardest criminal's quaking heart, Dan Fowler gave no quarter and asked for none. Son of a sherrif killed in action, ex-lawyer from the Middle West, Dan Fowler joined the F.B.I. as an ace operative for the Department of Justice. He was one of the valiant army of G-Men who battled the underworld and fought the strangle-hold of crime from the throat of humanity. In October of 1935, a new magazine appeared on newsstands: G-Men, featuring the adventures of Dan Fowler. The magazine changed its name to G-Men Detective in early 1940, but the stories continued the blood-bathed saga of the F.B.I.'s finest, Dan Fowler. After an amazing 112 Dan Fowler novels, the magazine closed with the Winter 1953 issue. G-Men returns in these vintage pulp tales, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
A Complete Dan Fowler Novel
Murder Guns
by Norman A. Daniels
When hoodlums rob an arsenal only the ace of the F.B.I. knows the strange and sinister purpose behind their crimes!? Follow Dan Fowler and his aides as they once again fight democracy’s foes!
A Complete Novelet
Death Under The Palms
by Wyatt Blassingame
When Ben Harden took the animal-training job in Florida, he certainly did not know that one of his principal duties was being framed for a grim murder rap!
The Baron Hunts A Lost Dutchman — Short Story
by Curtiss T. Gardner
Twice left in the desert to die, “Baron Munchausen” comes back to solve crimes
Murder Stubs A Toe — Short Story
by Wayne Rogers
Artist Beaujean paints a picture that sends him down the black road of doom!
Hanging Frame — Short Story
by Robert Leslie Bellem
It looks like the hot seat for a punch-drunk fighter when Fate counts him out
The Dry Dive — Short Story
by Peter Reid
Lawyer Nolan stares murder in the face when a man plummets down to his death
Federal Flashes — A Department
by The Editor