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.
Terence X. O'Leary, the world's greatest hero! He battles the lost empire of Lataki, hidden somewhere in the uncharted depths of South America. The evil Unuk, mighty high priest of Lataki who has lived for over five hundred years, sends out his mighty air ships to destroy America with their dyno-blast rays — a disintegration ray of vast power. Ter ance X. O'Leary, known as the Mighty Mick and also as the Sky Hawk, works together with his pal Peter Maher McGuffy to save mankind from world domination by the sinister powers of Lataki.
Science fiction mixed with aviation adventure in one of the shortest-lived of the hero pulps, Terence X. O'Leary's War Birds. In the first issue, published in March of 1935, Terence X. O'Leary traveled to Lataki to thwart an army of brainwashed scientists. In the second issue, April 1935, Terence X. O'Leary vanquished the threat from Lataki, making the world once again safe for humanity. The third, and final, issue told a new story in which O'Leary battled the powers of Neptunia, an underwater kingdom. But that's where it ended. The magazine, which had begun in 1928 under the title War Birds and which featured standard WWI aviation tales, returned to that title in October, 1935. Gone were the science fiction elements... and for its last two years, War Birds told straight air war stories from the Great War. It all ended with the final War Birds issue in October 1937. But for three unexpected issues from mid-1935, rocket-men wearing flying belts flew through the air, dispensing justice with their dyno-blasters. Terence X O'Leary's War Birds returns in these vintage pulp tales, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
A Book-Length Novel
O’Leary Fights The Golden Ray
By Arthur Guy Empey
Like blasting spotlights of destruction the devastating rays lanced out from the mystery ships of a lost kingdom, rocketing to atoms the finest of modern aircraft, reducing the U.S. to a nation afraid. Then from Unuk, master mind of carnage, came the order: “Kill O’Leary!”
Win Big Cash Prizes
by Editor
Center your stick, kiwi, and win one of the eighteen cash prizes given this month for naming O’Leary’s ship.
Take A Ride In The Cockpit
The biggest and best of the flying clubs grows with this issue to bigger aims. Get your membership application in.
When Sky Rays Destroy
The Devil’s Dreadnaught Strikes! — Cover
by Rudolph Belarski
Cover design from the novel “O’Leary Fights the Golden Ray.”