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. As a special bonus, Will Murray has written an introduction especially for this series of eBooks.
Another epic exploit of America’s best-loved pulp-fiction character of the 1930s and 1940s: The Spider — Master of Men! Richard Wentworth — the dread Spider, nemesis of the Underworld, lone wolf anti-crime crusader who always fights in that grim no-man’s land between Law and lawless — returns in vintage pulp tales of the Spider, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
Meet the Spider!
by Will Murray
Prophet of Folly — An Editorial
The Full-Length Spider Novel
Machine Guns Over the White House
by Norvell W. Page writing as Grant Stockbridge
Over the Capitol hung that suicide Senator's warning of destruction and anarchy to come when he was gone — of a fair land of freemen to suffer shame and degradation, a nation to be torn apart by the hounds of hell! Upon the very Senate doors hammered those yogi-mesmerized mobs who sought to make a mad man America's ruler. And Richard Wentworth, whose eyes had gazed upon a written message from the honored dead, must don the Spider's cloak of darkness to fight off these Storm Troops of Satan who would not rest content until Washington was a bloody shambles and the Chief Executive, himself, hung from a lonely gallows!
Killer’s Cradle Song — A Brother Henry Story
by Wayne Rogers
It was an irresistible murder-melody sung by those song-bird slayers to the nurse maids and their little charges — and Brother Henry, who had no ear for music, had to fight them single-handed!
Murder Misses Its Cue — An Ed Race Story
by Emile C. Tepperman
King Jordane's killers had rehearsed their ghastly roles until they were letter-perfect in that real-life drama of a father ruined and his son railroaded to the chair — but then the Masked Marksman spoke out of turn and stole the show!
The Web — A Department
by Moran Tudury
Dead men who tell tales.
Radio Archives Pulp Classics line of eBooks are of the highest quality and feature the great Pulp Fiction stories of the 1930s-1950s. All eBooks produced by Radio Archives are available in ePub and Mobi formats for the ultimate in compatibility. If you have a Kindle, the Mobi version is what you want. If you have an iPad/iPhone, Android, or Nook, then the ePub version is what you want.