Ki-Gor, son of the jungle! Orphaned son of missionary Robert Kilgour, raised in the jungle, he grew to a six foot bronzed-skin giant who ruled the jungles. Joined by Helen Vaughn, his fiance and later wife, Timbo George, the Masai chief, and N'Geeso, the chief of a Pygmy tribe, this band of adventurers roam the wilds of Africa in a series of pulp magazine stories that began in 1939 and ended with the last published story in 1954. Now, Ki-Gor is back, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
A New Complete Ki-Gor Novel
Nirvana of the Seven Voodoos
by John Peter Drummond
No broken, haunted captive lived to flee the jackal-born terrors of Nirvana, land of the red mists, where the gleaming-eyed scientist Krishna ruled by the dread hand of ancient gris-gris. And yet Ki-Gor, White Lord of the Jungle, dared enter that forbidden kraal, dared try to wrest his mate Helene from its secret power — and even dared challenge the half-human gorilla-men to a battle that could only end in defeat...
Three Novelets Of Congo Terror
Warrior Of The Veldt
by Joe Musgrave
He was too small, too weak, too cowardly to prove his manhood before the scornful giants of Tatoga. But little Baki, the tiger-proud native boy, would rather be clawed to death by lions than show the ghost of his chieftain father that he didn’t possess the courage of a great warrior.
Panther Wizard
by Alexander Wallace
It was a dried-up monkey’s paw that led Trader Hugh Barran to the Meeting Place of Panther Wizards — and to beautiful Jeanne Lautrec, enslaved queen of the nagoma drum dancers.
The Apes Screamed “Kill!”
by Emmett McDowell
In the strange, forgotten world of age-old Tanit, Jesse and Diana Quinn struggled against an enemy schooled for a thousand years in death’s slow tortures. How could they escape, when even Toth the Terrible and his legion of talking apes were helpless in the sacrificial spell of Baal Moloch?
Plus Two Exciting Short Stories
“Bwana Cannibal”
by John Starr
The Great Leopard Carson, they called him. A puny trader, a brush rat, a craven Gold Coast bum who thought he could run away from the juju that stalks forever all white men who eat human flesh.
Devil Rain
by Walt Sheldon
Professor Jeremiah Prayne staked his civilized, scientific brain against the mysterious, dark powers of jungle voodoo. Which would win?