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.
During the science-fiction boom of the 1930s, there were over a dozen pulp magazines dedicated to the subject. Analog, Startling Stories, Amazing Stories, Wonder Stories, Captain Future and Super Science Stories were just a few. In 1939, the pulp magazine publisher of Jungle Stories, and many others, added its own entry into the sci-fi field, Planet Stories. Until it folded in 1955, it published ground-breaking science fiction from some of the genre's brightest stars, including such luminaries as Ray Cummings, Frederic Arnold Kummer, Jr., Eando Binder, Leight Bracket, Isaac Asimov, Clifford D. Simak, Henry Kuttner, Ray Bradbury, Frederik Pohl, James Blish, A.E. van Vogt, Theodore Sturgeon, Alan E. Nourse and Robert Sheckley. Planet Stories returns in these vintage pulp tales, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
A Gripping Novel of Earthlings
Lost in Alien Savagery
The Rocketeers Have Shaggy Ears
by Keith Bennett
Some day there will be a legend like this. Some day, from steamy Venus or arid Mars, the shaking, awe-struck words will come whispering back to us, building the picture of a glory so great that our throats will choke with pride — pride in the Men of Terra!
A Thrilling Space-Adventure Novel
Flame-Jewel Of The Ancients
by Edwin L. Graber
The tiny golden sphere, blazing with terrible energy, spelled Galactic Empire at last to the out-space horde, once they had tapped its limitless power. They were grimly amused therefore when Captain Glayne of the Stellar Guardians dropped innocently out of the sub-space to view their mighty prize.
Five Exciting Stories
Forever And The Earth
by Ray Bradbury
They brought that great blazing writer three hundred years into the future. They gave him the stars and planets and all space for his hungry pen. Then they tried to put Thomas Wolfe back in his grave.
The First Man On The Moon
by Alfred Coppel
John Thurmon swore he’d be the first man on the moon. But he wasn’t. He was only the first murderer.
Madmen Of Mars
by Erik Fennel
Why do the Martians drink red wine, swagger about, spout vile poetry and fight endless duels with each other? How did Terence Michael Burke change their minds about invading the Earth?
Who Goes There?
by Charles H. Davis
Hurtling down from cold and hostile space, battle-worn Ekrado and Ronaro gazed with joy at the lovely watery world below. Here, surely, they would find friends — and the precious help they needed!
Ultimatum
by Roger Dee
In a dingy little Indiana hotel room the fate of three worlds suddenly hung in precarious balance!
And Planet’s Regular feature
The Vizigraph
by The Readers