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.
Detective magazines were some of the most popular reading material during the era of the pulp magazines. In late 1949, Ned Pines, publisher of Thrilling Publications, also known as Standard Magazines, Better Magazines, and Beacon Magazines, added a new entry into an already crowded field of whodunnit magazines. The unique feature of 5 Detective Novels, was the inclusion of five complete novels in a single pulp magazine. Admittedly, the definition of "novel" was stretched a bit, but even at 20,000 words per novel, the 25¢ magazine required 144 pages, much thicker than the normal pulp. In those pages could be found some of the best detective fiction writers in the field: Arthur J. Burks, H.M. Appel, Norman A. Daniels, George Fielding Eliot, Paul Ernst, Edmond Hamilton, Ralph Oppenheim, Robert Sidney Bowen, Fredric Brown, among others. After 17 issues, 5 Detective novels closed publication with the Fall 1953 issue. 5 Detective Novels returns in these vintage pulp tales, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
The Killer From Buffalo
by Richard Deming
The slaying she witnessed bared a shocking story
And Here Comes Murder
by G.T. Fleming-Roberts
Take one lovely model, one pot of money, one man —
The Next To Die
by Gerald Verner
The girl lay on the bed, and the killer had a whip
Homicide Sanitarium
by Fredric Brown
The newlywed detective was hired to play a nut
Death Walks In Circles
by Cyril Plunkett
Bart found a warm corpse — and trouble found Bart!
No Day for Murder — Short Story
by Roger Dee
The Body In the Street — Short Story
by Benton Braden
The Lowdown — Feature
Cryptogram Corner — Feature
Crooks Will Be Crooks — Feature
Who’s Crazy Now? — Feature
Slightly Illegal — Feature
The Road to Bigamy — Feature
Jail that Goes Places — Feature
Crime Curios — Feature
Perfect Crime — Almost — Feature