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.
The western was a staple of the newsstands. Every pulp reader had fond memories of playing cowboys as a child. Imagining bucking broncos, cold desert nights, and dirty hombres who scoffed at the law of the west. Westerns were one of the most popular genres with every magazine publisher having several western titles in its stable. And one of the longest running of these was Thrilling Western, from the same publisher who gave readers The Masked Rider, The Rio Kid, Range Rider Western, Rodeo Romances, Thrilling Ranch and West. All these from a single publisher, which gave proof to the claim that westerns were one of the most popular types of magazines. The first issue of Thrilling Western was dated February 1934. It lasted an amazing 174 issues of rip-roaring, gun-toting excitement, ending with the Fall 1953 issue. Thrilling Western returns in these vintage pulp tales, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
Four Complete Novelets
The Jail-Proof Outlaw
by T.W. Ford
Sheriff Smoke Curtis faces his toughest job when he tries to hold a leash on Killer Brunnermann, the evil outlaw who just can’t be slain!
Law For Sacaton
by Chuck Martin
Jim Marshal takes some plumb tough treatment in a wild gun-roaring town, but he proves he can dish out plenty of woe for lawbreakers!
The Letter And The Outlaw
by Stephen Payne
Longrider Hank Barrows lingers to help a needy family — despite the fact that the law is on his heels, and he hasn’t one moment to spare!
The 3R Brand
by Syl MacDowell
When Swap’s mistaken for a schoolteacher at Brushy Bald, a pair of wandering waddies are sure fed up on reading, writing and arithmetic!
Five Short Stories
Kid Marshal
by Paul S. Powers
Clint McKay throws a gun bluff as he seeks the killer of his brother
Bait For Boothill
by Edwin K. Sloat
Old Sam Figgen thought a relative worth a heap more than mere gold
Sixgun And Pencil Lead
by Ben Frank
Drawing pictures was Marty’s undoing until he got a line on a crook
The Kid From Arizona
by Ray Hayton
The button knew one of four hombres was guilty of his Dad’s killing
No More Indians
by Donald Bayne Hobart
Shawnee Clark always kept his Sharps ready just in case of emergency
Special Features
The Hitching Rail
by Buck Benson
How Well Do Yuh Know Yore West? — Quiz Feature