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.
Pulp readers could never seem to get enough of the detective titles. To meet that insatiable demand, Fiction House, well-known for Planet Stories and Jungle Stories, debuted a new magazine in Fall 1938 entitled Bull's-Eye Detective. It featured a standard mix of crime drama, murder mystery and general detective fiction. The stories, authored by the large stable of Fiction House writers, were solid, well-written tales of hard-bitten gumshoes, gang molls and crime bosses. But for pulp magazine readers, there was nothing to make it stand out among the other similar titles in a very large field. Sadly, it failed to sell enough newsstand copies to justify continuing, and it ceased publication after only three issues with the Fall 1939 issue. A sad demise to a very competent detective series. Bull's-Eye Detective returns in these vintage pulp tales, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
A Complete Supernatural Mystery-Detective Novel
Puppets Of The Murder Master
by John Murray Reynolds
From long-forgotten Persia’s mystic minarets to Gotham’s gleaming spires came Hassan and his devil crew — a strange and sinister brotherhood — whose blood-red magic made water-willed slaves of proud and lovely women, and murderers of strong, upright men!
Three Big Mystery Novels
The Iron Ring
by Jack Kofoed
BEAUTIFUL AMERICAN TO DIE! Two hard-case news-hounds set up Madrid’s greatest spy scoop. But if that lovely Mata Hari faced the firing squad, they too would die.
The Man Who Died Twice
by Joel Martin Nichols, Jr.
On March 4th, 1918, the naval collier Cyclops vanished with all hands lost. Now, twenty years later, a ghost-hand reaches from a watery grave to write this strange, weird story.
The Judas Jackpot
by George Bruce
Twice a year those two, big-shot, gambling czars met for a blue-sky poker fest. But now the Chi Guy had it hot in the belly — and Big Frenchy was slated to do the hot squat.
Five Detective-Mystery Short Stories
Finger Man
by Stewart Sterling
The way to trap a Racket King is to panic him into doing his own private killing.
Satan’s Slave-Girdle
by Greye La Spina
He who wore the gleaming girdle was doomed — helpless slave of a soul-less ghoul.
Hell’s Harvest
by Tony Beacon
Mart Grey, hard-boiled newshawk, follows a grisly trail to a hellish harvest of hate.
The Cokey Killers
by Ray St. Vrain
Seven sisters of sin — ready to heat their itchy rods at a nod from the Cokey King.
Dead Man’s Alibi
by Rod Allen
The newspapers called it an accident — but West knew it was clever, devilish murder.