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.
Mystery and thrills... times ten! That was Ten Detective Aces. Each magazine featured ten stories of action and adventure. The magazine got off to a shaky start in November 1928, under the title of The Dragnet Magazine. Ace Magazines published this pulp containing stories of gangsters and organized crime, but it failed to click with readers. In April 1930 the magazine was retitled to Detective-Dragnet Magazine and its new focus was on detective tales. This caught the reading public's attention, and sales surged. With the March 1933 issue, the title was changed to Ten Detective Aces, and that was the title that stuck. Authors such as Lester Dent, Novell Page, Frederick C. Davis, Norman Daniels, and Emile C. Tepperman wrote for the pages of Ten Detective Aces. It lasted until September 1949, offering up detective excitement for a total of 202 issues. Ten Detective Aces returns in these vintage pulp tales, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
The Corpse In The Crystal — Novelet
by Talmage Powell
Doomed by a fortuneteller, Abner Murder had to outguess the triggers of Fate’s hustlers.
Picture Of Homicide
by Theodore Pine
Kern knows just the face that will fit his murder frame.
The Slay Must Go On
by Robert C. Dennis
Instead of hand out orchids, this drama critic seems slated only to receive lilies.
Muzzle-Loader Message
by D.A. Hoover
This plotter sets his sights on a big-money target.
The Killer’s Home Companion — Novelet
by Norman A. Daniels
Alan King’s first detective duty it to convict himself.
Dead Man’s Code
by Glenn Low
Bank robbers can use a moonshiner hideout only if they know the backwoods secret.
Half Shot At Sunrise — “Dizzy Duo” Yarn
by Joe Archibald
Snooty Piper tries to bail out Boston’s richest dame by putting his worthless life in hock.
Pallbearer Mercy
by Emil Petaja
The emergency call turns out to be deadlier for the doctor than for the gangland patient.
Fee for A Murder Magnet
by David M. Norman
Detective Reid substitutes for a home-coming hellion — at a coffin price.
Midnight’s Deadly Duet
by Rex Whitechurch
Night Watchman Fred Stringer keeps a feudist’s death watch.