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.
Range Riders Western was a mix of a western with a mystery — a most satisfying combination. Three buckaroo trouble-shooters, Steve Reese aided by his two pals Hank Bell, and Dusty Trail worked for the Cattlemen's Protective Association. And when they received the call to action, they strapped on their six-guns and busted leather to hit the trail. Follow the trio as they take up the cudgels for peace and justice! This long-running western series began with the December 1938 issue, coming from Thrilling Publications, AKA Better Publications or Standard Magazines. It immediately struck a chord with its reading audience. The magazine title changed slightly — with the Fall 1940 issue Range Riders became Range Riders Western. And thus it stayed until the final issue in April 1953. All told, there were 75 issues of rip-roaring action published. Range Riders Western returns in these vintage pulp tales, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
A Steve Reese Novel
Guns Across No Man’s Land
by Joseph Chadwick
Fighting to save young Dan Norman from a hangrope, Steve Reese and his crack CPA buddies face a roaring gun showdown in wild country
A Long Novelet
Hot Gun Holiday
by Lee Floren
Buck McKee and Tortilla Joe were just a pair of harmless cowpokes until all the hounds of hell broke loose in sun-seared Ronde Basin
Short Stories
Bugles And Blood
by Al Storm
Broken in rank, Gault battled wily redskins to regain his chevrons
Hear The Warning Wind
by Cy Kees
Weird was the story told by the glassy-eyed, fear-crazed stranger
True Story
Slade Of The Overland
by T.J. Kerttula & D.L. McDonald
Was he brutal killer or outlaw tamer, this figure of the Old West?
Features
Trail Camp
by Ferris Weddle
The white man in the Frontier West was as ruthless as the redskins
The Horse Marines
by Allan K. Echols
They’re back in the saddle again, like in the days of Captain Jinks
Brand Talk
by Norman B. Wiltsey
Four centuries ago the first cattle were branded in North America