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.
Tales of derring-do in the skies of World War I and the men of steel who flew the flimsy bi-planes. Swooping from the clouds, they battled against the Kaiser's air forces over the war-torn battlefields of Europe. In the 1930s, every publishing house had it's "air" stories. From Ace Magazines came Sky Aces. It made its debut with the June 1938 issue. Each magazine held a dozen or so short stories and novelettes, often written by men who had served in the conflict and knew what they were writing about. Fifteen issues later, it closed down with the April 1941 issue. By that time bi-planes were out of vogue, World War II was in full swing and more powerful aircraft were the airpower over Europe and the Pacific. Sky Aces returns in these vintage pulp tales, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Sky-Cannon Counterfeit
by Arch Whitehouse
Bill Alcott didn’t like that song of doom — so he went hunting for the maestro!
One Last Patrol
by Ralph Powers
Lieutenant Royal fought for friends — not flags!
Killer From Nowhere
by Robert S. Fenton
No flyer dared to call his hand — except one.
Aces Are Taboo! — Novelet
by J.D. Rogers, Jr.
The Kid was just a Kiwi — but he got his chance.
Vultures From Hell
by Herbert Franklin
“Plane-a-Day” Adams gets his dates mixed.
“Dodo” Dilemma
by David C. Cooke
A rib-tickling article on the “West Point of the Air”
Spad Of Treachery
by Charles V. Kerr
Just 15 minutes in the sky was all that Boche needed.
Forbidden Flight
by Jack Millan
Von Strohm gets a gift — a brand-new D.H.!
Date With The Devil
by William E. Poindexter
“Satan’s Playmates” have a rendezvous on the Styx.
Snapshot Snap
by F.E. Rechnitzer
That flight led to hell — the green hell of the jungle.
Riddle Of The Raid
by Stewart Powell
To the death they fought. But which man was the spy?
Bag O’ Wind
by Ralph Tarbot
Barney Gatling fills an assignment — in his own way!