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.
Before the dust could settle on an old cow town, Culture Publications whipped out a new Western pulp in January of 1938 and entitled it Spicy Western Stories. Apparently there was just a bit too much spice in those pulp tales, because government and industry pressure finally force the publisher to mend their ways, after five spicy years. In January 1943 they changed the name of the company to Trojan Publications, and the magazine title to Speed Western Stories. And as such, it continued for another 42 issues and five more years, offering all the action and thrills that a western fan could ask for... just without the mild tittilation. The final issue of Speed Western Stories was dated January 1948. Speed Western Stories now returns with vintage pulp tales, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
Hard-Luck Heller
by Laurence Donovan
When the world started to kick Tom Conway around, he had to fight back — and he promptly fought himself into a jam to top anything ever seen in those parts!
Red Gold For Killers
by Paul Hanna
There was a method in the madness of the desert rat named Scrimpy, when he announced his rich gold strike in front of all those killers.
Dude Girl’s Desperado
by Larry Dunn
Salty Milt Saner figured out a plan to keep a fortune-hunter from marryin’ his daughter — but it had more surprises than a porcupine has quills, with results as prickly!
Buzzard Bait
by T.V. Faulkner
It rubbed Rusty Malone plenty the wrong way to be suspected of being the leader of a bushwhacking rustler gang — prodding him to take more long, dangerous chances than the vigilantes or the rustlers themselves...
Born Curious
by Randolph Barr
That rawhidin’ rodeo manager wanted Texas Tom Bolt to be the mystery rider toppin’ the mystery killer hoss — leadin’ to gun-slingin’ corpses!
Killer Hangs A Law Star
by Walton Grey
The Poco Kid hated the sight of a law star and he had sworn he never would be a lawman. Yet here he was, wearing a law badge —
Special Features
Isle of Happy Marriages
Indians Still Peril the White Man!
Animals Well-Armed