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.
Thrilling Ranch Stories told the gritty tales of the old west, where the majesty of the wide open spaces met the blazing wild frontier and where sixgun-justice was Law. Stories of bronco bustin', cattle rustlin', and land-baron feudin'. All this plus a touch of romance was what Thrilling Ranch Stories offered for twenty years of publication, beginning in November of 1933. Published by one of the pulp powerhouses, Better Publications (aka, Standard Publications, aka Thrilling Publications), it finally bit the dust with its Fall 1953 issue. Thrilling Ranch Stories returns in these vintage pulp tales, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
Featured Complete Novelet
One More River
By Norrell Gregory
When Jeff Dorey, from Kentucky, races a girl a dead heat in an Oklahoma Land Rush, their joint stake comes to mean much more to them than they ever expect!
Two Other Full-Length Novelets
The Circle 4 Stranger
by Stephen Payne
When Lafe Gordon hits Red Forks with his trail herd, Connie McGuire is torn between growing fondness for him — and the suspicion that he is a killer!
Hangnoose For A Prodigal
by Paul S. Powers
Clint Coleman returns to Storm Ridge after three years in the penitentiary — ready to pit guns and fists against his ruthless rangeland enemies!
Five Short Stories
Skeleton Trail
by Tom Parsons
Jim Burnett takes a hand when a stagecoach is eerily held up
A Helping Gun
by Tom Curry
Jimmy Furling sides a struggling farmer against a crooked range manager
I’ll Marry You Mañana
by Thelma Knoles
It seemed to Lucinda Garett as though Tomorrow would never come
General Delivery
by Norman W. Hay
Sometimes a postmaster’s curiosity can come in right handy
The Marry Widow
by Joe Archibald
When Hattie Pringle’s groom proves a wolf she is almost the goat
Special Features
Around The Branding Fire — A Department
The Enemy Is Here — A Message
by Kate Smith