Let’s Go Country With The Pulps


With the Fourth of July just a few days away, let’s celebrate the American countryside with the pulps!  From the early days of the pulps, life in rural America has been a favorite subject.  Here are a few portrayals of that life, courtesy of some of the best artists and illustrators to work in the pulp industry!

by James Meese

by Barye Phillips

by Emmett Watson

by George Gross

by Hans Helweg

by James Avati

by James Avati

by Julian Paul

by Paul Rader

by Rafael DeSoto

by Raymond Johnson

by Robert Bonfils

by Robert Bonfils

by Robert Maguire

by Robert McGinnis

by Rudy Nappi

by Sam Cherry

by Samson Pollen

by Saul Levine

by Stanley Zuckerberg

by Victor Kalin

by Walter Popp

Get Ready For Independence Day With Nick Carter, The Killmaster!


Happy July 1st! In just a few days, we will be celebrating Independence Day and here to help us get ready is the Killmaster! Better known as Nick Carter (and named after one of the first fictional private detectives), Nick Carter was an agent for AXE, an American spy agency that was even more secretive than the CIA. Carter was the American equivalent of James Bond and, from 1964 to 1990, he kept the world safe for Democracy by killing eliminating the enemies of truth, peace, and justice around the world. Nick Carter did the jobs that no one else was willing to do and it may not have been pretty but we wouldn’t be celebrating the 4th without him.

Here are just a few of the adventures of Nick Carter, Killmaster:

1964
1964
1965
1965
1967
1968
1969
1969
1970
1972
1974
1979
1980
1980
1982
1984
1985
1990

Artwork of the Day: Pay Off The Damned (by Bill Edwards)


1965 Bill Edwards

by Bill Edwards

This is from 1965 and, like so many “adult” books of the time, the cover blurb is awfully judgmental.  Franie knew she was doing wrong but someone published a book about it and then someone else decided to read it so is anyone in a position to judge?  This cover was done by Bill Edwards, who has a definite skill when it came to capturing the sordidness of small town life.