The Covers of Real Detective


The origins of Real Detective are obscure, as is the case with many of the oldest pulp magazines.  It’s believed that it started in 1922 as a magazine called Detective Tales and it was an all-fiction magazine.  However, when the publisher ran into financial trouble two years later, Detective Tales was sold to a new publisher who started to mix true crime with the short fiction.  The name of the magazine was changed to Real Detective Tales and Mystery Stories, which was certainly a mouthful.

Then, 1931, the name of the magazine was changed again, this time to just Real Detective.  The magazine’s format was now exclusively true crime and salacious scandal.  The new format proved popular enough that Real Detective ran until 1985.  Below are a few covers from the early days of Real Detective.  (Around 1954, Real Detective went from hiring illustrators to draw their covers to hiring photographers to take pictures of distressed-looking models.)  Where known, the artist has been credited.

by Alex Redmond

by Alex Redmond

by Alex Redmond

by Charles Wood

by Earle Bergey

Unknown Artist

Unknown Artist

Unknown Artist

Unknown Artist

Unknown Artist

Unknown Artist

Artist Profile: James B. Settles (1902 — 1957)


by James B. Settles

Other than the fact that he was born in Missouri and his first credited cover work was for Amazing Stories in 1942, I haven’t been able to find out much about James B. Settles.  As an illustrator, Settles had a good eye for detail and an obvious affinity for mechanical drawings.  Though he did his share of front covers, Settles is probably best-known for illustrating the back covers of Amazing Stories.  His back cover illustrations almost always seemed to be of some sort of futuristic mode of transportation.

Here’s a sampling of the work of the mysterious James B. Settles: