We may not be posting much on Twitt… er… X these days, but we’re still posting and updating regularly at https://t.co/h3qZ24KaXx: https://t.co/pYIic1h80c #pulpmags#newpulp
Welp. Back in May 2023, X (formerly Twitter) broke all links (APIs) that let us display our latest tweets and automatically post tweets from our blogs. As a result, we're only tweeting occasionally. Visit our website for the latest in articles and posts. https://t.co/pYIic1h80c
Seventy-four years ago today, on April 8, 1949, Street & Smith announced it was canceling the last of its pulp magazines — The Shadow, Doc Savage, Detective Story, and Western Story. Learn more about "The Day the Pulps Died" at https://t.co/h3qZ24JD7Z... https://t.co/NOWqouCs6i
He's remembered today for his wild adventures of The Spider, but fictioneer Norvell W. Page also penned a pair of sword-and-sorcery novels featuring Prester John in the late 1930s. #pulpmags#swordandsorcery#fantasy https://t.co/oPcgfoHo5r
New at https://t.co/h3qZ24JD7Z: Street & Smith's second-string heroes — The Whisperer and Cap Fury — were intended to push boundaries. #pulpmags#batman https://t.co/82UN5YmOe1
At Yellowed Perils: Alas, "The Shadow." A review of the upcoming book by James Patterson & Brian Sitts shows Conde Nast doesn't understand its pulp characters. #pulpmags https://t.co/osIGzudFfS
New at https://t.co/h3qZ24JD7Z: Remembering pulp-art collector Robert Lesser on the anniversary of his death with an interview from 1994. #pulpmags#pulpart https://t.co/GWdizUYvMP