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The Shadow was an American pulp magazine that was published by Street & Smith from 1931 to 1949. Each issue contained a novel about the Shadow, a mysterious crime-fighting figure who had been invented to narrate the introductions to radio broadcasts of stories from Street & Smith's Detective Story Magazine.
American Radio Archives and Museum offers one of the largest collections of radio broadcasting in the United States and in the world. [12] It has a collection of 23,000 radio and TV scripts, 10,000 photographs, 10,000 books on radio history, and 5,000 audio recordings.
Saplings (novel) Saraswatichandra (novel) The Secret Scripture; Seventeen (Tarkington novel) The Shades Will Not Vanish; Shardlake series; Sherlock Holmes vs. Dracula; The Sign of the Four; Something Wicked This Way Comes (novel) Space Cadet; The Space Merchants; The Stars My Destination; Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde; Strangers on a ...
Popular Publications was one of the largest publishers of pulp magazines during its existence, [1] at one point publishing 42 different titles per month. Company titles included detective, adventure, romance, and Western fiction.
Occasionally a novel would get as far as an outline, or further, but did not appear in Doc Savage. One such novel was Python Isle, in which Dent planned to have Savage fighting pythons; Nanovic turned down the outline on the grounds that readers had objected to recent short stories by Richard Sale featuring snakes. Sale had been considered as a ...
Gay pulps are part of the expansion of cheap paperback books that began in the 1930s and "reached its full force in the early 1950s." [1] Mainstream publishers packaged the cheap paperbacks to be sold in train and bus stations, dimestores, drugstores, grocery stores, and newsstands, to reach the market that had bought pulp magazines in the first half of the twentieth century.
Doc Savage stories, 213 in total, first appeared in Conde Nast's Doc Savage Magazine pulps. The original series has sold over 20 million copies in paperback form. [1] The first entry was The Man of Bronze, in March, 1933 from the house name "Kenneth Robeson". John L. Nanovic was editor for 10 years, and planned and approved all story outlines.
The Mercury Theatre on the Air is a radio series of live radio dramas created and hosted by Orson Welles.The weekly hour-long show presented classic literary works performed by Welles's celebrated Mercury Theatre repertory company, with music composed or arranged by Bernard Herrmann.