Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The peak era for these was the era from roughly 1959 until 1986, when, due to the Meese Commission (a contribution by Park Dietz), and the end of a few of the publishers of detective (or "true crime") magazines, the main era of the bondage cover ended, though there were a few issues of Detective Dragnet in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and a ...
File:A Pinch of Snuff (novel) 1st edition cover art.jpg; File:A Place of Execution - bookcover.jpg; File:A Prisoner of Birth Jeffrey Archer.jpg; File:A Real Basket Case cover.jpg; File:A Rose for Her Grave and Other True Cases Book.jpeg; File:A Savage Place cover.jpg; File:A Stranger Is Watching (cover).jpg; File:A Thief of Time.jpg; File ...
John Gall (born 1963 in New Jersey), is an American graphic designer known primarily for the design of book covers.. He is a graduate of Rutgers University. [1]Gall is currently the creative director of Alfred A. Knopf.
Weird menace is a subgenre of horror fiction and detective fiction that was popular in the pulp magazines of the 1930s and early 1940s. The weird menace pulps, also known as shudder pulps , generally featured stories in which the hero was pitted against sadistic villains, with graphic scenes of torture and brutality.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Throughout the 1930s, Bergey worked freelance for a number of publishing houses. His eye-catching paintings were predominantly featured as covers on a wide array of pulp magazines, including romance (Thrilling Love, Popular Love, Love Romances) as well as detective, adventure, aviation, and Westerns.
True Detective (originally True Detective Mysteries) was an American true crime magazine published from 1924 to 1995. It initiated the true crime magazine genre, and during its peak from the 1940s to the early 1960s it sold millions of copies and spawned numerous imitators. For most of its run, it was published by Macfadden Publications.
Thrilling Mystery was an American pulp magazine published from 1935 to 1944. New York publisher Standard Magazines had a stable of magazines with the "Thrilling" prefix, including Thrilling Detective, Thrilling Love, and Thrilling Adventures, but in 1935, Popular Publications, a rival publisher, launched a weird menace pulp titled Thrilling Mysteries.