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The next reprints of the original pulp stories did not appear until after the original stories ended in 1949: The Weird Adventures of The Shadow was published in 1966 by Grosset and Dunlop. This anthology, however, considerably edited the three stories contained therein.
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 .
The Shadow is a fictional character created by American magazine publishers Street & Smith and writer Walter B. Gibson.Originally created to be a mysterious radio show narrator, [2] and developed into a distinct literary character in 1931 by Gibson, The Shadow has been adapted into other forms of media, including American comic books, comic strips, serials, video games, and at least five ...
Cover to The Living Shadow from The Shadow Magazine #1, April 1931. Art by Modest Stein.. The Living Shadow was the first pulp novel to feature The Shadow.Written by Walter B. Gibson, it was submitted for publication as Murder in the Next Room on January 23, 1931, and published as The Living Shadow in the April 1, [citation needed] 1931 issue of The Shadow Magazine.
The Shadow (reprints of pulp-magazine stories) By Maxwell Grant (pseudonym of Walter Gibson) The Shadow #1: The Living Shadow (1974) ISBN ...
The Avenger is a fictional character whose original adventures appeared between September 1939 and September 1942 in the pulp magazine The Avenger, published by Street & Smith, which ran 24 issues. [1] Five additional short stories were published in Clues Detective magazine (1942–1943), and a sixth novelette in The Shadow magazine in
The Golden Master was submitted 13 February 1939 and saw print in the pulp magazine The Shadow Magazine on 15 September of the same year. [1] The story was republished in the hard back book The Shadow and the Golden Master published in 1984 by Mysterious Press. This book also contained a second Shiwan Khan story, Shiwan Khan Returns. In ...
Their pulp reprints are either single- or multi-volume collections, containing all the stories of a specific character, with new introductions written by pulp historians. [4] Due to this editorial decision, many are spread across several volumes. Altus Press has relaunched the pulp magazines Argosy, Black Mask, and Famous Fantastic Mysteries. [5]