Author: Tommy Hancock

ALL PULP NEW PULP EBOOK BESTSELLER LIST DEBUTS!

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Welcome to the first installment of All Pulp’s New Pulp EBook Best Seller List, inspired by the work of Barry Reese! Before we get to what you’re all waiting for, here are the rules by which this little list comes together.

    1)    This list only tracks Kindle sales through AMAZON. It does not keep track of sales through Barnes and Noble, Kobo, Smashwords, or anything else!

    2)   
This list only tracks DIGITAL sales. Exactly how Amazon calculates these things is mostly a trade secret and they vary wildly from day to day. If I checked this tomorrow, the list could be very different. This list reflects sales ranks as of Friday afternoon, February 8, 2013. 


3)   In order to keep the focus on new releases, eligible works must have been published within the last three months. So, since this list is being done on February 8, 2013, we are only looking at books published since November 8, 2012. Please keep that in mind before complaining that Title X is not listed. Also, keep in mind that for the most part, we are tracking sales from smaller and mid level press publishers who actively publish New Pulp material. We won’t generally track sales from Simon and Schuster or places like that — they have the New York Times Bestseller List for that. If one of the major publishers starts doing The Shadow or something, we’ll track that, but some publishers will not be listed here in order to keep the focus on the publishers actively working to produce and promote New Pulp.

4)   
Like the name suggests, we’re tracking “New” pulp —not sales rankings for reprints of classic material. In order for something to qualify for this list, it has to be at least 50% new material that has not been printed in book form before.


5)    We are human. If you are aware of a title that should be listed below (keeping in mind all the rules above), please let us know and we will make sure to remedy the situation.


6)    This information is garnered mostly from All Pulp, New Pulp, the Pulp Factory mailing list and a few other sites. If you think we might miss your release, let us know in advance — drop All Pulp a line and tell us when it’s being released.

Without further ado, here’s the completely and totally unofficial New Pulp Ebook Bestseller List as of right now (title, then publisher, then release date, then sales rank):

1) The Cestus Concern by Mat Nastos (Nifty Entertainment, December 28,2012) 2.138

2) Sherlock Holmes, Consulting Detective, Volume 4 by Various (Airship 27, January 19, 2012) – 59,826

3) Monster Earth by Various (Mechanoid Press, January 13, 2013- 60,940

4) Finn’s Golem by Gregg Taylor (Autogyro, January 10, 2013) -83,562

5) Legion I- Lords of Fire (The Shattering) by Van Allen Plexico (White Rocket Books, January 26, 2013) – 86,910

6) The Studio Specter by W. Peter Miller (Uchronic Books, January 5, 2013) – 108,769

7) The New Adventures of the Griffon by Various (Pro Se Productions, January 17, 2013) – 133,360

8) Sentinels: Metalgod by Van Plexico (White Rocket Books, December 10, 2012) – 155,489

9) Tier Zero by Henry Brown ( Virtual Pulp, January 13, 2013) – 276,126

10) Prohibition by Terrence McCauley, (Airship 27, December 15, 2012) – 279,713

Just missing the list were: Whack Job by Mike Baron (December 25, 2012)-339,703, Fight Card: Irish Dukes by Mike Faricy (Fight Card Books, November 12, 2012) – 399,113, Fight Card : The Knockout by Robert J. Randisi (Fight Card Books, December 1, 2012) – 402,303, Fight Card: Rumble in the Jungle by David Foster (Fight Card Books, January 8, 2013) – 472,411, The Fangslinger and the Preacher by Bret Lee Hart (Western Trail Blazer, January 3, 2013) – 410,666.

Being the first list, not a lot of commentary or history to track here.  Mat Nastos makes a fine showing in the top 2200 of all Kindle sales and our #10 comes in under 300,000, so the Kindle list definitely moves differently than Print, which is what creators and writers and publishers have been noticing for a while-Ebooks sell

As far as Publishers are concerned, White Rocket Books and Airship 27 each have two books in the debut EBook list, with Pro Se, Virtual Pulp, Nifty Entertainment, Mechanoid Press, Uchronic Books, and Autogyro all checking in with one.  But remember, readers, take it all with a grain of salt.  

FORTIER TAKES ON MIKE HAMMER IN ‘COMPLEX 90’!

ALL PULP REVIEWS by Ron Fortier
COMPLEX 90
By Mickey Spillane & Max Allan Collins
Titan Books
244 pages
Available May 2013

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Beginning a new year with a new Mike Hammer novel is a cause for jubilant celebration.  In his short preface to the book, begun by the late Mickey Spillane, Collins informs us that the setting is 1964 and “Complex 90” is in part a sequel to the 1961 Mike Hammer novel, “The Girl Hunters.”  For those of you unfamiliar with that private eye classic, a brief summary is in order. 
“The Girl Hunters” opens with our down-and-out hero discovering that his secretary, and one true love, Velda, has returned from the dead.  Having lived in an alcoholic haze since her disappearance seven years earlier, he learns that Velda had been on a spy mission for the government, captured by the Russians and thrown into one of their of their prisons where she had endured physical tortures until managing to escape.  Now back on U.S. soil her ordeal is far from over as the Soviets send a specialized assassin team to terminate her permanently.  Instead they run into Hammer and it he who does the exterminating.  You can easily enjoy “Complex 90” without having read “The Girl Hunters,” but why on earth would you settle for one great Mike Hammer book when you can enjoy two?
Okay, back to this “sequel” of sorts.  The cold war is still in full tilt, even though Hammer and Velda have slowly gotten their lives back on a normal track.  Then an old colleague recruits Hammer to assist him as a bodyguard for a controversial senator throwing a lavish cocktail parting in his New York penthouse.  Hammer sees it as an opportunity to make a few fast bucks.  In the middle of the soiree, an assassin attempts to shoot the senator but instead guns down Hammer’s pal. Hammer takes a slug to the leg before sending the killer through a window eighty stories up via a hot lead tivkry from his .45 automatic.  So much for an easy few dollars.
Suffering only a flesh wound, Hammer is soon back on his feet.  Immediately he is offered a new assignment; that of bodyguard to the senator during his fact-finding junket to Moscow. The senator wants Hammer to replace his dead friend who was scheduled to accompany him.
No sooner are the two in Russia then Hammer is arrested and imprisoned by the KGB for being a spy.  Fortunately for the savvy P.I., they detain him in a city facility and he waste no time escaping, leaving half a dozen bodies behind.  By the time he makes it back to the States, he’s left a trail of forty-five dead Russians creating an international incident.  Now the Russians are clamoring for his hide and the State Department isn’t any too pleased with the notorious New York private-eye.  What bothers Hammer is why he was kidnapped in the first place and why the Commies are so hell bent on bringing him back to the U.S.S.R.
Finding the answers to those two questions is the major plot around which this fast paced thriller revolves and like all Mike Hammer tales, there’s plenty of two-fisted action along the journey.  Collins prose never lets up for a second propelling this reader to a slam-bang climax that had us needing a drink when it was over.  Cold war intrigue, sexy femme fatales and in the middle of it all, one tough son-of-bitch throwback whose conservative patriotism will not be shaken by gun-toting foreign agents or two-faced  Washington politicians. 
In a time of when America is being torn apart by a culture war, Spillane’s Mike Hammer is a cleansing storm that makes no excuses for loving ones country and doing whatever it takes to keep her strong.  Makes us wish we had a lot more like him.

FREE AUDIOBOOK OFFER FOR ALL PULP FROM RADIO ARCHIVES!

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Special Offer from Will Murray’s Pulp Classics

RadioArchives.com and Will Murray are giving away to all members of this group the downloadable version of the newly released Strange Detective Mysteries #1 audiobook for FREE.

Strange Detective Mysteries #1 is one of my favorite pulps and I am excited to produce it as an audiobook with my good friends at Radio Archives. It leads off with Norvell W. Page’s bizarre novelette, “When the Death-Bat Flies,” and includes thrilling stories by Norbert Davis, Paul Ernst, Arthur Leo Zagat, Wayne Rogers and others. Popular Publications went all-out to make this 1937 debut issue a winner. And they succeeded!

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Happy listening
Tom Brown and Will Murray
RadioArchives.com

PULP ARK 2013 VOTING HAS BEGUN!

Pulp Ark 2013, being held in Springdale, Arkansas April 26-28, 2013, announces today the ballot for the Pulp Ark 2013 Awards.
The ballot for this year’s awards was composed based on nominations called for beginning December 15, 2012 and ending January 15, 2013.   Only those who nominated in at least one category in that time period are allowed to vote. The original intent was to have voting begin January 15 and end February 15, 2013.  Due to an unforeseen number of ballots and a tremendous variety of nominations, the ballot was not completed until February 5th, 2013.  Therefore, all eligible voters have until March 1, 2013 to complete a ballot and email that to proseproductions@earthlink.net.  
Winners will be announced on or after March 1, 2013 once all votes are compiled and winners are determined.  Awards will be given on April 27, 2013, at Pulp Ark 2013.  
If you made a nomination and did not receive a ballot, please email proseproductions@earthlink.net a copy of your original nominations.

The most comprehensive Pulp award today, the Pulp Ark 2013 Ballot features over 40 publishers represented by nominated creators and works.

For more information on Pulp Ark 2013, go to www.pulpark.blogspot.com.  
The nominees for Pulp Ark 2013 are as follows-
BEST NOVEL-

The National Maul- A Misty Johnson Mystery by RP Steeves, Seven Realms

The Sting of the Silver Manticore by PJ Lozito, Pro Se Productions

Riddle of the Glowing Men: A Captain Action Novel by Jim Beard, Airship 27

Productions

Dillon and the Pirates of Xonira by Derrick Ferguson, Pulpwork Press

Blood of the Centipede by Chuck Miller, Pro Se Productions

Die Glocke by Barry Reese, Pro Se Productions

Drowning in Red Ink by James Mullaney, James Mullaney

Devil May Care by James Mullaney, James Mullaney

Project Alpha by Lee Houston Jr., Pro Se Productions

Death’s Dark Domain by Will Murray (Kenneth Robeson), Altus Press

The Destiny of Fu Manchu by William Patrick Maynard, Black Coat Press

Once Upon a Time in Afrika by Balogun Ojetade, MVmedia

Murder Most Faire by Teel James Glenn, Post Mortem Press

Hawk: Hand of the Machine by Van Allen Plexico, White Rocket Books

Legends of Darkness by Georgia L. Jones, Blackwyrm Publishing

Prohibition by Terrence McCauley, Airship 27 Productions

Know No Fear by Dan Abnett, Games Workshop

The Song of Kwasin by Philip Jose Farmer and Christopher Paul Carey, Subterranean Press.

Prague Fatale by Philip Kerr, Putnam

Earthstrike Agenda by Bobby Nash, BEN Books

Green To Go by John Cunnigham, Green St.

Dinosaur Jazz by Michael Panush, Curiosity Quills Press

BEST NOVELLA

The Lone Ranger: Vendetta by Howard Hopkins, Moonstone

Moses: the Chronicles of Harriet Tubman (Bookx 1 and 2) by Balogun Ojetade, Balogun Ojetade

The Looking Glass Gambit from The Further Adventures of Maxi and Moxie by Teel James Glenn, Booksforabuck.com

Unearthed  by William Preston, Isaac Asimiov’s Science Fiction Magazine, 9/12

Play the Way Home by Jessica McHugh (as EJ McCain), P. Mortem’s Tall Tales

Exiles of Kho by Christopher Paul Carey, Meteor House Press

Savage Song by Warren Murphy, Destroyer Books

Outlaw Blues by Percival Constantine, Pulpwork Press

Dragon Kings of the Orient by Percival Constantine, Pulpwork Press

The Sons of Thor by Erwin K. Roberts, Pro Se Productions

The Knockout by Robert J. Randisi, Fight Card Productions

Samaritan by Bobby Nash, BEN Books

Sinbad and the Voyage to the Land of the Frozen Sun by Derrick Ferguson , The Adventures of Sinbad, Airship 27 Productions

BEST COLLECTION/ANTHOLOGY

Blood-Price of the Missionary’s Gold: The New Adventures of Armless O’Neil by Various, Pro Se Productions

Nightbeat: Night Stories by Various, Radio Archives

Mystery Men (and Women) III by Various, Airship 27 Productions

The Huntress of Greenwood by Nancy Hansen, Pro Se Productions

Tales of the Rook by Various, Pro Se Productions

Sgt. Janus Spirit Breaker by Jim Beard, Airship 27 Productions

The New Adventures of the Eagle Volume 1 by Various, Pro Se Productions

The Adventures of Lazarus Gray Vol 2: Die Glocke, by Barry Reese Pro Se Productions

Sinbad: The New Voyages By Various, Airship 27 Productions

The Green Hornet: Still at Large by Various, Moonstone Books

The Ruby Files By Various, Airship 27 Productions

Headline Ghouls: The Further Adventures of Maxi and Moxie by Teel James Glenn, Booksforabuck.com

Monster Aces by Various, Pro Se Productions

The Adventures of the Pulptress by Various, Pro Se Productions

BEST SHORT STORY

Armless O’Neil and the Chase for the Kuba Mask by RP Steeves from Blood: The Price of the Missionary’s Gold: The New Adventures of Armless O’Neil, Pro Se Productions

The Chicago Punch by Paul Bishop from Nightbeat: Night Stories, Radio Archives

Doc Panic by Dave White from Pro Se Presents 16, Pro Se Productions

The Killing Games by Barry Reese from The Tales of the Rook Volume 1, Pro Se Productions

Lucky by Tommy Hancock from Nightbeat: Night Stories, Radio Archives

Doctor Fear by Jarrod Courtenmanche, Secret Agent “X,” Volume 4. Airship 27 Productions

The Coming Storm by Teel James Glenn from New Adventures of the Eagle, Pro Se Productions

Lady Madeline’s Dive by Terrence McCauley from Thuglit #1, Thuglit

The Feast of Stephen by R P Steeves from An Undead Christmas, Undead Press

The Abominable Myra Linsky Rises Again by Chuck Miller from Pro Se Presents #13, Pro Se Productions

Making of a Hero by Barry Reese From The Adventures of Lazarus Gray: Die Glocke, Pro Se Productions

The Keener Eye: The Web of Life by Nancy A. Hansen from Pro Se Presents 12, Pro Se Productions

Death of a Dream by Christofer Nigro from Tales of the Shadowmen, Volume 9, Black Coat Press

Tulsa Blackie’s Last Dive by William Patrick Maynard from The Ruby Files, Airship 27 Productions


The Portrait by Terry Alexander from The Adventures of the Pulptress, Pro Se Productions


The Hellmouth by Barry Reese from The New Adventures of Thunder Jim Wade, Pro Se Productions


Extraction by Jessica McHugh from Fear the Abyss, Post Mortem Press


The Wild Huntsman by Win Scott Eckert from The Worlds of Philip Jose Farmer 3: Portraits of a Trickster, Meteor House Books
Hand of the Monster by Jim Beard from Monster Aces, Pro Se Productions

Red Lily and the Oriental Flower by D. Alan Lewis from Nashville Noir, Parthenon Press

The Curse of Baron Samedi by Percival Constantine from Tales of the Rook, Pro Se Productions

The Ghoul by Ron Fortier from Monster Aces, Pro Se Productions

Paranoia by Kevin Rodgers from Pro Se Presents March 2012, Pro Se Productions

Die Giftig Lillie, Sean Taylor from The Ruby Files, Airship 27 Productions

The Butcher’s Festival by Ron Fortier from The Adventures of the Pulptress, Pro Se Productions

Crown of the Cobra King by Frank Shildiner from Secret Agent X Vol. 4, Airship 27 Productions


BEST COVER ART

Witches, by Larry Elmore, Blackwyrm Publishing

Gil Murillo, The National Maul-A Misty Johnson Mystery, Seven Realms

Tales of the Rook, Volume 1 by Bob Hall, Tales of the Rook Vol. 1, Pro Se Productions

Mystery Men (And Women) III, by Marco Turini, Airship 27 Productions

Monster Aces byTerry Pavlet, Pro Se Productions

Sentinels: Metalgod by Chris Kohler, White Rocket Books

Lazarus Gray: Die Glocke by George Sellas, Pro Se Productions

The New Adventures of the Eagle Volume 1 by David L. Russell, Pro Se Productions

The Ruby Files by Mark Wheatley, Airship 27 Productions

Pro Se Presents #13 by Sean Ali, Pro Se Productions

Drowning in Red Ink by Micah Birchfield, James Mullaney

The Wild Adventures of Doc Savage: The Infernal Buddha by Joe DeVito, Altus Press

The Destiny of Fu Manchu by Christine Clavel, Black Coat Press

Once Upon a Time in Afrika by Stan Weaver, Jr., MVmedia

Doc Claus by Teel James Glenn, Pulp Empire

Blackthorn: Dynasty of Mars by Adam Diller, White Rocket Books

Pro Se Presents 14 by Sean Ali, Pro Se Productions

Sting of the Silver Manticore, David L. Russell, Pro Se Productions

Prohibition by Rob Moran and Shannon Hall, Airship 27 Productions

The Green Hornet Still at Large by Doug Klauba, Moonstone

Three Against the Stars by Laura Givens, Airship 27 Productions

Nightbeat: Night Stories by Doug Klauba, Radio Archives

The Family Grace by George Sellas, Pro Se Productions

Dragon Kings of the Orient by Percival Constantine, Pulpwork Press

Exiles of Kho: A Tale of Lost Khokarsa by Mike Hoffman, Meteor House

The Horn by Mike FylesUchronic Tales

Huntress of Greenwood by David Russell, Pro Se Productions

Project Alpha by Marc Guerrero, Pro Se Productions

Captain Action: The Riddle of the Glowing Men by Nick Runge, Airship 27 Productions

BEST INTERIOR ART

The Ruby Files Volume 1 by Rob Moran, Airship 27 Productions

Mystery Men (And Women) III by Rob Davis, Airship 27 Productions

The Adventures of Lazarus Gray Volume 2: Die Glocke by George Sellas, Pro Se Productions

Robin Hood: Arrow of Justice by Rob Davis, Airship 27 Productions

The Moon Man Volume 1 by Ralf van der Hoeven, Airship 27 Productions

Sentinels: Metalgod by Chris Kohler, White Rocket Books

Sgt. Janus, Spirit Breaker, Airship 27 Productions

Tales of the Rook Volume 1 by George Sellas, Pro Se Productions

Exiles of Kho: A Tale of Lost Khokarsa by Mike Hoffman, Meteor House

The Ruby Files by Rob Moran, Airship 27 Productions

The Baron’s Revenge by Rob Davis, Airship 27 Productions

BEST PULP REVIVAL

Armless O’Neil by Various, Pro Se Productions

Doc Savage by Will Murray, Altus Press

Thunder Jim Wade by Various, Pro Se Productions

Richard Knight by Various, Pro Se Productions

The Moon Man by Various, Airship 27 Productions

Secret Agent X by Various, Airship 27 Productions

Ki-Gor in Jungle Tales by Various, Airship 27 Productions

Doctor Death by Tommy Hancock, Pro Se Productions

BEST NEW CHARACTER

Camille Boucher in The National Maul by R. P. Steeves, Seven Realms

The Silver Manticore in The Sting of the Silver Manticore by PJ Lozito, Pro Se Productions

Rick Ruby in The Ruby Files, Vol 1 by Sean Taylor and Bobby Nash, Airship 27 Productions

Kiri in Mystery Men (And Women) III by Curtis Ferlund, Airship 27 Productions

Doc Panic in Pro Se Presents 15 by Dave White, Pro Se Productions

Hawk in Hawk: Hand of the Machine by Van Allen Plexico, White Rocket Books

Sgt. Janus, Spirit Breaker  in Sgt. Janus, Spirit Breaker by Jim Beard, Airship 27 Productions

Dr. Dana Unknown Jr in Pro Se Presents 13 by Chuck Miller, Pro Se Productions

Jimmy Dolan in Tales of the Hanging Monkey by Billy Craig, Airship 27 Productions

Bob Howard, The Crusader from Cross Plains in Adventures in Otherwhen: Tales of Pulpfantastique by Teel James Glenn, Booksforabuck.com

Samoda in the Remnants of Life Series by Georgia L. Jones, Blackwyrm

The Pulptress by Tommy Hancock in The Adventures of the Pulptress, Pro Se Productions

Terry Quinn in Prohibition by Terrence McCauley, Airship 27 Productions

Carl Flint in Outlaw Blues by Percival Constantine, Pulpwork Press

Sun Wukong in Dragon Kings of the Orient by Percival Constantine, Pulpwork Press

E-31 in Modern Pulp Heroes by Terry Alexander, Pulp Empire

BEST AUTHOR

Van Allen Plexico

William Preston

RP Steeves

PJ Lozito

Barry Reese

Chuck Miller

Dan Abnett

James Mullaney

Howard Hopkins

Will Murray

William Patrick Maynard

Teel James Glenn

Ron Fortier

Bobby Nash

Derrick Ferguson

Warren Murphy

Jessica McHugh

Win Scott Eckert

Percival Constantine

Nancy Holder

Andrew Salmon

Christopher Paul Carey

Gary Lovisi

Michael Panush

Joshua Reynolds

BEST PULP COMIC

Masks, Dynamite Comics

The Black Beetle, Dark Horse Comics Presents

Rocketeer: Cargo of Doom, IDW

Price for the Asking, Twilight Star Productions

The Shadow, Dynamite Comics

The Once and Future Tarzan, Dark Horse Comics

Atomic Robo: The Ghost of Station X, Red 5 Comics

Fatale, Image Comics

Robyn of Sherwood, Redbud Studio Comics

BEST PULP MAGAZINE

Pro Se Presents

Weird Tales

BEST NEW WRITER

Curtis Fernlund

David White

Jim Beard

Balogun Ojetade

Greg Daniel

Georgia L. Jones

D. Alan Lewis

Ashley Mangin

Andrea Judy


ALL PULP’S NEW PULP BEST SELLER LIST DEBUTS!

ALL PULP BEST SELLER LIST-FEBRUARY 4, 2013
(Concept Originated by Barry Reese)
#3 This Week on
All Pulp’s New Pulp Bestseller List
Welcome to the first installment of All Pulp’s New Pulp Best Seller List, originally created by Barry Reese! Before we get to what you’re all waiting for, here are the rules by which this little list comes together.

1)    This list only tracks sales through AMAZON. It does not keep track of sales through Barnes and Noble, face-to-face or anything else!

2)   
This list only tracks PRINT sales. Exactly how Amazon calculates these things is mostly a trade secret and they vary wildly from day to day. If I checked this tomorrow, the list could be very different. This list reflects sales ranks as of Monday morning February 4, 2013.


3)   In order to keep the focus on new releases, eligible works must have been published within the last three months. So, since this list is being done on February 4, 2013, we are only looking at books published since November 4, 2012. Please keep that in mind before complaining that Title X is not listed. Also, keep in mind that for the most part, we are tracking sales from smaller and mid level press publishers who actively publish New Pulp material. We won’t generally track sales from Simon and Schuster or places like that — they have the New York Times Bestseller List for that. If one of the major publishers starts doing The Shadow or something, we’ll track that, but some publishers will not be listed here in order to keep the focus on the publishers actively working to produce and promote New Pulp.

4)   
Like the name suggests, we’re tracking “New” pulp —not sales rankings for reprints of classic material. In order for something to qualify for this list, it has to be at least 50% new material that has not been printed in book form before.


5)    We are human. If you are aware of a title that should be listed below (keeping in mind all the rules above), please let us know and we will make sure to remedy the situation.


6)    This information is garnered mostly from All Pulp, New Pulp, the Pulp Factory mailing list and a few other sites. If you think we might miss your release, let us know in advance — drop All Pulp a line and tell us when it’s being released.

Without further ado, here’s the completely and totally unofficial New Pulp bestseller list as of right now (title, then publisher, then release date, then sales rank):

1) Sherlock Holmes, Consulting Detective, Volume 4 by Various (Airship 27, January 19, 2012) – 32,920

2) Finn’s Golem by Gregg Taylor ( Autogyro, January 10, 2013) -311,836

3) Fight Card: Bluff City Brawler by Heath Lowrance as Jack Tunney (Fight Card, January 31, 2013) – 631,972

4) Prohibition by Terrence McCauley, (Airship 27, December 15, 2012) – 637,244

5) The Fangslinger and the Preacher by Bret Lee Hart (Western Trail Blazer, January 3, 2013) – 671, 250


6) The New Adventures of the Griffon by Various (Pro Se Productions, January 17, 2013) – 696, 054

7) The Studio Specter by W. Peter Miller (Uchronic Books, January 5, 2013) – 782,506

8 ) Sentinels: Metalgod by Van Plexico (White Rocket Books, December 10, 2012) – 1,497,017


9) Three Against the Stars by Joe Bonadonna (Airship 27, November 26, 2012) – 1,500,519

10) Pro Se Presents # 16 by Various (Pro Se Press, January 8, 2013) – 1,682,166

#7 This Week On
All Pulp’s New Pulp Bestseller List!
Just missing the list were: Tier Zero by Henry Brown ( Virtual Pulp, January 13, 2013) – 1,706,803, Prophecy’s Gambit by Nancy Hansen (Pro Se Press, January 3, 2012) – 1,792,739, and Whack Job by Mike Baron (December 25, 2012)-1,194,265. 

Although not as soft as the most recent and last list byBarry, there’s still plenty of room for titles to climb.  Airship 27 Productions comes roaring in with their latest Sherlock Holmes collection, proving what this list has shown frequently– Classic characters rise to the top.  A few new entries make the list as well from Publishers that we’ll hopefully see more of.

One of the plans we have for this list is to make it a truly comprehensive New Pulp list focused on Small and Midlevel Publishers.   We’ll continually be adding publishers into the mix as we discover them, so if you know of a book or Publisher we should be keeping up with, let us know at allpulp@yahoo.com.


Also, the All Pulp New Pulp Ebook Best Seller List will debut this Friday here on All Pulp!  This list will track only Kindle sales with rankings posted on Amazon.  Again, if you know a book we need to include (no short stories sold as Kindle singles please), then give us a shot at allpulp@yahoo.com.

This week, Airship 27 leads the pack with three titles in the top ten, followed by Pro Se with Two, and Autogyro, Fight Card, Western Trail Blazer, Uchronic Books,  and White Rocket Books all garnering one.  But, as Barry always said, Take it with a grain of salt, folks.

FORTIER TAKES ON THE LATEST SENTINELS-METALGOD!

SENTINELS : METALGOD
By Van Allen Plexico
White Rocket Books
189 pages
metalgod-9167060
Getting this book was pretty much like getting an extra Christmas gift for this reviewer.  Go through these archives and you will discover we’ve been reading Van Plexico’s Sentinels series since day one; and applauding all of them.  Of course the inherent danger with any long running series is that the writer will become tired of the concept and characters and begin to offer up deluded stories missing the verve and punch of his or her earlier entries.
Well, rest easy, Sentinel fans old and new, “Sentinels – Metalgod,” is another top notch chapter in the saga of Earth’s mightiest super-heroes.  Without skipping a beat, this new book picks up where the last story arc end; the cataclysmic battle between the Sentinels and a trio of super beings all bent on the complete destruction of our planet. (Note, if you haven’t read those books yet, you have some serious catching up to do.)
So in the wake of the Sentinels miraculous victory over these outer space threats, the team finds itself divided.  With their leader, super powerful Ultraa, locked in stasis in a giant red gem, Pulsar (Lyn Li) returns to Earth with the remnants of the team minus scientist Esro Brachis who has opted to visit the alien worlds of Kur-Bai Empire with Mondrian, a beautiful Captain in the Kur-Bai Starfleet with whom he is infatuated.  They are traveling with aboard a fleet starship commanded by Devenn, leader of the Kur-Bai super warriors known as the Elites.
No sooner does Pulsar and company return to Sentinels HQ then a new super being calling himself Law appears and, taking control of the Earth’s communications satellites, broadcast a warning that the Kur-Bai areactually planning to an invasion the Earth.  It falls squarely on Pulsar’s shoulders to deal with this mysterious new character while at the same time trying to recruit new members to help bolster the team’s decimated ranks.
At the same time the Elites, nearing their home world, are attacked by a Kur-Bai starship crewed by powerful robots called Eradicators.  Esro and the Elites discover a military junta has taken over the governing body of the empire and they have been labeled outlaws to be captured and imprisoned.  Barely managing to foil the Eradicators, they make their way to a Kur-Bai space station and there learn the full extent of the events that have befallen their people.  A power-hungry admiral of the fleet has successfully orchestrated a coup, killing thousands of loyal citizens in the process. A full scale civil war is about to erupt throughout the empire and Devenn and his Elites are caught right in the middle.
Those of you who are fans of this series understand itshomage to Marvel Comics’ Avengers.  “Sentinels – Metalgod,” now tips its literary inspiration cap to that classic sci-fi TV series, Babylon 5.  Filled with political shenanigans, outer space battles, empire civil wars this book catapults readers into a whole now universe of action and adventure while at the same time injecting it with a marvelous wry commentary on today’s shallow attitudes about fame and popularity.  The scenes of Pulsar meeting her German based fan club had this reviewer in stitches.  Plexico’s enthusiasm for this series has never been stronger and that is evident on every single page.  If you aren’t a Sentinels fan yet, it’s high time you checked it out. This kind of reading fun doesn’t come along every day.

FORTIER TAKES ON ‘TARZAN-THE GREYSTOKE LEGACY’!

ALL PULP REVIEWS by Ron Fortier
TARZAN-The Greystoke Legacy
By Andy Briggs
Open Road Media
177 pages
tarzan-2881523

We’d vaguely heard mention someone was going to be re-launching a new, modern version of Tarzan a while back then promptly forgot all about it.  These kind of re-imaginings have been tried before with various pulp heroes; most of them have failed miserably and are better left forgotten.  Thus when one of the marketing agents for Open Road Media contacted us about reviewing Andy Briggs new Tarzan books we were curious enough to accept their gracious invitation.  The books arrived two weeks ago (they are also available as Ebooks) and we were anxious to dig into them.
It is important that we make it resoundingly clear that Tarzan of the Apes as created and written by Edgar Rice Burroughs is one of ourfavorite fictional characters.  Having discovered Burroughs books in paperback format during our teenyears, we devoured most of them and particularly cherish the first two; “Tarzan of the Apes” and “The Return of Tarzan.”  Together they tell one of the most amazing yarns ever put to paper and from which an entire cottage industry was born.  Tarzan is easily one of the most recognizable figures of all times and has been portrayed in movies (starting with the silent era), TV series, comic books, radio and who knows what else.  His venerable tale is of man’s daily struggles with survival, the preservation of his natural environment and the steadily encroaching beast that is modern civilization.
After having read, “Tarzan : The Greystoke Legacy,” we confess to having been wonderfully surprised at just how well it was both conceived and executed.  Briggs is a truly talented writer who is obviously a true fan of Burroughs’ original stories and he reshapes the origin of the Ape Man with both a logical presentation and a great deal of reverence for the classic source material.  Unlike Burroughs, who lived in a time when his background setting for Tarzan was a still largely unexplored “Dark” Continent, Briggs is challenged to offer us a hero whose jungle home is a rapidly dwindling landscape endangered daily by multiple factions.
Burroughs never once, in his many books, ever offered us scientific details of the wildlife and flora of the savage jungle he wrote about.  Not so in this retelling.  Yet, despite his handicap of portraying an authentic wilderness, Briggs never loses sight of the intrinsic nature of his hero; Tarzan is a savage being nurtured by the law of the jungle.  He kills his enemies and protects his friend, be they beast or human.
Jane Porter is a troubled, lonely young woman, who has followed her father into Congo where he and his partner are operating anillegal tree-cutting operation.  When mysterious acts of vandalism begin plaguing the camp and slowing down the work, those in charge believe the sabotage to be the work of militant rebels hiding deeper in the jungle.  One night someone sets fires to the machinery and Jane, disorientated by an explosion, awakens to find herself lost in the jungle.  When he is found and rescued by a half naked white man calling himself Tarzan, she is propelled into an adventure that will both alter her world view and awaken an inner strength and courage she didn’t know she possessed.  All because of this strange, mysterious man who dwells amongst the giant apes of the forest.
The last thing this reviewer desires is to spoil the exuberant, grand adventure this book presents by giving away scenes that are both fresh while echoing the iconic trappings of this legendary figure.  “Tarzan : The Greystorke Legacy,” is a rousing, hugely entertaining read that respects it heritage while offering us a truly exciting “new” Tarzan for our times.  We can’t wait to dig into book two.  Stat tuned, Tarzan fans.

UCHRONIC PRESS ANNOUNCES LATEST UCHRONIC TALE- THE STUDIO SPECTRE!

PRESS RELEASE-The Uchronic Press is proud to announce the third novella in the Uchronic Tales line—The Studio Spectre.



This time around, Clark Tyler finds himself on a movie lot with a killer on the loose. The rumors had always warned that the lot was haunted, but this time it seems the Spectre is out to kill Hollywood’s hottest starlet.

W. Peter Miller (The Zeppelin, The Horn) brings another exciting pulp action tale to the Uchronic series. Dames, death, and Tinseltown are the backdrop for this mystery in the Golden Age of Hollywood.

Is the Spectre real, or an elaborate hoax? The Jade Monk joins forces with Clark as they hunt for The Studio Spectre!

The eBook is on sale now at Amazon and the Nook store and just about everywhere else eBooks are sold. The paperback is at Amazon. The book features a stunning cover by Mike Fyles and is packed with thrill, chills, and a firetruck chase through the streets of Hollywood! How many books can say that!

The Uchronic Press serves reader that crave action, excitement, and a bit of an edge to their pulp adventure fiction. Or stories take place in a alternate past, a Uchronic world greatly like our own, but with a dash more mystery, danger, and the macabre. Here you will find heroic adventure, outlandish science, ferocious alchemy, and an alternate history just slightly larger than our own.

Look for other adventures featuring perilous airships, lost civilizations, and earth-shattering danger!

For more information visit:
UchronicTales.com
docsavagetales.blogspot.com

UCHRONIC PRESS ANNOUNCES LATEST UCHRONIC TALE- THE STUDIO SPECTRE!

PRESS RELEASE-The Uchronic Press is proud to announce the third novella in the Uchronic Tales line—The Studio Spectre.

This time around, Clark Tyler finds himself on a movie lot with a killer on the loose. The rumors had always warned that the lot was haunted, but this time it seems the Spectre is out to kill Hollywood’s hottest starlet.

W. Peter Miller (The Zeppelin, The Horn) brings another exciting pulp action tale to the Uchronic series. Dames, death, and Tinseltown are the backdrop for this mystery in the Golden Age of Hollywood.

Is the Spectre real, or an elaborate hoax? The Jade Monk joins forces with Clark as they hunt for The Studio Spectre!

The eBook is on sale now at Amazon and the Nook store and just about everywhere else eBooks are sold. The paperback is at Amazon. The book features a stunning cover by Mike Fyles and is packed with thrill, chills, and a firetruck chase through the streets of Hollywood! How many books can say that!

The Uchronic Press serves reader that crave action, excitement, and a bit of an edge to their pulp adventure fiction. Or stories take place in a alternate past, a Uchronic world greatly like our own, but with a dash more mystery, danger, and the macabre. Here you will find heroic adventure, outlandish science, ferocious alchemy, and an alternate history just slightly larger than our own.

Look for other adventures featuring perilous airships, lost civilizations, and earth-shattering danger!

For more information visit:
UchronicTales.com
docsavagetales.blogspot.com