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Hancock Tips His Hat to a few Tales from Back in the Day!
TIPPIN’ HANCOCK’S HAT-Pulp Reviews by Tommy Hancock
This is a bit of a different column than my usual. Normally, I tip my hat to the newest members and denizens of what many of us are referring to as “The Pulp Renaissance”, looking at new authors and works. But I also am a reader, student, and mostly a fan of the true blue classics from the golden era of Pulps. Which means I read those missives and from time to time will share my thoughts with some of them with you…like these for instance…
DEATH IS TOO EASY
by Arthur J. Burks
http://www.blackmask.com/, http://www.pulpgen.com/
Two cops work as partners and work from two different philosophies, one by the book, the other by the gun. When it finally gets too much for the law and order type, he walks off from his more violent partner who ends up taking on a whole mob on his own. Quickly he learns how even with a fast gun, he can’t do it all alone. Will he have to?
This is a fast paced story that does a good job of throwing bullets on every page as well as giving you a one two punch on characterization. The two main characters are just barely more dimensional than the cardboard cutout criminals they fight, but it’s just enough to make the story interesting. Burks does a good job of not only showing personality traits, but also of showing how characters evolve and grow. This is definitely a shining example of what pulp tales could be when done right.
FOUR OUT OF FIVE TIPS OF THE HAT-Cops, robbers, bullets, and character growth. Wow.
CAVE OF TERROR
from the Lone Ranger Magazine
by Fran Striker
August, 1937
I’ve read enough western pulp and read, seen, and heard enough Lone Ranger to know what to expect when I read a tale starring the Masked Man and his Indian companion. OK, so even I can be wrong! CAVE OF TERROR on its surface is a tale of the Lone Ranger and Tonto going after bad guys who are holed up in a labyrinthine cave led by a criminal mastermind who might also be an once well respected judge. This leads to all the stereotypical western conceits, confrontations, and cliches and Striker deftly nails every single one of those.
But CAVE OF TERROR exceeds the typical western pulp limitations. This is a thriller bar none and I will honestly tell you that The Ranger in this tale is not a super heroic man in a mask, but a hero who gets in way over his cowboy hat more than once and knows it! Striker amps up the danger and intrigue, setting a very good stage for the ‘Who is the Boss’ mystery and puts the Ranger in situations that test even his abilities and does it in a very believable way. CAVE OF TERROR is a fantastically wild, pulse pounding well paced mystery adventure!
FIVE OUT OF FIVE TIPS OF THE HAT!-Hi yo, Silver!! For sure.
LONG SHOT
by Richard Sale
Detective Fiction Weekly
January 9, 1937
This is the first story to star Candid Jones, one of Richard Sale’s most used pulp heroes. Jones, along with another creation, Daffy Dill, established Sale as an author skilled at writing off kilter, yet consistently well paced hard boiled detective stories. Although LONG SHOT does have the qualities that made Sale the legend he became, it isn’t really a top of the line tale. The storyline concerns attempts to manipulate races at a racetrack with a good dose of murder thrown in. Sale’s characterizations are extremely entertaining and the wrap up of the case is fairly decent, but the build up lags in parts and in other parts simply lacks cohesiveness. The connections that have to be made to discover the killer’s identity aren’t really as strong as they could have been. But overall a fine debut for a neat character.
THREE OUT OF FIVE TIPS OF HANCOCK’S HAT-Less racing, more Candid would have been nice.
Hancock Tips His Hat to Nick Kismet-Espionage, Action, Magic-All in One Spot!
TIPPIN’ HANCOCK’S HAT-Pulp Reviews by Tommy Hancock
THE DEVIL YOU KNOW
by Sean Ellis
Published by Seven Realms Publishing
Published 12/10
Pulp is a wonderful field. It encompasses so many genres and focuses on so many different types of heroes, villains, and characters. You can have action, crime, magic, adventure, even romance and humor in the stories that erupt from the volcano of pulp fiction. What’s even better is when all the lava and ash and such mingle together and what you get when it hardens is a character and a story that has it all.
Sean Ellis’ Nick Kismet in THE DEVIL YOU KNOW is the result of a perfect pulp eruption.
Kismet, a consultant for the Global Heritage Commission, is basically a one stop man of action/adventure/troubleshooting/globehopping. In this novella, you get a hint of his history and background, enough to know that if Ellis had written him back in the 1930s and 40s, then Kismet would rank right up there with The Saint and The Falcon.
This particular story has Kismet getting a call that hints at giving him information on Prometheus, a shadowy group that he’s tracked in past cases. At first Kismet thinks the half message he receives is nothing, but he can’t resist following it up. Keeping the meet suggested in the message, Kismet gets involved in what appears to be a tug of war between a traditional Mafia family and Colombian drug cartels led by a seemingly immortal priest who wears an ancient biblical artifact full of evil. I say appears because by the time Kismet rescues the girls, fights commandoes, runs from attack dogs and ATVs, and basically incites a shootout at a mansion, what Nick is really involved in turns out to be something altogether different. And awesome.
THE DEVIL YOU KNOW is a fast paced tale that starts at the beginning and doesn’t stop. The only real criticism I have is that maybe it starts too quickly in the high octane vein and the reader has to spend some time catching his/her breath to figure out just what is going on. Ellis allows for this, though, less than halfway through the tale, so this again is just a minor issue.
Like your heroes able to do just about anything, think on their feet, and ready to answer any call or even half messages? Then Kismet is your man. Ellis combines a modern pacing and today’s world with a pulp archetypal hero who is unabashedly a jack of all trades, a man’s man, and here to do good. Wow.
FOUR OUT OF FIVE TIPS OF THE HAT-Leslie Charteris, meet your successor.
Joanne Siegel, R.I.P.
Joanne Siegel, the widow of Superman co-creator Jerry Siegel and model for the original likeness of Lois Lane and the person who inspired Lois’s middle name, has passed away at 93. Word hit the comics community yesterday through a Tweet from Brad Meltzer and was later confirmed by the Cleveland Plain Dealer.CBR quoted Meltzer:
“I got the word from the people at the Siegel and Shuster Society. I met her when I was doing [my novel] ‘The Book of Lies’ because I was researching who killed Jerry Siegel’s father. I met Laura first, who is Jerry and Joanne’s daughter. We became really good friends, and she said to me ‘Of all the people who have ever researched Jerry Siegel, you’re the only one who’s ever called us.’ I became really close with the family, and they seemed really excited that someone was going to tell their story.”
“The crazy part is– of everyone I’ve ever spoken to in my life, there’s nothing like speaking to Lois Lane. When I finally met her at the unveiling of the repaired Siegel and Shuster house, which I flew to because I wanted to meet her face-to-face and see all the work everyone in Cleveland had done, everyone said to me ‘She’s beautiful. You won’t believe how beautiful she is.’ And I was thinking that this is a 90-year-old woman…how beautiful can she be? But she was beautiful. It was the only way to describe her. You saw here, and there was this stunning, elegant, amazing woman that was a spitfire.”It wasn’t like talking to your grandmother. You really saw ‘intrepid reporter’ as part of her personality. I just got a note from her in December talking about everything we’ve been doing on the [History] show and it’s still amazing to see how much she had going even at that age.”
The former Joanne Carter met her future husband and his artist partner Joe Shuster in Cleveland in the late ’30s when she responded to an ad the two had placed looking for local models. The original sketch Shuster did of her grew to become the foundation for fast-talking reporter Lois Lane, and Joanne later married Jerry in 1948. In the years since, she stood by the struggling writer as he saw the financial benefit and artistic credit for Superman pass him by while his publisher pushed the character to wider cultural acceptance, and later took a very public and prolific role in fighting DC owner Warner Bros. for the rights to the character after her husband’s passing in 1996. Along with her family and the family of Shuster, Siegel teamed with well-known intellectual property lawyer Marc Toberoff to push for more rights on the character than Superman’s creators had ever been able to earn in their lifetimes, which led to various reversions and much wrangling over settlements and compensation. The suit has been on hold since October, and it is unknown how Siegel’s death will affect the proceedings.
Here’s a photo from Alan Light of the Siegels (Jerry, Joanne, and daughter Laura) from the 1976 San Diego Comic Con.
Hancock Tips His Hat to a Christmas Tale a bit Late…or…a bit Early…
TIPPIN’ HANCOCK’S HAT-Pulp Reviews by Tommy Hancock
‘KRAMPUSNACT’
A Charles St. Cyprian Tale
written By Joshua Reynolds
distributed in limited time as free tale from Author
We oftentimes get the attitude that just because a story has a theme or is centered around an event, especially a holiday, that it is just that…a special novelty tale in remembrance of so-and-so and/or when-and-when. We feel these sort of stories don’t usually have anything to offer to the general literary field or to the character they deal with, that they’re simply a trumpeting of a special time and that’s it, that they sort of stand alone. I hate that because we miss the fact often that these stories have great things to contribute, that because they do deal with a holiday or special event, there are aspects of said day and event that can be mined, made literary, and transformed from an obscure detail or more hokum into sparkling tools of storytelling and even horrifying figures we are not likely to soon forget.
Joshua Reynolds, fortunately, did not miss that fact. Not at all.
KRAMPUSNACHT is a tale that Josh wrote last year to introduce a new series character he’s doing for Pro Se Productions’ FANTASY AND FEAR magazine. Charles St. Cyprian is the Queen’s handler of occult oddities and mystical mysteries and comes with a skillset all his own in dealing with such things. This tale, however, finds St. Cyprian and his very well crafted assistant Ebe Gallowglass (maybe it’s the whole British motif, but I got a very Emma Peel feel for Gallowglass) at Cyprian’s residence when he receives a visit from an old acquaintance. This acquaintance has run afoul of one of the lesser known and much less liked aspects of Christmas mythology, the antithesis to Santa Claus, the creature known as The Krampus. The tale involves St. Cyprian’s attempts to deal with the Krampus, determine if his friend’s place on said naughty list is valid, and to wrap it all up with a nice Christmas bow, which he does. And so, as an author, does Reynolds.
Reynolds paints not only a horrifying yuletide haunt with this tale, but he also sets up St. Cyprian and Gallowglass very well. Their dialogue, their interactions, and their overall personalities are so well established that the reader wants more, but also feels like they already know them. And as for St. Cyprian’s ‘client’, Joshua builds this character from the first word to the last in such a way that he himself is a mystery and the way it unfolds is completely and totally satisfying.
For those of you who missed KRAMPUSHNACHT, I’m sorry. You can catch St. Cyprian every third month in FANTASY AND FEAR. For those who got the pleasure of this great Christmas introduction to the characters, it was a good holiday, wasn’t it?
FIVE OUT OF FIVE TIPS OF HANCOCK’S HAT
ALL PULP NEWSSTAND BULLDOG EDITION 2/15/11
MOONSTONE MONDAY-MOONSTONE IN JUNE!!
MOONSTONE RELEASE-JUNE 2011!
The SPIDER: Judge, Jury, & Executioner HC
Story: Robin W. Bailey, Will Murray
Art: J. Anthony Kosar, Cortney Skinner
Cover: Gary Carbon
ISBN: 978-1-936814-05-3 978-1-936814-05-3
140 pgs, grayscale, HC, $20.99
The very first Spider tpb collection ever!
Get the complete run of the first series of the most violent and relentless crime fighter of all time! Justice served!
Contains: The Spider Judgement Knight #1-3, “Chaos Maker”, and The Spider short from The Phantom Noir #6.
BONUS: Exclusive to this volume: a BRAND new Nita and Ram team up story!
DOMINO LADY: Blonde Ambition Lt Ed HC
Author: Nancy Holder
Art: Steve Bryant, etc
Cover: Mark Sparacio
ISBN: 978-1936814-04-6 978-1936814-04-6
162pgs, color, HC, $41.99
This will be the only time this material is reprinted in color!
Join NY Times Best Selling author Nancy Holder as she makes sure that Domino Lady gets embroiled in all kinds of mysteries that need her special touch. She will bring the bad guys to their knees any way she can!
Domino Lady, the avenging angel
This volume collects Domino Lady #1-5 of the regular series.
BONUS: Exclusive to this volume: a BRAND new Domino Lady-Boston Blackie CTHULHU tale!!
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SHERLOCK HOLMES: Crossovers Casebook
Written by: Barbara Hambly, Will Murray, Kevin Van Hook
Cover Art: Timothy Lantz
Edited by: Howard Hopkins
240pgs, b/w, Squarebound, 6”x9”, $16.95
ISBN: 10: 1-933076-99-2
ISBN: 13: 978-1-933076-99-71-933076-99-2
ISBN: 13: 978-1-933076-99-7
Sherlock Holmes…teams up with other adventurers and investigators!
With the success of the Sherlock Holmes film with Robert Downey, Jr and Jude law, and the BBC television updating of the character (“Sherlock”), interest in him is at an all time high!
Moonstone Books is proud to present this original anthology featuring never before seen tales of the world’s first consulting detective, Mr Sherlock Holmes!
Barbara Hambly, Will Murray, Kevin Van Hook, Martin Powell, Matthew Baugh, Martin Gately, Don Roff, Win Scott Eckert, Chris Sequiera, & Joe Gentile
**See it here…a secret sequel to the classic Holmes novel “The Sign of Four”!
**Sherlock and Conan Doyle’s own “Lost World” Professor Challenger!
**Holmes teams up with one of the most famous thieves of literature, Arsene Lupin! Lawrence of Arabi?, Calamity Jane? Sexton Blake? Houdini?
The Thinking Machine?
How about Doc Savage’s father, Colonel Savage? They are all here working with Sherlock Holmes in these brand new stories!
Holmes, as he was created, in his lodgings at 221B Baker Street: Victorian London
This book keeps Holmes in his own enviroment, in the Conan Doyle tradition, with all of the customary trapping Holmes fans crave!
**Retailer incentive: any retailer who orders BOTH the CD set and the Crossovers Casebook will receive one CD radio drama sample and one free Holmes GN!!
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The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, CD’s Volume 1
5-CD Set
Retail Price: $14.98
ISBN: 9781610812016
For many long-time fans, Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce will always personify Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson – but it may come as a surprise to even the most devoted Baker Street enthusiast to discover that, for one radio season, the World’s Greatest Consulting Detective was successfully portrayed by actor Tom Conway, best remembered for playing The Falcon in a series of 1940s films. Now Radio Archives is releasing a new 5-CD set of rare original radio broadcasts featuring Tom Conway and Nigel Bruce, starring in ten full-length episodes of “The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes”, just as originally aired over the ABC Radio Network in 1946. Transferred directly from the original master recordings and fully restored for outstanding audio fidelity!
5-CD Set
Retail Price: $14.98
ISBN: 9781610812016
For many long-time fans, Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce will always personify Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson – but it may come as a surprise to even the most devoted Baker Street enthusiast to discover that, for one radio season, the World’s Greatest Consulting Detective was successfully portrayed by actor Tom Conway, best remembered for playing The Falcon in a series of 1940s films. Now Radio Archives is releasing a new 5-CD set of rare original radio broadcasts featuring Tom Conway and Nigel Bruce, starring in ten full-length episodes of “The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes”, just as originally aired over the ABC Radio Network in 1946. Transferred directly from the original master recordings and fully restored for outstanding audio fidelity!
**Retailer incentive: any retailer who orders BOTH the CD set and the Crossovers Casebook will receive one CD radio drama sample and one free Holmes GN!!
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SAVAGE BEAUTY #3
Story: Mike Bullock
Art: Jose Massaroli
Colors: Bob Pedroza
Cover: Dave Hoover
Ripped from today’s world news comes a reimagining of the classic jungle girl genre debuting a new hero for the modern age!
The bombastic fist story arc of your favorite new jungle girl comic is here! Lacy and Liv have cornered the slavers but who is the predator and who is the prey? Follow the trail of political upheaval down the streets of human trafficking as Lacy and Liv unleash their Savage Beauty!
Mike (The Phantom) Bullock presents a fresh new spin on the jungle girl genre, featuring real world conflicts in Africa and beyond.
“Issue Grade: A!” – The Pull Box – The Pull Box
“Fans of Adventure comics will definitely want to check this one out” – Comic Book Bunker– Comic Book Bunker
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HEAP #2
Story: Charles Knauf
Art: Sami Kivela
Colors: Renato Guerra
Cover: Rick Sardinha
32pgs, color, $3.99
The return of the original muck-monster continues!
Join CHARLES (Iron Man) KNAUF as he takes the HEAP on a journey of self-discovery through Norse magics and mythology, while sorting through the horrors of Nazi mayhem!
It is time for Midgard’s last defender to arise, amidst the devastation and inhumanity of World War 2.
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CAPTAIN ACTION King Size Special#1
Story: Steven Grant, Paul Kupperberg
Art: Reno Maniquis, John Hebert
Color: Jason Jensen
Covers: John Byrne, Mariah Benes, Mark Wheatley
72pgs,color, $5.99
THRICE the Action, as Captain Action’s Season 2 supersizes with two new episodes of the new Captain Action & Action Boy plus a new Captain Action Classified spy thriller!
Though presumed dead, Captain Action’s actually in the secret
city of Aggartha, getting a history lesson they don’t teach in schools in “Journey thru the Past” Then it’s an international catfight as the USA
vs. the UK! Lady Action battles Liberty, of the sinister new super-team, Patriot Power! As the intrigue builds to a crescendo, everyone’s asking, “Where is Captain Action?”
And in this lost tale from the swinging sixties, the original Captain Action is determined to stop the assassination of RFK. This can’t end well…
(Covers: Byrne = 75%, Benes = 25%)
**for every purchase of 3 or more, and you can buy one ultra rare MARK WHEATLEY variant cover for a retail of $6.99**
**Retailer incentive: buy 3 copies or more, and get one free!
LAI WAN: The Dreamwalker HC
Author: CJ Henderson
Art: Kieran Yanner
Cover: Michael Stribling
124pgs, grayscale, HC, $19.99
ISBN: 978-1-936814-06-0978-1-936814-06-0
Lai Wan: the Dreamwalker, seer and prophet, able to walk between realities, feared by any who embrace evil because of her one, terrible power–the ability to always know the absolute truth. At long last, Moonstone has gathered all the graphic stories of Lai Wan, CJ Henderson’s fantastic break-out character from his popular Teddy London series, into one beautiful collection, while adding two great print bonuses: a team-up between Lai Wan and Kolchak the Nightstalker, and a never-before seen novella, Terrible Anticipation, a sequel to H.P. Lovecraft’s The Dunwich Horror!
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ROTTEN : The Lost Diary of John J. Flynn, U.S. Agent Written by: Robert Horton
Art: Dan Dougherty
96pgs, b/w, squarebound, 6”x9”, $9.99
ISBN: 13: 978-1-936814-00-8ROTTEN : The Lost Diary of John J. Flynn, U.S. Agent Written by: Robert Horton
Art: Dan Dougherty
96pgs, b/w, squarebound, 6”x9”, $9.99
ISBN: 13: 978-1-936814-00-8
“More than just a blood-and-guts affair” (USA Today)
“Genius” (FHM).
ZOMBIES…SPIES…THE OLD WEST!
Strange accounts of the dead walking the earth.
A top-secret assignment from President Rutherford B. Hayes to investigate.
A detour on the journey West, involving none other than Jesse James.
Before the zombie mayhem depicted in the sold-out Rotten #1, Special Agent J.J. Flynn kept a diary of the bizarre events preceding his arrival in the West—all revealed here, in a document officially suppressed for generations. This bonus book to the Rotten universe fills in key elements of the acclaimed comic-book series.
MOONSTONE MONDAY-YOURS TRULY, CLIFFHANGER FICTION!
Moonstone Books and ALL PULP are proud to present a two fisted detective pulp tale from MOONSTONE CLIFFHANGER FICTION featuring the radio icon YOURS TRULY, JOHNNY DOLLAR ! This is a pulse pounder from Pulp author Eric Fein! This tale can be found in the SEX, LIES, AND PRIVATE EYES collection available from Moonstone at http://www.moonstonebooks.com/
Tune in next week for the conclusion to THE PRETTY CORPISE MATTER! And check out http://www.moonstonebooks.com/ for this and other collections and tales!
Beware the Tides of March… err… Bill O’Reilly

So, not so long ago, the American Atheist Group decided to buy a few billboards. So their president, one David Silverman, wanted to perhaps start a national debate on religion. Good idea? Well, we’ll leave that one up to the Lord (be it Allah, Ganesha, Buddha, Yahweh, Inky the Magical Leprechaun, or Stan Lee if you prefer). Billboards go up, and guess who get his panties in a bind? The answer rhymes with Shrill O’Bile-ly. Cut quickly to the O’Reilly Factor where Silverman was interviewed. And here’s where things get spicy.
During the interview, the debate whether the word “scam” is offensive is debated. And then the big guns get fired. Once Silverman dares to call organized religion “mythical”, Billy goes on the attack. “Let’s just be two guys. Not an atheist and a catholic. Just two guys…” O’Reilly throws out. Get this folks: The Tides. “They come in, and go out. Come in, and go out.” And why? According to O’Reilly… “It just happens. You can’t explain that.” Silverman, who didn’t have his high school physics book handy, forgot to PWN Bill by explaining tides move according to the gravity pull of Earth’s moon. He attempted a sidestep by saying “it doesn’t matter” that he couldn’t explain it, because at the root of his argument… explaining anything by way of an invisible man in the sky is silly. But Bill was Bill. He’d have nothing of it.
Enter the Internet. Now it’s become its own meme-in-the-making. So, ComicMixers… let’s discuss… what is there out in PopCultureLand that also can’t be explained by anything else than the mighty G-O-D? Consider this a contest folks. Use this meme-maker and post it in the comments below. Funniest meme gets a piece of the holy cross. Or a radioactive spider. Or the mighty Mjolnir. We’re not sure yet.
The Point Radio: The Next Wonder Woman?

Meet Sarah Butler – star of the new version of I Spit On You Grave! Sarah fills us in on how the remake came about, and after talking to her, we think she is a GREAT choice for the Wonder Woman reboot! See what you think…..
Don’t forget that you can now enjoy THE POINT 24 hours a Day – 7 Days a week!. Updates on all parts of pop culture, special programming by some of your favorite personalities and the biggest variety of contemporary music on the net – plus there is a great round of new programs on the air including classic radio each night at 12mid (Eastern) on RETRO RADIO COMICMIX’s Mark Wheatley hitting the FREQUENCY every Saturday at 9pm and even the Editor-In-Chief of COMICMIX, Mike Gold, with his daily WEIRD SCENES and two full hours of insanity every Sunday (7pm ET) with WEIRD SOUNDS!
CLICK HERE TO LISTEN LIVE FOR FREE or go to GetThePointRadio for more including a connection for mobile phones including iPhone & Blackberrys.



















