Developed in the 1890s and lasting into the 1950s, the "pulp" magazine format was a low-cost means of delivering fiction short stories to the masses. In many ways, the pulp magazine was a predecessor to the comic book of today and several famous comic book heroes got their start in pulp magazines.
Mammoth Adventures was one such magazine, but only lasted 9 issues in 1946 and 1947.
This is the November 1946 issue of Mammoth Adventures. This issue includes:
The Cassock and the Sword?By Tom Blackburn
The Tunca Punchu Nugget?By Richard Shaver
Quest of the Split Map?By Chester Geier
Valiant Dust?By Joseph Chadwick
"Convince Me, I Said"?By Craig Ellis
The Crazy Indian?By William Bogart
Wanted: Dead Man?By Mort Weisinger
Revenge of the Robot?By Berkeley Livingston
Developed in the 1890s and lasting into the 1950s, the "pulp" magazine format was a low-cost means of delivering fiction short stories to the masses. In many ways, the pulp magazine was a predecessor to the comic book of today and several famous comic book heroes got their start in pulp magazines.
Mammoth Adventures was one such magazine, but only lasted 9 issues in 1946 and 1947.
This is the November 1946 issue of Mammoth Adventures. This issue includes:
The Cassock and the Sword?By Tom Blackburn
The Tunca Punchu Nugget?By Richard Shaver
Quest of the Split Map?By Chester Geier
Valiant Dust?By Joseph Chadwick
"Convince Me, I Said"?By Craig Ellis
The Crazy Indian?By William Bogart
Wanted: Dead Man?By Mort Weisinger
Revenge of the Robot?By Berkeley Livingston