**My sincerest thanks to all those who've enjoyed Lots of Pulp over the past couple of years! It will be closing its doors (for the time being, at least...) but please feel free to peruse and enjoy all the amazing, classic covers, preserved here for your pleasure...**

For the first half of the 20th century, pulp fiction made up America's most popular form of entertainment, beyond even movies and radio. During that time, some of the nation's finest pop illustrators and painters created untold thousands of original works to adorn the covers of these everyman novels, most in virtual anonymity. Then, in the 1950s, television came along and finally laid the pulps to rest, bringing an end to an unappreciated art form in the process. The post-modern view of pop culture that has arisen in recent decades has shed new light on the work of the great pulp artists. I respectfully showcase that work here...

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

The Shadow Magazine - May 1944

2 comments:

ratatouille's archives said...

Hi! B-Solomon,
What a nice blogspot...I think that I will add your link to my writers' blog too.
By the way, what a nice mag(azine) cover.
Thanks, for sharing and welcome,
fellow Lammy.
DeeDee ;-D

B-Sol said...

Thanks Dee Dee! Glad you're enjoying the pulp blog as well as the horror stuff. I certainly cover a lot of bases!