Thursday, April 2, 2026

THE MASKED RIDER PULP MAGAZINE

Debuting in 1934, mere months after The Lone Ranger premiered over Detroit radio in 1933, was The Masked Rider. Produced by Ranger Publications (later Better Publications), the western pulp magazine featured the adventures of Wayne Morgan, who was secretly the masked vigilante known as “The Masked Rider.” Dressed all in black like Zorro, he went about investigating crimes and thwarting the villains with assistance of an Indian sidekick of the Yaqui tribe named Blue Hawk.

 

For many years people speculated whether the authors of the Masked Rider novels, or the publishers, heard the radio program and decided to publish their own rendition to capitalize on the radio program, but no direct connection has been found. In addition, the radio program was primarily a regional Michigan radio broadcast at the time and not a national phenomenon that it would become in 1938. Historians truly insist the pulp magazine was a coincidence applying a similar premise and with few western plots available and a variation-on-a-theme more than likely, I personally insist The Masked Rider magazine was a coincidence.

 

That, however, did not prevent me from buying the first three volumes from Altus Press, publishing the first nine novels in chronological order. Bold Venture Press has also been publishing the novels as double features. As of the time I type this, they have seven volumes available for sale. Both publishing companies incorporate the original illustrations.

 

Among the talented authors who contributed to the series were Johnston McCulley (creator of Zorro), Gunnison Steele, Norman A. Daniels (creator of The Black Bat, writing as Jud Tally) and Walker A. Tompkins. The issues were published hap-hazardly, sometimes monthly, sometimes bi-monthly, from 1934 to 1953. 

 

It was my initial intention to read the novels with The Lone Ranger in mind, to enjoy what could have been (through my eyes) additional adventures of the masked man and his faithful Indian companion, but I quickly discovered the mannerisms of Wayne Morgan were different from that of The Lone Ranger. Every summer I spend a week at the beach and every summer I take along one of these volumes to read. Give or take there are about 100 novels in the series so it may take me a few decades to read them all… that is, if reprints continue to be published from both Altus and Bold Venture.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

DICK TRACY: A Scrapbook of Rare Photos and Fun

For fans of DICK TRACY, the following are some obscure and rarely-seen photos. Enjoy the fun!


















Thursday, March 19, 2026

More Stories from The Twilight Zone

Fans of Rod Serling's 1959-1964 classic, The Twilight Zone, may want to take a moment to seek out a number of these paperbacks. Some of the gifted writers who contributed to the television series, Richard Matheson and Charles Beaumont, among others, wrote numerous short stories throughout the 1950s and 1960s, many of which would have made superb episodes of the television series.

The question that often comes up is where can fans of the television series find more stories just like those. The answer is to seek out the short story collections of Matheson, Beaumont, William F. Nolan, George Clayton Johnson, and others. The magazine Gamma, was short-lived and lasted a mere five issues from 1963 to 1965. Though not difficult to find, this magazine was launched and produced by the same writers of The Twilight Zone. Even Rod Serling contributed a story for one of the issues.  




In 1988, Roger Anker edited a superb collection of short stories by Charles Beaumont, with three of his stories that were adapted for The Twilight Zone, and plenty of stories that never had the chance to be adapted. A list of stories from that book is enclosed below as an example.

Contents:
The Vanishing American (1955)
Mourning Song (1963)
Gentlemen, Be Seated (1960)
Last Rites (1955)
Miss Gentilbelle (1957)
Place of Meeting (1953)
The Devil, You Say? (1951)
Free Dirt (1955)
Song for a Lady (1960)
The Howling Man (1959)
The Dark Music (1956)
The Magic Man (1960)
Fair Lady (1957)
A Point of Honor (1955)
The Hunger (1955)
Black Country (1954)
The Jungle (1954)
The New People (1958)
Perchance to Dream (1958)
The Crooked Man (1955)
Blood Brother (1961)
A Death in the Country (1957)
The Music of the Yellow Brass (1959)
Night Ride (1957)

 

So if you are a fan of The Twilight Zone and seeking more stories of that same nature, I recommend you seek out those paperbacks and hardcovers. And enjoy a cool story of science-fiction or fantasy.

Thursday, March 12, 2026

The Lone Ranger and the Outlaws of Wild Horse Valley (1940)

For collectors of children's books featuring The Lone Ranger, one of the rare titles is The Lone Ranger and the Outlaws of Wild Horse Valley, published by Whitman in 1940. The publishing company recycled one of the prior pulp stories, so there is nothing in this that you cannot find elsewhere. But this book is so rare that most collector catalogs, price guides and reference guides do not include it. This PDF is being provided for a few weeks so be sure to download and enjoy asap.