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Besides posting book reviews, once in a while I will be posting articles on the subject of pulps. I hope we can generate more interest for the Blog. If you would like to share an article on the pulps, you can send me a message in the Comments of a post.

Showing posts with label Action. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Action. Show all posts

Thursday, December 28, 2017

Prolog To Jur: A Story of Pre-Dawn Earth

PROLOGUE
My uncle once told me that one could not believe the stories that one hears in bars. Perhaps he never heard the right ones.
It was in Paris that I first met the man who told me this part of the story. I don’t remember the name of the bar. It was a small place on the Left Bank, and I had wandered in there late one morning feeling stale and bleary-eyed after only a couple of hours sleep. The night before had been spent trying to prove to myself that there was still a magic about this city, something that had been in the air when Hemingway and the others made it their city, sixty years before…something that would allow me to recapture the success of their efforts. I had been there six weeks, seen all the sights there were to see, made the acquaintance of several very friendly young women, and done not a damn thing that was worth anything.
That was why I was in the bar, sipping a beer and trying to decide whether to pack it in and go back to the States when the tall old man came in, pausing just a moment in the doorway to let his eyes adjust to the dim interior.
I didn’t know he was an old man then. He was a tall man, dressed like an American, who moved with sure, easy steps to the bar and ordered a cognac in what sounded like flawless French. At least it sounded that way to my untrained ears. It was only when he turned around and put his back to the bar that I got some idea of his true age. His hair was silvery, and his face had the weathered, seemed look of a man who had spent almost his whole life outdoors. There was no trace of his years in the way he walked quickly across the room toward the little table where I sat. I looked up at him in surprise as he approached me, wondering what had drawn him to come over to my table. Perhaps he just wanted to talk; there were few patrons in the bar at that hour, and I might look like the most promising to him.
“Hello,” he said in a quiet, controlled voice. “You look like an American. Mind if I sit down for a few minutes?”
Up close, I was struck even harder by the contrast between his aged face and the athletic body of a much younger man. I said, “Sure, have a seat. You’re right. I am an American.” I extended my hand across the table with its checkered cloth and introduced myself.
He returned the handshake, clasping my hand in a strong grip. Something about it told me that the force he exerted was only a fraction of what he was capable of. He said, “Glad to meet you,” but I noticed that he didn’t return the favor of giving me his name. Well, another thing my uncle told me about bars was to never ask a man a question that he obviously wouldn’t want to answer.
“I suppose there are a lot of Americans over here, but for some reason I don’t run into very many of them,” he went on.
“There are quite a few American businessmen in Paris,” I said.
“But you’re not one of them, are you?”
I had to smile. “I don’t know how you knew that, but you’re right. I’m a writer...or at least I’m supposed to be.”
He sipped his drink. “Having trouble with it?” 
I shrugged. “Some. I suppose all writers do. Still, I’ll stumble across the right idea sooner or later.”
“Ah, eternal optimism. I like that. Why are you sitting in this bar, though, instead of being somewhere writing?”
Coming from someone else, I might have resented the question. Something about this strange young/old man, though, kept me from even coming close to losing my temper. I sensed a real interest on his part, so I said, “I’ve been writing. All night, in fact. And it was a bunch of damned hopeless garbage. I don’t know what causes it, but just once I’d like to write something that wasn’t so bleak and depressing.”
“Maybe you think life is bleak and depressing. They say writers write what they know best.”
I shrugged and swallowed some more warm beer.
He was looking intently across the table at me, a frown on his lined face. After a moment of silence, he said, “Maybe you just haven’t lived long enough, my friend. You haven’t discovered yet just how many wild, wonderful things are possible.”
I thought back on my life so far and couldn’t remember anything wild and wonderful. There had been some good times, but none of them had lasted.
The man said, “Listen, I’ll give you an example of what I mean. I’ll tell you a story, just off the top of my head. I’m no writer like you, but I’ve lived a long life, and I’ve got an imagination. If I can tell a good story, just think what you can do once you’ve lived a while longer and opened your mind up to all the possibilities.”
“We haven’t heard the story yet,” I said, a trifle rudely.
“That’s true,” he smiled. “Well, let’s see. We have to go back a bit, to an earlier day when adventure and romance weren’t as rare as they are today...that’s a good way to start, don’t you think?”


Sunday, November 18, 2012

Moon Man, Secret Agent X & More


Coming soon to Kindle, three new books by Tom Johnson.

Hunter’s Moon, featuring the Moon Man in his best adventure since Frederick C. Davis. With the police closing in on Angel’s hideaway, the danger for the Moon Man may be escalating for Great City’s Robin Hood. To compound matters, tragedy strikes closer to home. This time, he will not be able to provide help to someone close to him. Sergeant Steve Thatcher, seeing the people struggling to survive, dons the mysterious garments of the Robin Hood thief to relieve the filthy rich of their ill-gotten gains to be distributed among the poor by ex boxer Ned Dargan. When they come up against an illegal weapons manufacturer masquerading as a toy company, his fiancé is taken prisoner by criminals and he must not only remove them of their money, but put a stop to their weapons sale overseas.

In The Silence of Death, Colonel Jeremiah Custer’s Wild West Show comes across murder in a small Texas town. A mystifying murder mystery ensnares the famous criminologist and sharpshooter, Colonel Jeremiah Custer when his team encounters a young boy accused of mayhem. The lad cannot deny the charges for he can neither hear nor speak. The scientific brain of the greatest man hunter is put to task as he attempts to unravel this new crime! The ex intelligence officer puts his scientific brain to work to prove that the deaf mute boy is not the killer. Follow Colonel Custer and his aides as they unravel this deep mystery, and bring to justice this evil murderer.

Secret Agent X is back in The Tower of Death. What could a German agent be after in America? During Secret Agent X’s recovery at the Montgomery Mansion after the battle with Zerna’s drug gang in 1937, Betty Dale falls into a trap while following a suspect and is captured by a German Spy. Her whereabouts are unknown, and indeed, it’s not known if she’s even alive. Although the Agent hasn’t fully recovered from his previous battle with Zerna and the underworld, it’s imperative for him to locate and rescue the girl. For Betty Dale is more precious to him than anything in the world. If she has been harmed, he will exact vengeance on those responsible!

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Tales of Masks & Mayhem


For lovers of exciting thrills and adventures in the pulp tradition, don’t let these anthologies elude you. All are available on Amazon in print. V #2 & 3 are available in eBook from Ebooktime.com, and #3 is available as an eBook at NTD, Kindle, and elsewhere. Great reading, written some some of the best new writers in the pulp field.


V #4: This large volume contains "The Hooded Hunter" by Max Scarlatti, "Prophet of Peril" (a Masked Avenger story) by Lamont Wentworth, a new Crimson Mask story, "The Crimson Mask's Justice" by Frank Johnson, Doc Atlas returns in "His Master's Voice" by Michael A. Black and Ray Lovato, and Tom Johnson's Black Cat story, "Partners In Crime" rounds out the issue. With a great cover by Matt Lovato, this is a must for all pulp fans.


V #3: THE CULT OF THE FACELESS FIEND by Thomas V. Powers featuring Crimson Bat. THE FACE OF CHU-JUNG by Eric Turowski. SIDEWINDER by Debra Delorme featuring Scarecrow. DEATH AND THE BLACK GHOST by Tom Johnson  featuring The Black Ghost. A TASTE FOR MURDER by J. Michael Major featuring Black Bat. SOULS ON FIRE by John L. French featuring Grey Monk. THE DUST OF DEATH by Joel Jenkins featuring Eel & Adder. SATAN PLAGUE by Michael A. Black featuring Doc Atlas. THE VACATION by Ginger Johnson featuring Mr. Minus. CATCH A FALLING STAR by Dale J. Roberts featuring Mr. Mystery.


V #2: FIRST FLIGHT by K.G. McAbee & Tom Johnson featuring Shadowhawke. WOLF'S CLOTHING by John L. French featuring Grey Monk. ARCTIC TERROR by Michael A. Black featuring Doc Atlas. MIDNIGHT MOON by Terry Nudds featuring Moon Man. FOR THE LIFE OF A CHILD by Debra Delorme featuring Scarecrow. THE BEGINNING by Ginger Johnson featuring Mr. Minus. THE LADY OF DEATH by G. Wayman Jones featuring Black Bat. THE CHINESE CONNECTION by Alanna Morgan.


V #1: MONARCH OF THE FLAME-MADNESS by Maxentius Andor Scarlatti featuring The Tarantula.
CRIMSON HARVEST by Therese Drippe & Tom Johnson featuring The Black Bat. THE GREY MONK’S JUSTICE by John L French  featuring The Grey Monk. THE LUNAR LEAGUE by Lance Curry featuring The Moon Man and Secret Agent X. GORILLA KILLER by Michael A. Black  featuring Doc Atlas. HUNTER’S MOON by Debra DeLorme & Tom Johnson featuring The Black Ghost and The Scarecrow. THE NIGHT HAWK by Will Murray featuring The Night Hawk.

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Guns Of The Black Ghost

Coming soon to Kindle, Guns of The Black Ghost by Tom Johnson. Here is the planned cover for the huge volume. This should be released in the next week or two.

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Savage Land of Jur


Coming soon from NTD, “Savage Land of Jur” by Tom Johnson, the sequel to “Jur: A Story of Pre Dawn Earth”, with a new cover by talented artist, Teresa Tunaley. Originally written in 1970, this has been newly edited, and tightened from the previous editions.
Tom