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Gamma No. 2

Contents
Dorothy B. Hughes “The Granny Woman”
Robert Bloch “The Old College Try”
Francesca Marques “Michael”
Richard Matheson “Deus Ex Machina”
William Faulkner “The Kid Learns”
Jack Matcha “King’s Jester”
William Shakespeare & Ib Melchior “Here’s Sport Indeed!” (verse)
Burt Shoneber’s Portfolio
William F. Temple “The Undiscovered Country”
Robert Sheckley: The Gamma Interview
Charles E. Fritch “Castaway”
Charles Beaumont “Something in the Earth”
William F. Nolan “I’m Only Lonesome When I’m Lonely”
The Editors: A Note on Ernest Hemingway
Ray Bradbury “Sombra y Sol”

Gamma No. 2 1963
Editor & Publisher: Charles E. Fritch
Executive Editor: & Publisher: Jack Matcha
Managing Editor: William F. Nolan
Cover: Morris Scott Dollens
5.25” x 7.75” 128 pages 50¢

Western Magazine No. 2

Contents
J.L. Bouma “Killer Posse”
L.L. Foreman “Deadline in Barrio”
Elmore Leonard “The Rancher’s Lady”
C.S. Park “Two-Gun Farewell”
Ed La Vanway “Shadow of the Shield”
George C. Appell “Backtrail Blues”
C. William Harrison “Meet Mr. Mule”
Debs Smith “Caged”
Gardner F. Fox “The Fight at Lost Horse Springs”

Western Magazine Vol. 1 No. 2 Sept. 1955
Editor: Harry Widmer
Business Manager: Monroe Froehlich
Art Director: Mel Blum
Art Editor: Robert C. O’Neill
~5.5” x 7.75” 160 pages 35¢

Read Peter Enfantino’s story-by-story recap of Western Magazine in The Digest Enthusiast No. 8.

Michael Shayne No. 1

“I am both proud and gratified that my long-time and valued friend, Leo Margulies, is the publisher and sole owner of this magazine. It is a project that both Leo and I have held in our minds and hearts for many years.” –Brett Halliday

Contents
Brett Halliday “Bring Back a Corpse!”
Craig Rice “The Quiet Life” (John J. Malone)
Robert Bloch “Water’s Edge”
Charles Irving “You Wash, and I’ll Dry”
Hal Ellson “Walk Away Fast”
Kenneth Fearing “Three Wives Too Many”
John E. Hasty “Unfinished Business”
Louis Trimble “A Pitch for Murder”
Carter Sprague “A Present for Peter”
Matthew Lee “Home Ground”
Norman Daniels “Rooftop”

Michael Shayne Mystery Magazine Vol. 1 No. 1 Sept. 1956
Publisher: Leo Margulies
Editor: Sam Merwin Jr.
Managing Editor: Cylvia Kleinman
5.25” x 7.75” 160 pages 35¢

Where is Janice Gantry?

Excerpt from “The Creative Works of Joe Wehrle, Jr.” from The Digest Enthusiast No. 8, June 2018. His story, “Kromaflies,” appears in The Digest Enthusiast No. 10, June 2019. (Quotes gleaned from Joe’s interviews or correspondence.)

In 1968, Robin Scott Wilson organized the first Clarion Writers’ Workshop for fantasy and science fiction at the Clarion State College in Pennsylvania. The staff of visiting lecturers during its first year included Judith Merril, Fritz Leiber, Harlan Ellison, Kate Wilhelm, and Damon Knight. Joe Wehrle, Jr. was one of several students lucky enough to attend.

“When I attended the workshop in 1968 (with Karen and five-month-old Jill outside on a blanket among the trees),” Joe said, “Harlan Ellison told us, ‘I know we’re talking science fiction writing here, but if you want to study a really good modern writing style, you guys should be reading John D. MacDonald.’ Two I particularly remember enjoying are Dead Low Tide and Where is Janice Gantry, and his dozen or so Travis McGee stories are all very good too. The last one, The Lonely Silver Rain, is compelling, because, along with the mystery, Travis discovers and gets to know a daughter he had no idea existed.”

While at the workshop, Joe told me in 2010: “I wrote a story called ‘Kromaflies,’ which Robin Scott Wilson liked, Fritz Leiber felt showed that I had put a lot of thought into the development of the society I wrote about, and Harlan Ellison pretty much hated, although he did agree I was a ‘plotter,’ which was high praise from Harlan, who had no patience with anyone who wrote off the top of their head with no object in mind.”

Joe’s bibliography appears on the Larque Press website.

Kromaflies
Detective No. 2

“Stories” changed to “Cases” in this issue’s full title:
Detective: The Magazine of True Crime Cases Vol. 1 No. 2 Spring 1951
Contents
Stuart Palmer “Fancy Nancy’s Secret”
Allan R.Bosworth “The Laughing Killer of the Woodside Glens”
Burton Rascoe “The Affair of Mr. X”
William T. Brannon “The Curse at Christmas”
Mary Sullivan “The Rosenthal Case”
M.R. Kelly “American’s Jack-the-Ripper”
Edward D. Radin “Murder by Conscience”
James Thurber “A Sort of Genius”
Stewart H. Holbrook “Dead Man’s Bounty”
William Roughead “Malice Domestic”
Don Pancho Vega “One Morning in Ecuador”

Publisher: Lawrence E. Spivak
Editor: Edward D. Radin
Managing Editor: Robert P. Mills
General Manager: Joseph W. Ferman
Art Director: George Salter
Cover: Sid Rosenbaum
5.5” x 7.75” 126 pages 35¢

Detective No. 2 back cover
Paperback Parade No. 104

Contents
Gary Lovisi: Paperback Talk
Art Scott “Carter Brown: The Writer & the Stories”
Art Scott “Carter Brown: The Books & the Covers”
Gary Lovisi & Art Scott “Carter Brown: The Signet List”
Art Scott “Carter Brown: In Belmont & Tower”
Philip Harbottle “Fearn’s Jinxed Novels”
Richard Greene “Matchless Paperbacks: Straw Boss”
Gary Lovisi “Mighty Midgets”
Jon D. Swartz “Early Penguin SF”
Jon D. Swartz “Bill Crider”

Paperback Parade No. 104 Aug. 2019
Editor: Gary Lovisi
Designer: Richard Greene
~5.5” x 8.5” 100 pages, full color throughout
$15 + postage for a single issue
$40 for three-issue subscription
Gryphon Books website

Tough Crime Stories No. 2

Contents
Michael Bracken “Itsy Bitsy Spider”
Thomas Pluck “The Third Jump of Frankie Buffalo”
Matt Mattilla “Day Planner”
William R. Soldan “Tally Ho”
C.A. Rowland “Beach Body”
Nick Kolakowski “Viking Funeral”
Andrew Welsh-Huggins “Long Drive Home”
Rob McClure Smith “Masonry”
Tia J’anae “Once Upon a Time in Chicago”
S.A. Cosby “The Grass Below My Feet”
Evelyn DeShane “No News is Good News”
Alec Cizak “The Bag Girl”
Preston Lang “Sarah, Sweet and Stealthy”
Chris McGinley “With Hair Blacker Than Coal”
Mary Torson “She Goes First”

Tough Crime Stories No. 2
Redneck Press
Editor/Publisher: Rusty Barnes
Contributing Editor: Tim Hennessy
Associate Editor: Rider Barnes
Design: Sue Miller
190 pages, 5” x 8”
POD $14.95
Tough website

Contents
Wayne D. Dundee “Straight from the Shoulder Holster”
Joe R. Lansdale “By Bizarre Hands”
Daniel Rowe “The Dispeptic Diogenes”
Hal Charles “The Peacemakers”
Michael Bracken “Partners” (Nathaniel Rose)
Max Allan Collins “Mourn the Living” (Part 2 of 4; Nolan PI)
Will Wyckoff “A Christmas Story”
Charles Hoffman’s Ninja: Hardboiled Comics for the Eighties
Paul Bishop “Day of Asphalt, Day of Guns”
Wayne D. Dundee “Dirty Business” (Joe Hannibal)

Hardboiled No. 9 Winter/Spring 1988
HB Enterprises
Editor: Wayne D. Dundee
Cover by Kevin Farrell
6” x 9” $2.95

Tequila Sunrise

In his interview in The Digest Enthusiast No. 8 (June 2018), Michael Bracken gave a brief character sketch of detective Rose:

“Nathaniel Rose is a St. Louis-based private eye who made his first appearance in “Partners” (Hardboiled, Winter/Spring 1988), and all seven Rose stories are collected in Tequila Sunrise (Wildside Press, 2000).”

For more about Rose, visit his page on Thrilling Detective.
Image and data from Galactic Central.

The Greatest Adventure Stories Ever Told

Published in 1945 by J.P. Feiner, The Greatest Adventure Stories Ever Told features “30 Thrillers by the world’s master story-tellers.”

Steve Carper’s research for One-and-Dones part two (The Digest Enthusiast No. 8), reveals its likely connection to Doreen Publishing, who also produced (30 Tales of) Adventure and Romance, edited by Arnold Shaw.

Now Available from McFarland: Steve Carper’s Robots in American Popular Culture, a comprehensive reference volume that includes a companion website: robotsinamericanpopularculture.com.