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Used pulp fiction magazine. 
All Pulps ship with a bag and board.

I will be listing a couple hundred pulps so keep checking back. 

detached cover

Short Stories [v188 #6, #930, September 25th, 1944] ed. D. McIlwraith (Short Stories, Inc., 25¢, 144pp+, pulp, cover by Benton Clark) 
Details supplied by Bill Contento.
6 · The Story Tellers’ Circle · Anon. · cl
_6 · [letter] · William R. Cox · lt
_6 · [letter] · George Armin Shaftel · lt
10 · Job on the Beach · Richard Howells Watkins · nv
37 · From the Neck Up · William R. Cox · ss
45 · In the Devil’s Wigwam · George Bruce Marquis · ss
53 · Curioddities · Irwin J. Weill · ia
54 · Winged Firebrands · Neil Martin · nv
81 · A Proved Crook · Ray Palmer Tracy · ss
88 · The Thousand Deaths of Burma [Part 2 of 4] · H. Bedford-Jones · sl
108 · Wotta Spot! Wotta Spot! · Frank Richardson Pierce · ss
112 · Dry Rot [Corporal Downey of the Mounted; Black John Smith; Halfaday Creek] · James B. Hendryx · nv
127 · Wings for Victory · Jim Ray · ia
128 · Cargo of Show Business · George Armin Shaftel · ss
140 · The Shooter’s Corner · Pete Kuhlhoff · cl




Pulp magazines (often referred to as "the pulps") are inexpensive fiction magazines that were published from 1896 through the 1950s. The term pulp derives from the cheap wood pulp paper on which the magazines were printed; in contrast, magazines printed on higher quality paper were called "glossies" or "slicks". The typical pulp magazine had 128 pages; it was 7 inches (18 cm) wide by 10 inches (25 cm) high, and 0.5 inches (1.3 cm) thick, with ragged, untrimmed edges.


In their first decades, pulps were most often priced at ten cents per magazine, while competing slicks cost 25 cents apiece. Pulps were the successors to the penny dreadfuls, dime novels, and short fiction magazines of the 19th century. Although many respected writers wrote for pulps, the magazines were best known for their lurid and exploitative stories and sensational cover art. Modern superhero comic books are sometimes considered descendants of "hero pulps"; pulp magazines often featured illustrated novel-length stories of heroic characters, such as The Shadow, Doc Savage, and The Phantom Detective.