Publicado por Better Publications, New York, 1936
Librería: Bookman21century, Vista, CA, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 8,95
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritotrade paper. Condición: Good. Color Paper Wrapper, Heavy Edge Wear, Full Lengh Novel By Lieut. Scott Coffin "Flying Coffin", Other Stories By; George Bruce, Arch Whitehouse, H. Ralph Goller, Hugh James, Owen Atkinson, Ship Of The Month "Northrop Xft-1", Binding Solid Nothing Loose, Several Insect Holes, Contents Clean, Paper Aging, Over 15 Years Book Selling Experience, Buy With Confidence.
Publicado por American Eagle / the Lone Eagle, New York, 1941
Librería: S. Howlett-West Books (Member ABAA), Modesto, CA, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación
EUR 13,48
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoMagazine. Condición: Fair. B&W Illustrations; This magazine is in Fair condition and was issued without a dust jacket. The magazine front cover is included, but detatched, and is lacking the spine and rear cover. The text pages are generally clean, though noticeably toned. There are several smallish tears to the edges of her text pages. Included are: Wings of Treason by LIeut. Scott Morgan, Bombs with Wings by Robert Sidney Bowen, Pastry Doughboys by Joe Archibald, The Payoff Metteau Miles, Furtive Skies by Arthur J. Burks, and more. "Borrowing one of the nicknames given to Charles Lindbergh following his nonstop flight from New York to Paris, Standard Magazines released THE LONE EAGLE. Telling the heroic adventures of Air Intelligence Agent John Masters, "the world's greatest Sky Fighter, " the pulp debuted in the late summer of 1933. "Masters showed a natural affinity for a stuttering machine-gun and as his natural proficiency increased, he built up a dark and terrible reputation about his name. He became the 'Lone Eagle' of the skies . . . He showed an indomitable courage and a dynamic driving power, in pushing to a successful conclusion his secret missions. Many men feared him, many hated himan occasional one loved him. "Those words, written by F. E. Rechnitzer, appeared in "No Man's Air, " the lead novel in the first issue of the new hero pulp. A former World War I Allied pilot and prisoner-of-war, Rechnitzer is believed to have written many of the adventures of The Lone Eagle, hidden behind the "Lt. Scott Morgan" house name; Robert Sidney Bowen probably contributed most of the later novels. In all, 75 tales of "the world's greatest Sky Fighter" would appear through the spring of 1943, when the magazine would fly off into the sunset as THE AMERICAN EAGLE." (from Pulpfest).