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Retirement. Publishers, thank you for the many years of reading pleasure you gave me, but all good things must come to an end. Due to failing eyesight I am forced to retire. I can no longer review your books, and any that you send will be donated to the local library, unread. Do not send any more. I can only read for a couple hours every day, and this does not allow me to finish a book in reasonable time. I will be devoting time to my own books from now on, and reading on a personal level. Books that interest me. I prefer paperbacks and hardbacks, not eBooks. My eyesight has been failing the last few years, and I cannot handle hundreds of review books any more. My books are still available for review. Anyone interested in reviewing any of them, they are found in the Link to Tom’s Books On Amazon. Contact me for pdf copies at fadingshadows40@gmail.com

Showing posts with label Masked Avenger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Masked Avenger. Show all posts

Friday, June 7, 2013

Triple Detective From Altus Press


Altus Press www.altuspress.com/ published four issues of TRIPLE DETECTIVE. Tom Johnson was the guest editor for the four issues, plus wrote most of the stories. The tales were aimed at the hero characters from the pulp magazines. Readers who are not familiar with these characters, can get a nice sampling right here with TRIPLE DETECTIVE. Each issue is $13.46 and available from Altus Press and Amazon.


TRIPLE DETECTIVE #1 (each story rewritten by Tom Johnson)
“The Lady of Death” (Black Bat) by Stewart Sterling
“The Happiest Hours Murders” (Phantom Detective) By Norman Daniels
“The Stolen Formula” (Secret Agent X) by Elia Back & Tom Johnson

TRIPLE DETECTIVE #2
“Doctor Death Returns” (Doctor Death) by Steve Mitchell
“Murder Museum” (Phantom Detective) by K.G. McAbee
“Crime’s Last Stand” (Masked Avenger) by Tom Johnson


TRIPLE DETECTIVE #3
“The Black Bat’s War” by G.Wayman Jones
“The Eyes of Satan” (Phantom Detective) by Robert Wallace
“Dark Streets of Doom” (Masked Avenger) by Tom Johnson

TRIPLE DETECTIVE #4
“Gibbering Gas of Madness” (The Eagle) by Capt. Kerry McRoberts
“City of Phantoms” (Black Bat & Phantom Detective) by Robert Wallace
“The Death Plague” (Masked Avenger) by Tom Johnson

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Crime's Dark Streets


Crime’s Dark Streets by Tom Johnson, $.99, now available on Kindle http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00BR7YSQC

Dark streets that lead to ebony alleys in the city’s immigrant district culminate in a spider’s web of fear when emissaries of evil abduct homeless children. When The Masked Avenger promises protection to the city’s unwanted children, can he keep that promise? Follow our palidan as he embarks on his second dangerous mission!

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Crime's Last Stand


Crime’s Last Stand by Tom Johnson, now available on Kindle for $.99. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00BOZCYOU

In this debut adventure of the masked hero, will evil win out? Blood covers the streets as gangsters kill indiscriminately. As a little boy lies helpless in the hospital, a new paladin takes up arms to bring the killers to justice. Can even the great Masked Avenger survive the final battle with the city's underworld when crime makes its last stand?

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Triple Detective


One of the most popular titles of its day, TRIPLE DETECTIVE carried some terrific stories. The magazine was so popular that it lasted long after most titles had folded, continuing until the Fall 1955 issue. Some interesting stories ended up in the later issues after the other titles ceased. Unfortunately, many of the later issues contained reprints of earlier published stories. TRIPLE DETECTIVE is being published in the pulp format of old, and for the pulp collector, and fan of the character pulps, this will quickly become a collector’s item in itself. Available from Altus Press & Amazon.

#1, 2007, $14.95: With the release of the new series from Altus Press, three important stories are included in the first issue for the pulp fan.

THE HAPPIEST HOUR MURDERS by Norman Daniels was written as a Phantom Detective entry in 1934, but rejected, and published later with all reference to the Phantom removed from the story. Restored by Tom Johnson.

THE LADY OF DEATH by Stewart Sterling was originally written as a Black Bat, but left unpublished, and appeared later, with all traces of the Black Bat removed. Restored by Tom Johnson.

THE STOLEN FORMULA by Elia Back (Secret Agent X) was published in Greece in 1950. This is its first American publication in English. Translated by Dimitry Hanos, and heavily edited by Tom Johnson.

#2, 2008, $14.95: DOCTOR DEATH RETURNS by Steve Mitchell: Twenty years before, a sinister madman held the world at bay, using the twin powers of science and sorcery to unleash a crimson tide of murder and destruction that swept across America and Asia. Then he disappeared—leaving no clue to his final fate.

MURDER MUSEUM by K.G. McAbee: The Phantom Detective, that nemesis of all evildoers in New York City, takes on the uncanny powers of the sinister Dr. Darkness!

CRIME'S LAST STAND by Tom Johnson: Will evil win out? Can even The Great Masked Avenger survive the final battle with the city's underworld when crime makes its last stand!

#3, 2009, $14.95: THE BLACK BAT'S WAR by G. Wayman Jones In the trenches of war-torn Germany, soldiers were dying from the medicines they were receiving for their wounds. The Army generals blamed America for the bad drugs, yet nothing could be done until the source of the deadly medicines could be uncovered and replaced with new drugs. While investigators were stymied, The Black Bat and his team of crime fighters took up the challenge, uncovering a giant plot by a master criminal. But would he be in time to save brave young soldiers dying of their wounds in a far off No-Man’s Land?

THE EYES OF SATAN by Robert Wallace: From war-torn Europe comes a mastermind with plans to unite all the mobs under his leadership, but while he is making future plans, a small-time thief murders his young bride, calling for vengeance first. That vengeance results in the death of three people, the small time thief, a respected jewel dealer, and a city cop. Those murders bring in the underworld’s dreaded nemesis, The Phantom Detective. But when the lovely Muriel Havens, daughter of the Phantom’s only contact, Frank Havens, is kidnapped, can even the master detective run down the killer before death strikes again?

DARK STREETS OF DOOM by Tom Johnson: Dark Streets That Lead To Ebony Alleys In The City’s Immigrant District Culminate In A Spider’s Web of Fear When Homeless Children Are Abducted By Emissaries Of Evil. When The Masked Avenger Promises Protection To The City’s Unwanted Children, Can He Keep That Promise?

#4, 2009, $14.95: THE GIBBERING GAS OF MADNESS by Capt. Kerry McRoberts. When Scientist working on military weapons mysteriously go mad, The U.S. Government fears a foreign power at the source of the evil and G-2 calls in their top secret agent, The Eagle. But this time his foe may be the greatest spy in the world – And the most beautiful. Will Jeff Shannon also fall victim to her womanly charms?

CITY OF PHANTOMS by Robert Wallace. When an old case resurfaces, The World’s Greatest Detective is pulled back into a new battle with a deadly enemy, while ex-Fighting District Attorney Tony Quinn’s lovely secretary, Carol Baldwin is kidnapped by a vicious mob, hoping to force the prosecution to drop it’s case against their Boss. Two champions of Justice meet in a race against time!

PLAGUE OF DEATH by Tom Johnson. A German scientist has brought a virus to America to aid in the Brown Shirts taking control of the United States for Hitler. To test the virus, the scientist releases it on a Chicago orphanage, killing all but one child. The Masked Avenger puts the child, a young Korean boy, under his protection, while a Chicago policeman and young Korean woman also watch over him. But when the boy is kidnapped, the trail leads the Masked Avenger to New York, where he must uncover the German scientist and stop the virus from killing everyone in the great city. A wild ride, as the German mob and Brown Shirts combine to bring America to its knees while Hitler concentrates his army on Europe! Can one man, even such as the Masked Avenger, succeed when America looks to be doomed?

An additional surprise is in store for the readers with THE LEGEND by Tom Johnson. In this short story, The Legend returns to bring justice to an old hoodlum! This giant issue also contains a Phantom Detective comic not reprinted in THE PHANTOM DETECTIVE COMPANION.

Monday, February 20, 2012

TOM&M V4 Review By JoAnna Senger


Tales of Masks and Mayhem v. 4
Edited by Ginger Johnson

 During and after World War II, pulp fiction captured the imagination of the America public with its clear distinction between good guys and bad guys with nothing less than the safety of the Western world at stake.  Most stories take place in a gritty American metropolis.

The protagonists are men (usually) of action, all-but-impervious to physical pain, and single-minded in their determination to rid society of dangerous undesirables.  Unencumbered by domesticity, they are wealthy or have no need of paid employment for some other reason.  When fighting crime or Nazis, they must conceal their identity.  Villains usually die in a hail of bullets.

Ginger Johnson has assembled five stories of varying lengths which celebrate the genre.  Like planets circling the sun, the stories share a literary focus but are sufficiently varied to make each story distinct and worthy of exploration.

“The Hooded Hunter” by Maxentius Andor Scarlatti proceeds at a breakneck pace without excessive backstory.  The interaction of the Hooded Hunter with the Texas Rangers was particularly fascinating, and this reviewer arrived at the end feeling vicariously exhausted.  A real adventure!

“Peril of the Prophet” by Lamont Wentworth departs from the genre through a female central character, a reporter, and a mysterious nun who appears at unexpected moments.  The protagonist, the Masked Avenger, and the famous special rings worn by his allies were celebrated in Woody Allen’s movie Radio Days.  Taking a real physical beating, the Masked Avenger hasn’t lost his touch.

“The Crimson Mask’s Justice” by Frank Johnson varies the theme by introducing us to a kindly father-figure pharmacist who is, in fact, the crime-fighter known to law enforcement as the Crimson Mask.  This plot cleverly entwines politics, a famous necklace, and the double-cross leaving the reader hanging on by the fingernails, still surprised by the ending.

“His Master’s Voice – A Doc Atlas Adventure” by Raymond L. Lovata and Michael A. Black takes place behind enemy lines in Germany rather than in an American city.  The authors are particularly adept at taking the reader through the Nazi medical experiment lab deep in a stone castle on a mountaintop.  The Golden Avenger, Doc Atlas, works with the United States military to thwart the brilliant but evil Dr. Von Strohm.

“Partners in Crime” by Tom Johnson treats the reader to a most unique protagonist: The Black Cat, not only a woman but also a thief.  Her prowess with weaponry including archery and knife throwing make her formidable in combat without the need to throw a punch.  She may be the most devious and ethically flexible of all the crime fighters.  In this story, the shortest in the anthology, the author has created an exceptionally nuanced crime fighter.  The reader is swept along with both plot and protagonist.

As the years go by, there are fewer and fewer people who can tap into personal memories of the American culture as it was in the heyday of pulp fiction.  This reviewer wants to thank Ms. Johnson and all the writers for continuing this uniquely American literary tradition.


Review by JoAnna Senger