Total Pulp Experience. These exciting pulp adventures have been beautifully reformatted for easy reading as an eBook and features every story, every editorial, and every column of the original pulp magazine.
International intrigue and espionage! Beginning in the fall of 1939, readers could travel the world with the top U.S. Secret Agent, Jeff Shannon. Known as The Eagle, he battled spies and saboteurs who would plot to destroy America in a series of novels written for Thrilling Spy Stories. Each issue featured a lead novel of The Eagle accompanied by a good handful of spy-oriented short stories. The magazine was one of the "Thrilling" group, published by Standard Publications, who also brought to the newsstand titles like Thrilling Wonder Stories, Thrilling Adventures, Thrilling Western, Thrilling Sports, Thrilling Love, Thrilling Baseball, Thrilling Detective, Thrilling Ranch, Thrilling Sports. Each novel of The Eagle was written by Captain Kerry McRoberts, actually a house name which allowed various authors to fill the role. Although the publisher had great hopes for the new publication, it only lasted four issues. It folded with the Summer 1940 issue, over a year before America had even entered World War II. Thrilling Spy Stories returns in these vintage pulp tales, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
A Complete Full-Length Novel
Storm Over the Americas
by Capt. Kerry McRoberts
When Nazi intrigue menaces the Panama Canal, the Eagle, U.S. Secret Agent, swoops down on a spy ring guarding secret weapons of war!
A Complete Novelet
Terror In Kurdistan
by E. Hoffmann Price
In a Bandit Khan’s mountain fastness an Englishman and an American face desperate spy peril.
Other Thrilling Stories
The Corpse From G-2
by G.T. Fleming-Roberts
Investigator Bob Roche barges into a fiendish sabotage plot...
War Plans Divided
by Robert Leslie Bellem
It was a desperate game of “Button, Button, Who’s Got the Button.”
Flame Under The Sea
by Allan R. Bosworth
There’s a battle royal when submarine disaster stalks the deep.
Waterway Death
by Arthur W. Phillips
The Welland Canal looked like an easy target to saboteurs!
and
Secret Orders — A Department