Saturday, July 7, 2018

"ASSEMBLY LINE FICTION" by Tom Rizzo

Writers and illustrators, especially those new to the craft, found plenty of work between 1920 and 1950 when hundreds of inexpensive fiction publications—commonly referred to as "Dime Westerns"— flooded the American market.




To satisfy the appetite for these magazines, covers and thousands of inside pages needed art and written storylines produced in assembly-line fashion on a weekly or monthly basis. 

The pulp magazines, which sold for between a dime and 25 cents, measured six-by-nine-inches and were made of cheap wood pulp paper, which made the manufacturing process economical. The 32-page Dime Western novels were so popular, distribution averaged in the tens of millions. 

The pulps featured a broad range of genres: detective stories, science fiction, fantasy, horror, romance, gangster, war, mysteries, and sports—all usually featuring memorable main characters.



The most popular pulp themes centered around cowboys and Indians and the Wild West.

According to The Pulp Magazine Project, the inaugural issue of the first all-western pulp appeared on newsstands on July 12, 1919—Street and Smith's Western Story Magazine.

Hundreds of writers wrote for the magazine, which enjoyed thirty straight years of publication promising "Big Clean Stories of Outdoor Life." 

Pulps attracted prolific writers who sometimes two or more stories for the same issue.


Frederick Faust, also known as Max Brand, ranked among the most versatile of the writers. He sometimes wrote as many as three stories for a single issue but under different pen names.


Others included Paul S. Powers, who wrote for a variety of magazines, including Wild West Weekly, Thrilling Ranch Stories, Exciting Western, and others.

Laurie Powers, his granddaughter, discovered six stories never before published and included them in a book she edited, called Riding the Pulp Trail, Altus Press (2011) and consists of twelve Paul Powers stories.

Several legendary literary figures got their start and polished their writing craft in pulp magazines. Among them: Louis L'Amour, Dashiell Hammett, Agatha Christie, Edgar Rice Burroughs, and Mary Rinehart.

At the same time, plenty of no-name writers logged grueling hours for paltry wages—no more than a penny a word—to meet the production demands of pulp magazines. 

John Dinan, who authored, The Pulp Western: A Popular History of the Western Fiction Magazine of America, wrote, "The art of the ballyhoo may not have been invented by dime-novel writers, but they certainly raised it to new heights."


Among the hundreds of publications, Western pulp fiction appeared in such magazines as: 

Lariat Story Magazine
    • The Black Mask
    • Crackshot Western
    • Argosy Weekly
    • Dime Western Magazine
    • Indian Stories
    • Masked Rider Western
    • Outlaws West
    • Quick Trigger Western
    • Spicy Western Stories

Changing market factors accelerated the decline of pulp fiction magazines.


By the 1930s, more than a thousand different pulp titles were in circulation. With the need to print so many publications, the industry got hit hard by paper shortages after World War II.

To trim expenses and keep pace, some publishers switched to digest-size formats that were cheaper to produce.

Declining popularity, however, proved insurmountable.  The public began turning from pulp to other forms of entertainment, such as comic books, paperbacks, and radio.

Television drove the deepest nail in the pulp fiction coffin. Post-war sales of RCA television sets skyrocketed and helped accelerate the demise of the pulps.


At the same time, talented writers discovered they could make much more money by writing novels and having them serialized. 

Pulp westerns proved an entertaining channel of storytelling while it lasted, and gave new writers and artists an unparalleled training ground.


Frank Munsey, an American newspaper and magazine publisher who launched the first ten-cent periodical in 1889, once wrote:

"The story is worth more than the paper it is printed on."


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6 comments:

  1. Hi Tom, I was reared on these little cowboy books.Mum used to read them to Dad and us kids before we went to bed.We didn't have power or TV so books were our entertainment.Loved them-Adele

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  2. Glad this rekindled some good memories for you, Adele. Thanks for stopping by.

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  3. I've read so many stories about these early magazines. It was a great way for a writer to learn the craft and dicipline to be a writer.

    My grandfather was a big fan of those kind of stories. I love when they republish those stories of the early writers. They make me feel closer to my family that read them. I wonder if the rise in internet and self-publishing is doing something similar for writers today? I'm going to ponder that. Thanks for the post. It brought back fond memories. Doris

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    1. Hi Doris, thanks for visiting and good to hear it triggered some fond memories.

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  4. Tom,

    Like Doris' grandfather, my maternal grandfather had stacks of these magazines in his house. He read many of the stories to me before I learned to read. I don't know what happened to his 'collection'. Sadly, they were lost somehow over the years.

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  5. Sad, indeed, Kaye. What a great find that would have been. Maybe they'll show up someday when you least expect it.

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