Category: Pulp

Posted in Pulp

Women Without Men by Reed Marr

Reed Marr | Women Without Men | The ugly and the beautiful, the depraved and the innocent, the dangerous and the frightened (the run-on sentence!), they shuffled through the days in

Posted in Gay Pulp Fiction Pulp

Faggots to Burn by Matt(hew) Bradley

Matt(hew) Bradley | Faggots to Burn | ‘For the first time.the truth about the alarming spread of homosexuality in America today!’

A startling, penetrating, factual survey of the

Posted in Pulp

The Married Set by Jerome Martin

Jerome Martin | The Married Set | We are unable to provide a description at this time.

Posted in Pulp

Hell is Filling Up by Peter O’Neill

Peter O’Neill | Hell is Filling Up | Guy down on his luck meets the wrong woman at the right time. Things go swimmingly until bodies pile up

Posted in Grier Rated Pulp

The Dangerous Games by Tereska Torres

Tereska Torres | The Dangerous Games | ‘A candid, sophisticated tale of faithless love. Only in Paris.’

‘A startling tale of a menage a trois, by the author of WOMEN’S BARRACKS.’

Posted in Pulp

Sin Doll by Dan Eliot; Robert Silverberg

Dan Eliot; Robert Silverberg | Sin Doll | Casinoi sinner.Joni Clyde–five feet, seven inches of blonde joybait in Las Vegas.Fastbuck guys and bigtime schemes whirled around her, partners in a

Posted in Pulp

$50 a Night by Don James

Don James | $50 a Night | First Line(s)

On Monday of that week, Ann Freeman had felt no premonition about the weekend. It was a singularly routine Monday from the hour

Posted in Pulp

The Constant Urge by Donna Richards

Donna Richards | The Constant Urge | ‘Happy and miserable at once, they were wracked by feelings neither could fully understand’

Posted in Pulp

Lesbos Hill by George P. Toward

George P. Toward | Lesbos Hill | Really very upbeat, though unhappy, slick-type paperback. The story is the cut-and-dried ‘end in a murder’ type of thing, but there is one unusual fac

Posted in Pulp

Odd Girl on Campus by Joan Ellis

Joan Ellis | Odd Girl on Campus | Story copy reads: ‘She could not have the man she wanted, but she could have his wife!’