Published by Frank A. Munsey Co., NY, 1930
Magazine / Periodical
SingleIssueMagazine. Condition: Very Good-. Vol. 215, No. 3. Pulp magazine. [Edited by A. H. Bittner.] Cover art by Paul Stahr for "Forbidden Seas" (pt. 1 of 2) by R. de S. Horn. Includes "Gambler's Throw" (pt. 2 of 5) by Eustace L. Adams; "Dead-Line" (pt. 4 of 6) by J. Allan Dunn; "The Crimson Trail" (pt. 5 of 5) by J. E. Grinstead; "Blood-Red Gold" (novelette) by Erle Stanley Gardner; "The Morale Breakers" by F. V. W. Mason; "Smoke Segrue" by Anthony M. Rud; "The White Parka Man" by Jack Allman; "Brains Beat Bullets" by John A. Thompson. Other Features: "The Cliff Dwellers" by Roy T. Wilcox; "Food and Clothing for Castaways" by William David Belbeck; "Houses Made of Opals" by Gerald FitzGerald; "Nootka Indians Afloat" by Alan Osbourne; "A Parade of Living Dead" by Robert F. Bailey; "World's Last Marriage Market" by William P. Schramm; "Thar's Gold in That Thar Ocean, Pardner!" by Harold J. Ashe; ; "The Men Who Make the Argosy - Anthony M. Rud"; "Argonotes"; "Looking Ahead!" Old tape at ends; cover's glued on at hinges; minor losses; tanning. Book.
Published by Grosset & Dunlap, 1930
Seller: Koster's Collectible Books, Farmingville, NY, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Good+. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. Hardcover in dust jacket. Red cloth boards frayed and soiled at edges. Spine ends frayed. Fore edge soil, edges roughed up and worn. Tanning to endpapers. Pencil name on blank verso of half title. Quarter inch closed tear to outer edge of first 7 pages. Text pages are clean. Illustrated dust jacket chipped throughout, tape repaired at spine. Looks good in new protective mylar. Always carefully wrapped and shipped in cardboard boxes to protect your purchase. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. Very good book in a good dustjacket.
Published by The Dial Press, E-138, 1930
Seller: Last Exit Books, Charlottesville, VA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. First Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. 8vo. Published by Lincoln MacVeigh/The Dial Press, New York, 1930. 280 pgs. First Edition/First Printing. DJ has shelf-wear present to the DJ extremities (DJ is lightly worn and scuffed to the extremities). Bound in cloth boards with titles present to the spine and front board. Boards have light shelf-wear present to the extremities. No ownership marks present. Text is clean and free of marks. Binding tight and solid. A new brand of kidnaping is Introduced by a mysterious gang, who abduct Nancy Wentworth, a popular musical comedy star, Luccl, a notorious gangster, and four wealthy business men. Relatives of the kidnaped persons are informed that they must pay "board money" to Insure the prisoner's safety. Jerry Calhoun, airplane pilot, who was with Nancy when she was carried away, his friend Emory Battles and Stevens, a detective, pick up the trail of the gang when the money Is collected and follow the kidnapers' hydroplane in their own airplane. The captives find themselves In some tropical place, where the uncertainty and heat undermine their nerves. The leader of the (gang, Ashwood, a cultured man who is very lame, watches their strained emotions. Luccl and Mallory, a millionaire stockbroker, In rivalry over Nancy, begin to quarrel. Incited by Ashwood they start fighting what Nancy believes to be a "battle to the death. " Eustace Adams graduated from St. Lawrence University (New York) in 1915. His writing career began about 1928, and he published at least 128 stories between 1928 and 1953 in magazines such as 'The American Magazine' and 'Argosy'. He also wrote at least 20 novels, primarily between 1928 and 1932. Four movies were made from his writings (see the IMDB link). He wrote the screen play for the film 'Under Secret Orders', released in 1933. His short story 'Sixteen Fathoms Under' was made into the movies "Sixteen Fathoms Deep" in 1934 and into "16 Fathoms Deep" in 1948. His novella "Loot Below", which was serialized in Argosy Weekly (11 December 1937 - 1 January 1938) , was made into the movie 'Desperate Cargo' in 1941. EB; 8vo 8" - 9" tall.