3 Wrestling Stories from the Pulps

3 Wrestling Stories from the Pulps

by Thomas Thursday
3 Wrestling Stories from the Pulps

3 Wrestling Stories from the Pulps

by Thomas Thursday

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Overview

PERIL PRESS presents:
3 WRESTLING
PULP STORIES
by Thomas Thursday

Top-Notch, April 15 1925
THAT TERRIBLE WRESTLER
by Thomas Thursday
Chapter 1: Husky and Rough
Chapter 2: All Holds Permitted
Chapter 3: What Would Never Happen
Chapter 4: Eager For The Fray
Chapter 5: Tried Too Often
4300 Words

All Sports, Summer, 1943
THE TRAGEDY OF KING LEARY
by Thomas Thursday
Wherein we introduce the wrestler of the ages, the champ who practiced on alligators, and set him up against a rubber man!
5000 Words

Thrilling Sports, Fall 1943
BALDY MUZZLES THE TIGER
By JACK KOFOED
Women Can Provide Complications for Manager Simmons Even at an Army Wrestling Match!
4200 Words

This edition includes the illustrations to the stories, as well as the covers to the pulp magazines in which they were first published, but also includes a small gallery of vintage wrestling images.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940148610137
Publisher: Peril Press
Publication date: 09/05/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Thomas Thursday (born 1894, date of death unknown) was a lesser-known pulp writer who ended up having one of the longest careers writing for the pulp magazines. His first published short story, "A Stroke of Genius," appeared in Top-Notch (April 1, 1918). He submitted the story to them after finding an old issue in the subway. He used the penname "Thursday" after glancing at a calendar. His real name remains a mystery. He was still appearing in the pulps in the late 50s, after which the magazine format all but disappeared from the newsstands.
Thursday was primarily a humorist, one of the few in the pulps. He appeared regularly in Top-Notch through the mid-20s, then transitioned to Argosy. Many of his story titles featured wordplay, e.g. "Illiterature" (People's Favorite Magazine, April 10, 1919), "Young Mild West" (Argosy All-Story Weekly, February 28, 1925), "Of Lice and Men" (Phantom Detective, September 1940). Many of his stories centered around circuses and sideshows. Thursday had worked for numerous circuses in his youth. Swindles and scams were a frequent theme.
During the early Depression, his career seemed to peter out for a few years. Likely, with the increasing specialization in pulp magazines, the market for general humor became too narrow. Thursday resurfaced in the mid-30s, adding a number of other specialties to his repertoire. He wrote humorous sports stories for the growing sports pulp field; straightforward detective stories; and articles for the true-crime magazine market. The true-crime stories all concerned Miami, Florida cases, where he had relocated (from New York) in the late-20s. He was never one of the prolific fictioneers, so it's likely he wrote on the side.
Throughout his career, Thursday frequently published articles in writers' magazines like Writer's Digest and The Author & Journalist. Though always amusing, these how-to articles took on an increasingly bitter tone, as Thursday became more and more disgusted with the hardships of the writing business, especially the collapse of word-rates after the onset of the Depression. He reserved his most severe wrath for the pulp magazine editors, who he dubbed "idiotors."
He published a true-crime article as late as 1963. His date of death remains unknown.
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