Moon Man (literary character)
Encyclopedia
The Moon Man is a fictional pulp magazine
Pulp magazine
Pulp magazines , also collectively known as pulp fiction, refers to inexpensive fiction magazines published from 1896 through the 1950s. The typical pulp magazine was seven inches wide by ten inches high, half an inch thick, and 128 pages long...

 character who appeared in Ten Detective Aces magazine, published by A.A. Wyn's Ace Magazines. He was a pulp hero in the Robin Hood
Robin Hood
Robin Hood was a heroic outlaw in English folklore. A highly skilled archer and swordsman, he is known for "robbing from the rich and giving to the poor", assisted by a group of fellow outlaws known as his "Merry Men". Traditionally, Robin Hood and his men are depicted wearing Lincoln green clothes....

 mold. Frederick C. Davis created the character and wrote all the stories under his own name. (Davis had a long career as a mystery novelist under various pen names, most notably "Stephen Ransome.")

Character

The Moon Man was so named because he concealed his identity with a spherical helmet of argus glass, which gave a mirrored appearance. He wore a black robe with black gloves. Because the Moon Man robbed from villains, he was viewed by the police as another criminal. All the loot he took was instead distributed secretly to the poor of Great City by the Moon Man's ally, Ned "Angel" Dargan.

The Moon Man was really detective-sergeant Stephen Thatcher, son of Great City's Police Chief. His main opponent was Detective Gill McEwen, who worked to stop the Moon Man. Sue McEwen, Gill's daughter, was Thatcher's love interest.

Stories

  1. "The Sinister Sphere", 06/01/33
  2. "Blood on the Moon", 07/01/33
  3. "Moon Wizard", 08/01/33
  4. "The Silver Secret", 09/01/33
  5. "Black Lightening", 10/01/33
  6. "Night Nemesis", 11/01/33
  7. "Murder Moon", 12/01/33
  8. "Silver Death", 01/01/34
  9. "Mark of the Moon Man", 02/01/34
  10. "Crimson Shackles", 03/01/34
  11. "Blood Bargain", 04/01/34
  12. "The Black Lash", 05/01/34
  13. "The Murder Master", 06/01/34
  14. "Moon Doom", 07/01/34
  15. "Calling 'Car 13'", 08/01/34
  16. "Fingers of Fear", 09/01/34
  17. "Corpse's Alibi", 10/01/34
  18. "The Sinister Snatch", 11/01/34
  19. "Badge of Blood", 12/01/34
  20. "Ghoul's Gamble", 01/01/35
  21. "The Silver Snare", 02/01/35
  22. "The Crimson Snare", 03/01/35
  23. "Satan's Stepson", 04/01/35
  24. "The Silver Spectre", 05/01/35
  25. "The Dial of Doom", 06/01/35
  26. "The Masked Scourge", 08/01/35
  27. "The Master of Murder River", 09/01/35
  28. "Counterfeit Corpse", 10/01/35
  29. "Homicide Dividends", 11/01/35
  30. "Robe of Blood", 12/01/35
  31. "The Whispering Death", 01/01/36
  32. "Death's Last Bargian", 02/01/36
  33. "Corpse's Plunder", 03/01/36
  34. "Preview to Murder", 05/01/36
  35. "Ghoul's Carnival", 07/01/36
  36. "Skeleton's Snare", 09/01/36
  37. "Murder for a Pastime", 11/01/36
  38. "Blackjack Jury", 01/01/37

Reprints and New Stories

A few Moon Man stories were reprinted in later years, with a proposal in the mid-1980s to reprint all the stories in two volumes from "Purple Prose Press". Only the first volume, Night Nemesis, saw print. More recently, the small press Battered Silicon Dispatch Box
Battered Silicon Dispatch Box
The Battered Silicon Dispatch Box is an independent, Canadian literary publisher, founded in 1993 by George A. Vanderburgh. Based in Shelburne, Ontario, and in Sauk City, Wisconsin, the company is headed by George Vanderburgh....

published the two volumes as a set.

A few new Moon Man stories have also appeared in pulp fanzines. Longer works include The Hounds of Hell, published by Airship 27, which pitted the Moon Man against pulp villain Doctor Satan.
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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