The Shadow

Bells of Doom is a short novel featuring The Shadow. The story begins on a ocean liner and soon brings readers to a small town that is home to a belltower. The rest of the book deals with a series of murders committed in the town that are announced by the ringing of bells. ...more on Wikipedia about "Bells of Doom (novel)"

Death Has Grey Eyes is a pulp novel featuring the Shadow. It concerns a post-WWII Nazi plot to create a reich by replacing an American service man with a with his duplicate. ...more on Wikipedia about "Death Has Grey Eyes"

Double Z is a pulp novel featuring the Shadow. Double Z is a mysterious mastermind who sends letters to the police, sometimes tipping off the plans of other criminals and sometimes his own crimes and then committing them under the nose of the police. ...more on Wikipedia about "Double Z"

A list of original novels featuring The Shadow and published as paperback books by Belmont Books. These have been numbered 326 to 334. The first of these novels, Return of the Shadow, was the only one written by Walter B. Gibson. ...more on Wikipedia about "List of The Shadow stories"

Maxwell Grant was a pen name used by the authors of " The Shadow." ...more on Wikipedia about "Maxwell Grant"

The Death Tower is a pulp novel featuring The Shadow. It involves the Shadow and his agents' battle with the monstrous Dr. Palermo, who lives in a booby-trapped apartment on top of a forty story building. It features the first appearance of Clyde Burke, a reporter who becomes one of the Shadow's agents. ...more on Wikipedia about "The Death Tower"

The Golden Master is a 1939 pulp novel featuring the character known as the Shadow. It has the first appearance of the hero's archenemy Shiwan Khan, and deals with a scheme by Khan to conquer the world by hypotizing arms manufacturers. ...more on Wikipedia about "The Golden Master"

Please visit again http://www.shortopedia.com

"The Living Shadow", the first pulp magazine story to feature The Shadow. Written by Walter B. Gibson, it was submitted for publication as "Murder in the Next Room" on January 23, 1931, and published as "The Living Shadow" in the April 1, 1931 issue of "The Shadow Magazine". This story introduces the literary version, as opposed to the radio version, of The Shadow. ...more on Wikipedia about "The Living Shadow"

The Shadow is a pulp fiction crime fighter created by Walter Gibson, who became even more famous on radio. Featured also in comic books, television, and at least seven motion pictures---including the most recent, starring Alec Baldwin in the title role---The Shadow is best regarded for its radio years, in which pulp crime fiction received perhaps its most compelling broadcast interpretation and sent both parts of its unmistakeable (and never varied) introduction (Who knows...what evil...lurks in the hearts of men? The Shadow knows...) into America's permanent lexicon. ...more on Wikipedia about "The Shadow"

Walter Brown Gibson ( September 12, 1897- December 6, 1985) was an American author and a professional magician best known for his work on The Shadow. ...more on Wikipedia about "Walter B. Gibson"

Walter Gibson was an American author who created the pulp fiction character The Shadow. "Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men? The Shadow knows." ...more on Wikipedia about "Walter Gibson"

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia . Direct links to the original articles are in the text.
If you use exact copy or modified of this article you should preserve above paragraph and put also : It uses material from the Shortopedia article about "The Shadow".
MAIN PAGE MAIN INDEX CONTACT US