Wild West Weekly

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Wild West Weekly was a dime novel later turned pulp magazine.[1]

On October 24, 1902 Frank Tousey released his first issue of the 5-cent dime novel Wild West Weekly called "The Prince in the Saddle". Written by Frank, though said to be written by "An Old Scout", it created a story centered around the character Young Wild West, a "bright, handsome boy of eighteen with a wealth of waving chestnut hair hanging down his back".[2] West is an expert horse rider among other things.[3]

The dime novel series ran from 1902 to 1928. [4] In 1927, the novel was acquired by Street & Smith and continued to run as a pulp magazine from 1931 to 1943.[5] In 1943 the magazine went through a name change, removing the word weekly from its title and was discontinued by the company later that year. Wild West ran for a total of 822 issues before ceasing publication.

The magazine was featured in an exhibition about Native American portrayals by the University of California Bancroft Library.[6][7]

Regular writers included editor Tousey and (1863-1952).

References[]

  1. ^ "Wild West Weekly (Western)". Comic Book Plus.
  2. ^ Young Wild West: the prince of the saddle. Frank Tousey.
  3. ^ "Young Wild West: the prince of the saddle". digital.lib.usf.edu.
  4. ^ "Wild West Weekly". University of South Florida Libraries Digital Collections.
  5. ^ "Wild West Weekly archives". onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu.
  6. ^ "Mass Market Appeal (16 of 19)". bancroft.berkeley.edu.
  7. ^ "Young Wild West's Weird West Weekly, a 1915 dime novel. | jessnevins.com".

External links[]


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