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What makes a story pulp fiction?

April 8, 2014 by RJ Andron

You would think there would be an easy answer for this, but the reality is that trying to define pulp fiction is currently trying to define art. In a lot of respects, what constitutes pulp fiction is very much in the eye of the beholder.

If you were to ask anyone what pulp fiction was, you would very likely have them say that it was that Tarantino movie that starred John Travolta and Samuel L Jackson. This amazingly successful movie essentially took the concept of pulp and made it its own. The medium however has a much older history.

I don’t want to go too deep into the history – that’s another show – but I do want to get an idea across that this was designed as entertainment for the masses. If you go all the way back to Victorian England and you see the start of the “penny dreadfuls,” you will see that publishers found a market for stories among the common people of England. There were similar startups in France and the United States and elsewhere, but the common element was that publishers made money by selling entertainment.

Naturally, the literati hated this. The authors who believed that literature was intended to elevate and to challenge wanted nothing to do with this cheap, quickly written marketplace. Of course, that didn’t stop authors like Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Sax Rohmer from creating stories that entertained. Even Charles Dickens, before the literati claimed him as one of their own, wrote stories that would sell to the widest audience possible.

In the United States and Canada, we progressed through dime novels at the turn of the century up to pulp fiction in the 1930s and 1940s. These were magazines printed on cheap wood pulp paper and sold for a few cents at newsstands. North America, in the grip of the Great Depression, was desperate for entertainment. Entertainment exploded in this particular timeframe with pulp magazines competing with upscale, glossy magazines (nicknamed “slicks”). At the same time, we saw Hollywood ramping up its production as it circumvented the Edison Trust, and the new technology of radio actually brought live audio entertainment into people’s homes.

All of these entertainment companies prospered at a time when the United States and Canada were experiencing some of the worst economic conditions since their founding. They did this by providing their stories or movies or radio plays to as wide an audience as they could reach. In much the same way as William Shakespeare promoted his theater to Londoners as a whole, these entertainment companies wanted to get as many paying customers as possible to realize maximum profits. They saw their stories as ways to earn those profits by making them accessible to everyone for mere pennies, rather than producing solely for the literati and charging thousands of dollars so that only the wealthy could enjoy the entertainment. Pulp fiction was a wonderful democratizing expression of free-market capitalism at its finest.

For the pulp magazines, they lived or died based on their readership. Naturally, they chose to try different markets ranging from romance to Western to horror and even into “spicy” stories. Pulp heroes such as Doc Savage and the Shadow got their start in this particular era, as did noted writers like H.P. Lovecraft and Robert E Howard. If you could write a fictional story about it, odds are that there was a pulp magazine based on that.

So, the stories themselves had to be written quickly to allow them to get magazines out the door quicker. Naturally, this also meant that the stories had straightforward plots, little characterization, and for the major pulp heroes, little to no character development over the series of stories.

Because of the volume of stories needed and the rapid pace of development, multiple authors had to be used. Most of the stories were written under house names chosen by the magazine editors themselves, and ghostwritten by any number of scriveners under contract to the magazine, or freelancing. Maxwell Grant was the name of the author credited as writing the Shadow, but the books were actually written by Walter Gibson and in some cases Theodore Tinsley, Lester Dent, and Bruce Elliot.

Finally, the stories also had to be entertaining. There were a lot of magazines out there, and being able to convince the readership to plunk down their hard-earned money for your magazine as opposed to your competitor’s magazine meant you had to deliver the goods.

A lot of the enthusiasts for classic pulp fiction like to point out that pulp fiction is a medium, and not a genre. Genres would include things like hero pulps, weird menace stories, horror pulps a.k.a. “shudders”, Westerns, sea adventure stories, air adventure stories, sports and boxing stories, crime and detective stories, exotic adventure stories, and even in the more adult-oriented “spicy” versions of most of the other genres.

While it’s true that there are multiple flavors of pulp fiction, I would say that pulp fiction actually does fill a particular genre itself. To my mind, the pulps are:

  •  rapid paced,
  • exciting, and
  • compelling stories that demand the readers keep the pages turning to find out what happens next.

To these, I’d also add a fourth requirement as well. In the case of pulp fiction, the stories should be able to be finished within one or two sittings. This makes them shorter than most contemporary novels, which can require several sittings in order to read through the book. I’m a fast reader, and yet it would still take me a few days to churn my way through a 300 page novel.

Can you have a novel that has the hallmarks of pulp fiction, and yet exceeds 300,000 words? I think you can certainly have elements of that, but the longer the story goes, the more likely that the writer is going to have issues with pacing and maintaining excitement and keeping the readers interested. The more times the reader has to put down the book, the more opportunities there are for the reader to walk away from the novel.

Good pulp fiction can have a reader finish a 100,000 word story within a couple of sittings. Great pulp fiction can have the reader giving up sleep to finish that story in one sitting. And, if you can accomplish that as a writer, then you will have an audience for life.

About the Featured Image for this post: Parts of the image were made from cover scans by Will Hart of classic Pulp Fiction Magazines and are used under a Creative Commons Attribution License.

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Filed Under: Pulp Tagged With: Pulp, Pulp Fiction, Writing

Superhero Writing Tips – Writing Superhero Battles

April 2, 2014 by RJ Andron

Battle scenes are incredibly common in superhero comics and superhero stories. Every single story it seems involves some sort of fight between superheroes and super villains, or superheroes and the thugs de jour. In many cases, it’s actually quite refreshing to run across a superhero story that doesn’t involve some sort of punch up.

Yet, despite the presence of all of these superhero battles going on within comics, very few of them actually serve to do anything other than provide an excuse to show the superheroes in action. After all, back in the bad old days of comic books in the 1960s and 1970s, the villain of the month was introduced perpetrating some crime, and the superhero stepped in to try to deal justice to the super villain.

In a short superhero story, the one fight ends with the villain being soundly thrashed and led away in handcuffs. In a longer story, the villain escapes the first battle, leaving the superhero suffering from the mild embarrassment of being caught in the villain’s trap, and then a second climactic battle happens towards the end of the story. Again, the villain is soundly thrashed and let away in handcuffs.

In the 1980s and 1990s, superhero battles evolved to a certain extent to where the villains were necessarily led away in handcuffs but were allowed to serve as the target of the superhero’s angst. Yes, X-Men, I’m looking at you. After all, how many times in a Wolverine story did Sabertooth just happen to appear out of nowhere to provide some excuse for action scenes?

But, this is the 21st century. We can take a look at how to improve battle scenes within superhero storytelling, and we can see if we can come up with some useful guidelines that can then be applied to your next superhero story.

As always, your mileage may vary.

The Purpose of Superhero Battles

Let’s start by keeping in mind that we are telling stories here, so the battles themselves have to serve an integral storytelling function. They either have to:

  • advance the plot, or
  • reveal something about the characters that are involved,
  • or both.

[Read more…]

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Filed Under: Superheroes Tagged With: Battles, Superhero Writing, Superheroes

Reader Review: The Black Skull can rescue me anytime…

March 8, 2014 by RJ Andron

We have a brand new Five-star review of Accused: A Black Skull Short Thriller posted by Havorn at Amazon.ca. Check out her review below:

Five Stars for the Black Skull!

The Black Skull can rescue me anytime…

I’ve never been one for gritty crime novels, but I’m quite surprised how much I enjoyed this book. Reminiscent of Batman and the pulp fiction characters of yesteryear, the Black Skull is one intriguing hombre. I found myself kinda frightened by him and drawn to him all at the same time. 🙂

Mr. Andron has a way of taking you into the murky world that was 1930’s NY, and holding you in with his details. However, be warned that if you are not into course language, blood, and violence, this book is not for you. It took me a bit to get used to this myself, but if you’re looking for an exciting mystery and a return to the age of masked crusaders, look no further than “Accused: A Black Skull Short Thriller”. Looking forward to the next leg of the saga, Mr. Andron! 🙂

Thank you very much for the review Havorn! I am working on the Black Skull’s next adventure at the moment, and this adventure will take our pulp hero into the darkest corners of New York in the 1930s and beyond.

Get your own copy of Accused: A Black Skull Short Thriller by clicking on one of the links below:

  • Amazon.com for Kindle
  • Amazon.com for Print
  • Amazon.ca
  • Amazon.co.uk
  • Kobo

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My Path to Pulp Fiction – the Call to Adventure

February 28, 2014 by RJ Andron

How did I get interested in pulp fiction? What was the original spark that fired my imagination to chase down stories of fearless heroes, hard-boiled detectives, and daring archaeologists hacking their way through the jungle to find a lost temple?

For me, my passion for pulp fiction came fairly late in life. When I was much younger, I certainly did enjoy the adventure stories of child detectives such as the Hardy Boys, The Three Investigators, and just about every other junior mystery that my municipal and school libraries had in their possession. These books certainly fed my interest in adventure stories.

At the same time, I was a very avid comic book reader and I was fortunate enough to catch the run of Denny O’Neil and Neal Adams – and later Jim Aparo in the 1970s Batman comic books, and I still remember buying the 1st issue of the 1973 shadow comic book drawn by Mike Kaluta. Let’s just say that the 1970s and early 1980s were very good to someone who had an interest in action/adventure stories.

For somebody who was growing up in small-town Alberta, adventure seemed like a pretty good way to escape the prairies.

Then, in the 1980s, a lot of things started to change. The release of Frank Miller’s The Dark Knight Returns and the rise of the X-Men in comic books marked a couple of changes in how comic book stories were being told and how characters were being portrayed. Whereas Batman originally was a detective who had profound martial arts and athletic abilities and who dressed up in costume to fight crime, after Frank Miller’s seminal work, Batman became more and more of an unhappy and unlikable character. Some writers chose to portray him as on the verge of being a psychopath.

With the X-Men, everything at Marvel became about the mutants. Now, I can’t blame Marvel for wanting to capitalize on a trend that would only gather steam in the 90s. After all, the X-Men were some of their biggest titles and Marvel certainly wanted to make the most of a good thing.

However, with Batman becoming crazier and darker by the issue, and with Marvel’s entire line of superheroes becoming increasingly infected by the mutant virus, there wasn’t an awful lot out there to provide characters that were relatable to ordinary people.

Those were the characters that I always found most interesting. I always wanted to see how ordinary people could become extraordinary – how someone could rise well above their origins to challenge the unknown, and to do good simply because it’s the right thing to do. And in comic books, those characters went away.

Sure, there were a few characters who were holdouts against the trend towards the un-relatable. We had John Sable Freelance written and drawn by Mike Grell, we had Moon Knight in his first independent run written by Doug Moench and drawn by Bill Sienkiewicz, and we had the famous G.I. Joe comic line written by Larry Hama. But, more and more, comics were moving over to portraying characters that offered no inspiration to ordinary people.

So, I had to find inspiration – elsewhere. My Path to pulp fiction will be continued.

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We come from the Land of Ice and Snow…

January 31, 2014 by RJ Andron

Sometimes, you come across something on the web and you have to ask yourself: “why have I not heard of this before?” While indie or fan film superhero movies make up a good-sized chunk of YouTube videos, it’s a lot harder to find original superhero movies, let alone Canadian superhero web series. I came across Heroes of the North just yesterday, and I spent part of the evening going through season 1 of their web series. This group, based out of Montréal, is one of the most unique Transmedia producers that I have come across because they are doing their own, original Canadian superheroes. Talk about a niche market, but a market that I’m very happy to be part of.

Looking at their website, they’ve been very busy. They’ve produced 20 web series episodes in their 1st season, comic books, and they’re looking at producing DVDs. What they’ve managed to do with a modest budget per episode of approximately $5,000 is nothing short of amazing. I also like the fact that they are really pushing the concept of Transmedia. They’re telling stories not only through their web series, but also through comic books, photo novels, and their press kit says they’re looking at doing video games as well. Taking a look at their storefront, they even have custom figurines of 2 of the characters: Nordik and Fleur-de-Lys.

Even better, season 2, which promises to greatly expand the number of heroes and villains in their own universe begins tonight. I’ve still got a few videos to go before I start on season 2, however.

Their videos are also available on YouTube, and you can check them out from their Youtube channel.

Check them out at their Heroes of the North website and consider supporting them in their efforts. I know I will be.

After all, one thing we need a lot more of is Canadian superheroes.

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Filed Under: Superheroes Tagged With: Canada, Superheroes, Web Series

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