FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #801: A HISTORY OF THE DOC SAVAGE ADVENTURES By Robert Michael “Bobb” Cotter

I tend to live in the Past and from time to time I go on a nostalgia kick. This week it was Doc Savage (it was Tarzan a couple of weeks ago). I started reading and collecting Doc Savage paperbacks back in 1964 and I’m nowhere near reading all 182 Doc Savage novels but I have read dozens of them.

Robert Micheal “Bobb” Cotter’s A History of the Doc Savage Adventures presents plenty of information on the series and captures the unique aspects of the character. Doc Savage first appeared in 1933 with the Great Depression and the prospect of a world war affecting the stories. Science is blended with acton as Doc Savage and his band of skilled heroes take on villains and mysterious entities.

The artwork section of A History of the Doc Savage Adventures features illustrations, covers, and original artwork. I enjoyed the chapters on Doc Savage paperbacks, the pulp magazines, the comic books, and various fanzines. Also useful is an appendix that offers biographies of all major contributors to the Doc Savage series.

If you’re a Doc Savage fan, A History of the Doc Savage Adventures is a must-read! Do you have a favorite Doc Savage novel? GRADE: A

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Introduction—Who Is Doc Savage?      1

One. A New Deal, a New Hero      11
Two. All This and World War, Too      105
Three. The Bronze Age Meets the Atomic Age      140
Four. The Doc Savage History of Comics      158
Five. Doc Savage on the Air and in the Movie(s)      173
Six. The Fan(zines) of Bronze      190
Seven. The New Adventures of Doc Savage      202

Appendices
1. The People Behind Doc Savage      211
2. The Best of Doc Savage: Novels, Pulp and Paperback Covers      218
3. Street & Smith’s Doc Savage Magazine Issues      221
4. Bantam’s Doc Savage Paperbacks      223
5. Doc Savage Comicography      224
Bibliography      229
Index      231

13 thoughts on “FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #801: A HISTORY OF THE DOC SAVAGE ADVENTURES By Robert Michael “Bobb” Cotter

  1. Fred Blosser

    I bought four or five DOC SAVAGEs over the years in the Bantam editions, and even then, a few years after the Bantam series debuted. As a teen I never glommed onto the series as I did with Burroughs, Howard, Rohmer, Lovecraft, Fleming, and Gold Medal. I should give it another whirl..

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Fred, I’ve binged on Doc Savage novels over the years. They used to be easy to find, but today I’d have to put the Bantam Doc Savage paperbacks in the “scarce” category.

      Reply
    1. george Post author

      Jeff, Doc Savage is a classic pulp fiction icon. But, you have to be in the mood for 1930s-1950s style adventure writing.

      Reply
  2. Byron

    The Bantam editions with those cool James Bama covers (with the bold, groovy title font) seemed to dominate the paperback spinners of my youth. I read what I believe was the first book in the series when I was in highschool. It was fine but I never read another one. Maybe it was that weird helmet haircut? Is there one that you’d recommend?

    Reply
  3. Cap'n Bob

    Don’t know why, but I never was captured by Doc’s adventures! I read one book and saw the lousy movie and that’s it! Maybe I need to try again, but I’m 20 years behind on my reading now!

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Bob, sometimes one doesn’t connect with a character or a series at the time. I’m way behind on Adam Hall’s QUILLER series.

      Reply

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