In wanting to recognize Galaxy Press for this milestone achievement, Gulli stated that the benchmark for entertainment is to "publish page-turning and gripping works: mission accomplished." Whether for his best mystery books or best thriller books, "L. Ron Hubbard's amazing worlds are a testament to his dedication to the art of storytelling."
To make the point, in a review done, The Strand Magazine noted, "L. Ron Hubbard's Spy Killer, a 1936 espionage thriller, he introduces the mysterious Russian woman Varinka Savischna with this line: 'The steam that rose from her cup of tea was not less elusive than the quality of her eyes.' Writing like this has a cadence, a lilting quality that not only establishes characterization but engages the reader. We learn more about Varinka Savischna in those nineteen words than if Hubbard had written a full page of prose."
Like other great pulp writers that included names such as Edgar Rice Burroughs, Raymond Chandler, Agatha Christie, and Dashiell Hammett, L. Ron Hubbard rapidly became a mainstay of popular fiction in the 20th century. However, Hubbard was unlike most authors of the day, as his stories covered a wide spectrum of genres, including adventure, western, mystery, detective, fantasy, science fiction, and even some romance, using his own and 15 pen names.
For more information about the mystery & suspense books in the Stories from the Golden Age, go to http://galaxypress.com/mystery-stories.
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