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Tag Archives: Curse of the Nekhen (1966)
Pulp Friday: Wild Beat, a tribute to Australian pulp writer Carl Ruhen, 1937-2013
Most people think of pulp publishing as American. But for several decades in the second half of the last century, Australia had a significant pulp paperback industry that produced a large range of popular fiction.
By the mid-to-late sixties, Horwitz, Australia’s largest pulp publisher, was producing up to 16 titles a month with initial print runs of 20,000 copies. Black magic, hippies, juvenile delinquents, spies, bored suburban housewives looking for thrills, and evil Japanese and German prison guards – nothing was off limits. Local pulp publishers pounced on mainstream society’s fantasies, fears and obsessions and turned them into cheap, disposable paperback thrills.
Carl Ruhen was at the centre of this industry and continued to ply his trade as a writer until the late eighties. AustLit, the Australian Literature Resource database, credits him with 78 books. He also penned numerous short stories and magazine articles.
On November 28 last year, Carl Ruhen died after a long illness, aged 76.
I’ve long been aware of Ruhen’s work. Unfortunately, I never met him. I found out about his passing in late December when an acquaintance who’d been in sporadic contact with Ruhen emailed me with the news. The only mention I’ve been able to find of his death was a short notice in the Sydney Morning Herald, dated December 2, 2013.
Posted in Australian pulp fiction, Horwitz Publications, Pulp fiction, Pulp fiction in the 70s and 80s, Pulp Friday, Scripts Publications, Vintage pulp paperback covers
Tagged Alvin Purple, Carl Ruhen, Curse of the Nekhen (1966), Gordon and Gotch, Horwitz Publications, J.E. Macdonnell, John Slater, Mad Max 2, Man Magazine, Olaf Ruhen, Stag Publications, The Rebels, The Violent Ones, Wild Beat, WR Bennett