
Norvell Page (1904–1961)
Author of The Spider: Robot Titans of Gotham
About the Author
Series
Works by Norvell Page
But Without Horns 2 copies
City of Doom 1 copy
Hell's Music 1 copy
The Demon-Mask Murders 1 copy
Gallows Ghost 1 copy
Satan's Hoof 1 copy
The Sinister Embrace 1 copy
Satan's Sideshow 1 copy
The Angel of Death 1 copy
Angel's Wings 1 copy
Murder Magic 1 copy
Snowball in Hell 1 copy
In at the Death 1 copy
Little Brother of Death 1 copy
Statues of Horror 1 copy
Jewel Kill 1 copy
Medal For Murder 1 copy
The Leopard Kills 1 copy
Associated Works
Rivals of Weird Tales: 30 Great Fantasy & Horror Stories from the Weird Fiction Pulps (1990) — Contributor — 97 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Page, Norvell W.
- Legal name
- Page, Norvell Wordsworth
- Other names
- Stockbridge, Grant
Craig, Randolph - Birthdate
- 1904-07-06
- Date of death
- 1964
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Richmond, Virginia, USA
Members
Reviews
Norvell Page wrote like a runaway locomotive, his narratives filled with action from the opening moments to their exciting conclusions. These pulp adventures of Ken Carter stories are fabulously entertaining for pulp fans. While some may tout Page's The Spider as better, I do find these Ken Carter stories to be very close to that quality in many respects.
You get a lot of bang for your pulp buck with Page, but especially here. The cover is high-gloss, good quality, and the artwork terrific. show more The book has a nice introduction by Robert Weinberg, and at the conclusion of the stories, an essay from Page himself called Why I Write. The opening line of Page's essay is as follows:
"People who talk of 'Art for Art's sake' annoy me."
Beyond that is an About the Author by Tom Roberts, explaining how the stock market crash of 1929 led Page in the direction of writing, for which pulp fans are incredibly grateful. The text is on white paper of good stock, so it's a book which will hold up for collectors. If there is a caveat, it is the minor one I noted for The Rambler collection. Perhaps in order to keep the collection from being heftier, and pricier, Black Dog Books chose a somewhat smaller font size than I would have liked. While it wasn't an issue for me, it might be an annoyance to older fans of pulp.
There are seven Ken Carter stories here. Each comes in at roughly around thirty pages, but because they move at such a breakneck speed, it feels like one continuos thrill-filled ride for fans of early pulp. The stories included in City of Corpses, which has the aforementioned terrific cover art from Walter Baumhofer, are as follows:
Hell's Music
City of Corpses
Statues of Horror
Gallows Ghost
The Devil's Hoof
The Sinister Embrace
Satan's Sideshow
While Statues of Horror and Gallows Ghost were my favorites here, all the stories were great pulp fun. These stories were culled from 1933 - 1935, and there is a feel to them which echoes Page's more famous, The Spider, who competed in the pulps with The Shadow. Great stuff no early pulp fan, and especially no Page fan, will want to miss! Awesome for its targeted audience. show less
You get a lot of bang for your pulp buck with Page, but especially here. The cover is high-gloss, good quality, and the artwork terrific. show more The book has a nice introduction by Robert Weinberg, and at the conclusion of the stories, an essay from Page himself called Why I Write. The opening line of Page's essay is as follows:
"People who talk of 'Art for Art's sake' annoy me."
Beyond that is an About the Author by Tom Roberts, explaining how the stock market crash of 1929 led Page in the direction of writing, for which pulp fans are incredibly grateful. The text is on white paper of good stock, so it's a book which will hold up for collectors. If there is a caveat, it is the minor one I noted for The Rambler collection. Perhaps in order to keep the collection from being heftier, and pricier, Black Dog Books chose a somewhat smaller font size than I would have liked. While it wasn't an issue for me, it might be an annoyance to older fans of pulp.
There are seven Ken Carter stories here. Each comes in at roughly around thirty pages, but because they move at such a breakneck speed, it feels like one continuos thrill-filled ride for fans of early pulp. The stories included in City of Corpses, which has the aforementioned terrific cover art from Walter Baumhofer, are as follows:
Hell's Music
City of Corpses
Statues of Horror
Gallows Ghost
The Devil's Hoof
The Sinister Embrace
Satan's Sideshow
While Statues of Horror and Gallows Ghost were my favorites here, all the stories were great pulp fun. These stories were culled from 1933 - 1935, and there is a feel to them which echoes Page's more famous, The Spider, who competed in the pulps with The Shadow. Great stuff no early pulp fan, and especially no Page fan, will want to miss! Awesome for its targeted audience. show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 46
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 386
- Popularity
- #62,659
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 41
- Languages
- 1











