Pulp Magazine or Pulp Fiction is a term used to describe a huge amount of creative writing available to the American public in the early nineteen-hundreds. Termed “pulp magazines” because of the low quality paper used between the covers, these publications proliferated in the nineteen-thirties and nineteen-forties to the point where they blanketed newsstands in just about every popular fiction genre of the time.
Although the pages in-between the covers were a dingy cheap quality, the covers were beautifully decorated, many times with lurid portraits of pretty women in various stages of trouble, and the handsome men attempting to rescue them.

Tomb Raider, Gme-101
Woodstock, LP0037
Dumbo, TLS 73.
Red Sonja, MocB-095
MineCraft, Gme-182
Puebla, Mexico, Adv-240
Paco de Lucia, LP0011
Bike, CYCL-23.
The Hunchback of Notre Dame, TLS 205
''Banksy'' STR-04.
''Banksy'' STR-15.
''Banksy'' STR-24.
''Banksy'' STR-19.
''Banksy'' STR-26
''Banksy'' STR-07.
Cowboy Bebop, TLS 457
''Banksy'' STR-12.
''Banksy'' STR-03.
Resident Evil, Gme-107.
Dracula, THR-54
IT, THR-67
The Last of Us, Gme-136
Haikyu, Cmx-482
Mexico, Adv-263
''Banksy'' STR-23.
''Banksy'' STR-05.
''Elvis 4'' Mus-21.
Steel Ball Run, Jojo's Bizarre, Cmx-667
Orang-Utan, Adv-178
Wonder Science, Ppf-026.
Africa, SA-35.
Ecuador, Adv-361
Wonder Stories, Ppf-016.
Phantom Detective, Ppf-019.
Africa, SA-55
Africa, SA-56
Planet Stories, Ppf-005.
Planet Stories, Ppf-027.
Evangelion, Cmx-464
Les Aventures de Blake et Mortimer, Cmx-478
The Shadow, Ppf-030.
Doc Savage, Ppf-009.
Captain Future, Ppf-001.