Well, I wasn't aware of
Haffner Press. So thank you!
Re Ivy Frost, [and Jean Moray.] I'm coming to the conclusion [from my reading, and from the books on CB+, that there were actually a lot more strong females and female heroines in the 20's to 40's in fiction and movies that there were later in the supposedly liberated 70's to 90's.
That homepage has two
Frederick Brown collections, which I can thoroughly recommend. They are definitely not run-of-the-mill. Good for your head space. Fred Brown was a thinker and liked also for his Audience to have fun. So, light, but also deep.
Howard Browne's Paul Pine stories are great Private Eye stuff.
I see a collection of Moore and Kuttner's
Michael Grey Mysteries.
On the Canadian site, Faded Page,
https://www.fadedpage.com/ Someone has been posting a lot of Kuttner's short Science Fiction stories. If anybody's interested.
Andrew, to answer your question,
what other forgotten pulp heroes from the thirties deserve a reboot - any suggestions?
1/ I would like to see more period Private eye, detective, mystery and police procedural material - Noir, not Cosy, in comic book form, but not rebooted, as in updated and substantially changed, but done period.
Not enough space here to go into it, but many of those characters just won't work and don't make sense in today's world.
My mind goes off in tangents of its own. Nero Wolfe just occupied it. And that's a big occupancy.
The TV series with Timothy Hutton and Maury Chaykin was terrific.
Whole episodes here.
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=nero+wolfe+tv+series+full+episodes And here are the two 1930s Nero Wolfe movies.
MEET NERO WOLFE (1936)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHCoB_zrOE4 THE LEAGUE OF FRIGHTENED MEN (1937)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lHpUGK5jD-8 Cheers!
Enjoy!