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Details supplied by Rob Preston. |
British reprint edition of Private Detective. |
Reprint of the February 1950 (US) issue, plus a single story from elsewhere. Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Partial reprint of the April 1950 (US) issue. Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Partial reprint of the August 1950 (US) issue. Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Issue not indexed. |
Issue not indexed. |
Partial reprint of the June 1950 (US) issue. Details taken from eBay listing. |
Partial reprint of the December 1950 (US) issue. Details supplied by Rob Preston from Table of Contents. |
Partial reprint of the May 1950 (US) issue. Details taken from eBay listing. |
Partial reprint of the October 1950 (US) issue. Details supplied by Rob Preston. |
Private Eye featured stories of hoodlums and small-time crooks, private investigators and the police, and some stories with surprise endings. Despite containing a good selection of contemporary crime-adventure and mystery stories by well-known authors, the magazine folded after only two issues, publishing material that was too little different from so many others. |
Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Details taken from Table of Contents. |
--- see under New All-Action Stories. |
Issue partially indexed. |
The magazine featured Michael Avallone’s well-known detective Ed Noon (and was originally to be called Ed Noon’s Mystery Magazine). It folded after only two issues because of distribution problems. |
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Details taken from Table of Contents. |
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This issue was not available to the general public. It was a published for trademark purposes. Details supplied by Doug Ellis. |
Details taken from Table of Contents. |
President: Saul Willbach; Secretary: J. M. Mann. Details supplied by Morgan Wallace. |