Partial reprint of the Spring 1949 (US) issue. Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Partial reprint of the Summer 1949 (US) issue. Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Partial reprint of the Fall 1949 (US) issue. Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Partial reprint of the Winter 1950 (US) issue. Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Partial reprint of the Spring 1950 (US) issue, plus a single story from the Winter 1950 (US) issue. Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Partial reprint of the January 1949 (US) issue. Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Partial reprint of the November 1948 (US) issue. Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Partial reprint of the Fall 1950 (US) issue. Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Partial reprint of the Winter 1951 (US) issue. Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Partial reprint of the September 1948 (US) issue, plus a single story from the Winter 1951 (US) issue. Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Partial reprint of the Spring 1951 (US) issue, plus a single story from the Fall 1950 (US) issue. Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Details supplied by Lance Liddle. |
Started out as a cops-and-robbers pulp with emphasis on police action and heavy thugs; as Ace Detective switched to heroic detective (usually police or FBI) chasing harsh thugs. |
|
Details taken from Table of Contents. |
|
|
Details taken from Table of Contents. |
|
Details supplied by Randy Vanderbeek. |
Title changed from Gold Seal Detective. |
Details supplied by John Locke. |
|
|
--- see under F.P. Detective Stories. |
Great Detective was originally launched in 1933 with the self-imposed task of publishing “the best detective-mystery fiction available”, much of it with a distinctly English flavour. After nine issues or so there was a hiatus following which the magazine resurfaced briefly featuring entirely original fiction, but survived for only three issues in this guise. |
Details taken from Table of Contents. |