Print-on-demand facsimile reprinting of the original May 1937 issue of the pulp magazine. The lead pulp novel is listed in the magazine as by G-8 as told to Robert J. Hogan, and includes the non-genre air-war short story "Flying Stepmother" (p 98) by Greaseball Joe (who is also Hogan), and "The Glory Buzzard" by an uncredited Hogan (90).
All G-8 reprints in this series from Adventure House are reprinted in order of their original publication.
"G-8 Speaks" is a letter section, and it usually opens with a short introductory essay by G-8 (Robert J. Hogan) and then goes on to print some G-8 fan letters. However, while it is listed on this facsimile's contents page, it is not reprinted this time in this magazine.
It is unknown how many pages the original pulp had, this facsimile stops, possibly, at page 105 of the pulp. The last page is unnumbered. The non-reprinted "G-8 Speaks" was supposed to start at page 110.
Volume 11 Number 4.
The front cover of the facsimile has been restored from the original.
All illustrations, including those of the non-genre stories, are by John Fleming Gould. The reprint published miscredits them to "John Flemming Gould".
Contains many spot illustrations and character portraits that are either filler and drift from one issue to another, or are cropped from the larger full-page illustrations.
The original G-8 and His Battle Aces pulp magazine was published by Popular Publications, now Argosy Communications.
The original editor of the pulp is uncredited. This edited version of the pulp is presumably edited by John Gunnison, the publisher of Adventure House.
Listed as an anthology as it is unknown how much this facsimile reprint has been edited.
Page thirty-five has a full-page advertisement for Adventure House pulp auctions. It is unclear if this ad replaced a piece of artwork or a page of ads from the original pulp.
This is the second of eight appearances of the villainous Chu Lung.
The original pulp cost $0.10, this facsimile costs $10.95 in Canada.