G-8 | |
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Publisher | Popular Publications |
First appearance | G-8 and His Battle Aces #1 (October 1933) |
Created by | Robert J. Hogan |
In story information | |
Real name | Unknown |
Supporting characters | Battle Nippy Weston Bull Martin |
G-8 and His Battle Aces | |
Publisher | Popular Publications |
Genre | War, Spy, Adventure |
Publication date | October 1933 – June 1944 |
Number of issues | 110 |
Creative team | |
Writer(s) | Robert J. Hogan |
G-8 was a heroic aviator and spy during World War I in pulp fiction. He starred in his own title G-8 and His Battle Aces, published by Popular Publications. All stories were written by Robert J. Hogan, under his own name. The title lasted 110 issues, from October 1933 to June 1944. Many of the novels have been reprinted by a wide-range of publishers including comic books.
While not as dramatic a pulp character as Doc Savage or the Shadow, his stories were often outlandish, with many supernatural or science fiction elements. G-8's true identity was never revealed. He had a girlfriend, a nurse who aided his group, and her name as well was never revealed. His English manservant was named Battle. His wing-men were the short Nippy Weston, who flew an aircraft numbered 13, and the tall and muscular but superstitious Bull Martin, whose aircraft was numbered 7. Both of them were Americans. His adventures entailed fighting against the lethal super technology that was constantly created by the Kaiser's mad scientists. Reoccurring villains included Herr Doktor Krueger, the Steel Mask, and Grun.
The character made two appearances in the comic book Planetary along side many other pulp analogues as part of a society for the betterment of humankind.[1][2]
Contents |
During the craze for hero pulp reprints in the 1970s started by the success of Doc Savage reprints, Berkley Books reprinted 8 G-8 novels. The first 3 had covers by Jim Steranko and a logo inspired by Doc Savage's. After that, the covers reprinted the original pulp covers.
In more recent years, some G-8 novels were reprinted by small presses like Adventure House. Adventure House recently started a reprint series of G-8 in similar size to the original pulps, including covers and interior artwork. So far, they have reprinted about 40 issues.