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Captain Zero

Captain Zero was an American pulp magazine that published three issues in 1949 and 1950. The lead novels, written by G.T. Fleming-Roberts, featured Lee Allyn, who had been the subject of an experiment with radiation, and as a result was invisible between midnight and dawn. Under the name Captain Zero, Allyn became a vigilante, fighting crime at night. Allyn had no other superpowers, and the novels were straightforward mysteries in Weinberg’s opinion, though pulp historian Robert Sampson considers them to be “complex… [they] pound along with hair-raising incidents… full of twists and high suspense”. Captain Zero was the last crime-fighter hero magazine to be launched in the pulp era, ending an era that had begun with The Shadow in 1931. There was room in the magazine for only one or two short stories along with the lead novel; these were all straight mystery stories, without the veneer of science fiction of the Captain Zero novels. Each issue included a non-fiction section with crime anecdotes, and a department called “The Zero Hour” which narrated stories about anonymous crime-fighters, likely to be fabricated, according to Sampson. The magazine was canceled after only three issues. Fleming-Roberts had already written a fourth novel, but it was never published and is now in a private collection.
Alias Captain Zero
Real Names/Alt Names Lee Allyn
Characteristics Pulp Characters, Weird Tales Universe, Disembodied Body Part, Number-themed, Invisibility, Invisibility, Atomic Age
Creators/Key Contributors G.T. Fleming-Roberts, Rafael De Soto
First Appearance Captain Zero #1 (1949)
First Publisher Popular Publications [Internet Archive] [LUM]
Appearance List Captain Zero #1-3
Sample Read Captain Zero [LUM]
Description Captain Zero was an American pulp magazine that published three issues in 1949 and 1950. The lead novels, written by G.T. Fleming-Roberts, featured Lee Allyn, who had been the subject of an experiment with radiation, and as a result was invisible between midnight and dawn. Under the name Captain Zero, Allyn became a vigilante, fighting crime at night. Allyn had no other superpowers, and the novels were straightforward mysteries in Weinberg’s opinion, though pulp historian Robert Sampson considers them to be “complex… [they] pound along with hair-raising incidents… full of twists and high suspense”. Captain Zero was the last crime-fighter hero magazine to be launched in the pulp era, ending an era that had begun with The Shadow in 1931. There was room in the magazine for only one or two short stories along with the lead novel; these were all straight mystery stories, without the veneer of science fiction of the Captain Zero novels. Each issue included a non-fiction section with crime anecdotes, and a department called “The Zero Hour” which narrated stories about anonymous crime-fighters, likely to be fabricated, according to Sampson. The magazine was canceled after only three issues. Fleming-Roberts had already written a fourth novel, but it was never published and is now in a private collection.
Source Captain Zero (magazine) – Wikipedia
Captain Zero #1 (1949) | Rafael De Soto
Captain Zero #1 (1949) | Rafael De Soto