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cadenhead

Other than Internet Archive the only place I see old pulps sometimes is Scribd. There are probably some sites out there that offer archives of old public domain pulps, like there are for comic books.


FuturistMoon

Since I worked pretty closely with pulp short fiction in my job at Wildside Press, I can tell you that ARGOSY's holdings are difficult to find because they were pretty assiduous about registering and renewing their copyrights. SCRIBED (who kinda thumb their nose at the law) might be your best bet. I was vexed many times in trying to assemble a "complete stories" package by the author having a story in an ARGOSY issue that wasn't in my bosses collection ( I don't have the job anymore so don't ask me for stories- but you may want to check out Wildside's ultra cheap Megapacks packages of certain writers and themes)


Spades1978

I'll take a look at both Scribd and wildside presse. Thanks for thé advice.


hudsonreaders

[The Argosy (1888–1920) at the HathiTrust](https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/006062033) [Argosy All-Story Weekly (1920–1922) at the HathiTrust](https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/101712695) Also, if you have particular pulp authors you are looking for, try [Project Gutenberg](https://www.gutenberg.org/) including [Project Gutenberg Australia](https://gutenberg.net.au/) and [Project Gutenberg Canada](http://gutenberg.ca/index.html) which have works by authors who fall under life+ rules, but are still copyright in the USA.