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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ed_Earl_ReppEd Earl Repp - Wikipedia

    Ed Earl Repp (1901–1979) was an American writer, screenwriter and novelist. His stories appeared in several of the early pulp magazines including Air Wonder Stories, Science Wonder Stories and Amazing Stories.

  2. Repp, Ed Earl. Entry updated 9 January 2023. Tagged: Author. (1901-1979) US advertising man, newspaper reporter and author; he wrote a large number of fairly unremarkable Pulp -magazine adventures for about a decade from 1929, ceasing to produce sf during World War Two, after his work as a screenwriter began to pick up; between 1934 and 1957 he ...

  3. www.imdb.com › name › nm0720101Ed Earl Repp - IMDb

    Ed Earl Repp was born on 22 May 1901 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. Ed Earl was a writer, known for The Pecos Pistol (1949), Cyclone Fury (1951) and The Devil's Saddle Legion (1937). Ed Earl was married to Margaret Louise Smith. Ed Earl died on 14 February 1979 in California, USA.

    • Writer
    • May 22, 1901
    • Ed Earl Repp
    • February 14, 1979
  4. Ed Earl Repp has 53 books on Goodreads with 680 ratings. Ed Earl Repps most popular book is The Radium Pool.

  5. Ed Earl Repp – And finally we come to, yes, Ed Earl Repp. It's a matter of record that Repp used ghostwriters extensively, so in a way, when you read one of his stories in a pulp magazine, you can never be sure who actually wrote it.

  6. Mar 21, 2020 · Ed Earl Repp (1901-1979) was a prolific Pulpster who wrote more Westerns than Science Fiction. (Some critics say it is hard to tell them apart.) He wrote some of his SF under the name Bradnor Buckner. He left the Pulps to write screenplays for Western movies.

  7. Ed Earl was a writer, known for Rider from Tucson (1950), The Pecos Pistol (1949) and The Devil's Saddle Legion (1937). Ed Earl was previously married to Margaret Louise Smith. Ed Earl died on February 14, 1979 in California, USA.

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