Argosy All-Story Weekly Pulp Magazine August 26, 1922 The Sign of the Serpent


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Argosy All-Story Weekly – August 26, 1922 – “The Sign of the Serpent” (GD Interior)

This August 26, 1922 issue of Argosy All-Story Weekly opens with “The Sign of the Serpent,” the first chapter in a seven-part serial by John Goodwin. Blending intrigue and adventure, it headlines a robust lineup of continued stories, novelettes, short fiction, and poetry from some of the era’s most prolific pulp writers.

The magazine is in acceptable condition with good interior for its century-old age. It shows rips, marks, creases, and general wear, but the text remains complete and legible. The copy pictured is the exact item you will receive. Please check photos for a detailed view of condition.

We gladly offer combined shipping on multiple purchases, and every item is shipped in a clear protective sleeve to preserve its integrity.


Table of Contents

Five Continued Stories

  • The Sign of the Serpent (Part One of Seven) — John Goodwin – p.161

  • The Age-Old Kingdom (Part Two of Four) — Captain Dingle – p.208

  • The Beloved Brute (Part Three of Six) — Kenneth Perkins – p.232

  • The Poison Plague (Part Four of Five) — Will Levinrew – p.262

  • Hidden Trails (Part Five of Five) — Robert Ames Bennet – p.285

Novelette and Short Stories

  • Flora — Ellis Parker Butler – p.180

  • Ching Li — Richard Barry – p.224

  • The Vacuum Chamber — Henry Leverage – p.254

  • Brothers — Earl C. McCain – p.278

  • The Respectable Mr. Williams — Rud Rennie – p.306

Miscellaneous & Poetry

  • The Ladies in Sports — Izzy Kaplan’s Kolumn – p.318

  • Suspicion — Hariette G. Bingham – p.223

  • Haunted — Eleanor Robbins Wilson – p.253

  • To My Lady — Nina Hatchitt Duffield – p.277

  • The Lure — Jennie Harris Oliver – p.284

  • Geography — Edgar Daniel Kramer – p.305

  • Fate — La Touche Hancock – p.320


A fine artifact of early pulp publishing, this issue exemplifies the blend of serial adventures, mystery, and light verse that made Argosy All-Story Weekly a cornerstone of 1920s popular literature.

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