- Thomas Thursday
Thomas Thursday (1894-19??) was a lesser-known pulp writer who ended up having one of the longest careers writing for the pulp magazines. His first published short story, "A Stroke of Genius," appeared in
Top-Notch (April 1, 1918). He submitted the story to them after finding an old issue in the subway. He used the penname "Thursday" after glancing at a calendar. His real name remains a mystery. He was still appearing in the pulps in the late 50s, after which the magazine format all but disappeared from the newsstands.Thursday was primarily a humorist, one of the few in the pulps. He appeared regularly in
Top-Notch through the mid-20s, then transitioned toArgosy . Many of his story titles featured wordplay, e.g. "Illiterature" (People's Favorite Magazine , April 10, 1919), "Young Mild West" (Argosy All-Story Weekly , February 28, 1925), "Of Lice and Men" (Phantom Detective , September 1940). Many of his stories centered around circuses and sideshows. Thursday had worked for numerous circuses in his youth. Swindles and scams were a frequent theme.During the early Depression, his career seemed to peter out for a few years. Likely, with the increasing specialization in pulp magazines, the market for general humor became too narrow. Thursday resurfaced in the mid-30s, adding a number of other specialties to his repertoire. He wrote humorous sports stories for the growing sports pulp field; straightforward detective stories; and true-crime articles for the crime magazine market. The true-crime stories all concerned Miami, Florida cases, where he had relocated (from New York) in the late-20s. He was never one of the prolific fictioneers, so it's likely he wrote on the side.
Throughout his career, Thursday frequently published articles in writers' magazines like
Writer's Digest andThe Author & Journalist . Though always amusing, these how-to articles took on an increasingly bitter tone, as Thursday became more and more disgusted with the hardships of the writing business, especially the collapse of word-rates after the Depression. He reserved his most severe wrath for the pulp magazine editors, who he dubbed "idiotors."He published a true-crime article as recently as 1963. His date of death remains a mystery.
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