(Pulp Fiction - Detective Magazines) NICK CARTER LIBRARY NO. 152. THE FACE AT THE WINDOW; OR, WHAT HAPPENED AT THE LAWYER'S OFFICE. JUNE 30, 1894; by the Author of "Nick Carter." New York: Street & Smith, Publishers, June 30, 1894. FIRST EDITION. 4to - 11-7/8" x 8-9/16". Staple bound pictorial cheap wood pulp paper self wrappers printed in black with a masthead featuring seven different portraits of "Nick Carter in Various Disguises" and a large drawing of a woman at a window looking out "boldly, fearlessly" superimposed upon a large black glove to front wrapper and publisher's advertisements to back wrapper with fraying to the edges, splitting to the fold at tail of spine and age-tanned paper for what is still a nice copy of what is a rare survival of a 19th century pulp magazine. 16 pp.; with chipping and fraying to edges, some short closed tears to the edges, splitting to the page folds at foot of magazine and age-tanned pages, several of which remain unopened. Nick Carter, the fictional detective, began as a dime novel private eye in 1886. Credit for creating the fictitious character goes to the prolific dime novel author, John R. Coryell, who wrote the original Nick Carter dime novels and pulp magazine stories. Nick Carter Library began publication in 1891. A total of 282 issues were published, with the final issue, No. 282, being published on Dec. 26, 1896. Though Nick Carter Library ceased publication on that date, that would not be the end for Nick Carter, as the character would appear in new magazines, new novels, and even a popular radio show. Nick Carter electronic books are even available from major online retailers today. The condition of the pulp magazine is GOOD. Only one copy located on OCLC/WorldCat (University of Rochester). RARE #001057