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The Shadow Pulp #6

The Shadow: The Death Tower

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The Shadow stories are split into 54 volumes of 6 stories each.

In The Shadow Volume 1 they are:

1-1 The Living Shadow
1-2 The Eyes of The Shadow
1-3 The Shadow Laughs
1-4 The Red Menace
1-5 Gangdom's Doom
1-6 The Death Tower

233 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1932

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76 people want to read

About the author

Maxwell Grant

651 books32 followers
Maxwell Grant was a pseudonym often used by Walter B. Gibson to write stories of "The Shadow".

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5 stars
35 (28%)
4 stars
41 (33%)
3 stars
42 (33%)
2 stars
6 (4%)
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0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews
Profile Image for Juho Pohjalainen.
Author 5 books348 followers
July 14, 2021
This is the first book, I think, where the villain actually manages to give The Shadow considerable trouble. It's definitely the most we've seen of The Shadow himself. I've mixed feelings of this: the less he's actually seen, the less we hear his throughts, the more mysterious and interesting he is to me - but perhaps that's a dynamic that cannot hold on forever. With each book, more of him is revealed to us, inevitably. We've reached a tipping point here.

Bit of a clumsy Deus Ex Machina at the end, too.
Profile Image for Leothefox.
314 reviews17 followers
January 27, 2019
The 6th entry in “The Shadow” series, features a supervillain dude with a “Chinese Room” death chamber in the penthouse of a 40 floor apartment house. The dude has a henchman and some gangsters are working for him, and he's got a cursed sapphire!

This time we get to The Shadow through his new agent, Clyde Burke, a former newspaper man, and Mr. Clarendon, a new playboy secret identity for The Shadow. The man in black appears more frequently this time, in full costume, with an automatic in each hand. There's no Lamont Cranston at all, but Clarendon seems to serve much the same purpose. Oh! And Harry Vincent is back, getting in on the action with some disguises of his own.

The plot concerns the villainous Dr. Palermo who murders one rich guy and then goes in disguise as his victim to murder a whole other rich guy. At some point he may also have murdered a rich guy in Florida and made it look like a suicide. He comes complete with gangsters, an Arab assistant, a girlfriend, and an evil Chinese idol.

There's an autogiro, which gets a big buildup as something new and awesome (it's 1932, you guys), hypno seduction, disguises galore, disguise as The Shadow, disguise as objects, killer medical aids, a task force sent after The Shadow, people vanishing in puffs of smoke, rigged elevators, and a secret organization called The Silent Seven... which is also the title of the next book! I'm excited for that one.

In many ways, this is a sharp departure from the previous book, “Gangdom's Doom”, since we see The Shadow doing his thing more and there's less about guys in disguise gradually working against one another. In that sense, “The Death Tower” is sort of a leap forward to what the future books would end up being. I've got like 300 to go, so there'll doubtless be more points of evolution ahead.
Profile Image for Charles.
Author 41 books289 followers
January 24, 2011
I enjoyed it. I didn't think the villain, Dr. Palermo, was quite up to the caliber of some of the other villains in the series but he was interesting. The Shadow also seemed a bit different in this one, and I'm thinking, without going through the work of looking it up, that this one might have been written by a different writer. For one thing, the Shadow fell in love in this one, or seemed to.
2 reviews
December 26, 2018
The Death Tower is one of my favorite Walter Gibson books. It is gripping and horrifying, yet it ends well. Despite its cliche moments (which I had no problem with), it is quite original, perfectly capturing the personalities of a sociopath and a hero not quite under the law. I am currently re-reading it and find it just as wonderful as the first time.
46 reviews1 follower
February 18, 2021
A fast-paced, action-packed story! For fans of The Shadow, this one features Clyde Burke more than The Shadow's other agents. However, Harry Vincent and Burbank are also included - and Burbank is operating in the field! This had some very good plot twists and I really enjoyed reading it.
Profile Image for Iain.
129 reviews1 follower
July 25, 2022
One of the better and faster paced early Shadow stories, and a return to form.

There are some plot points that I don't understand, and I don't think it has any really iconic Shadow moments other than the dramatic introduction of his , but The Shadow is quite present throughout, and we get to see him up against an enemy who really gives him a challenge.

Also, we get a very rare moment of The Shadow being genuinely shocked by what has unexpectedly transpired.

I would say that so far in the series we've seen an uneven initial trilogy that was feeling its way forward and trying to figure out the character, a fourth story that suddenly gave us a much more fleshed out and interesting character and a story with some depth, a fifth story that returned to feeling limited and not fully formed, and then this sixth installment is back on track where the fourth left off, with a Shadow who is once again a clearer presence in events. My introduction to these stories was with the later volumes, where the character was already fully formed, so my favorites among these early tales are the ones where I recognize the later Shadow I'm familiar with starting to show through.
Profile Image for Fraser Sherman.
Author 10 books33 followers
May 25, 2020
Dang that was good.
Dr. Palermo is a sinister psychoanalyst who murders a patient in the first chapter (guy had this really, really fabulous sapphire Palermo wanted), then disguises himself as said patient and goes and murders someone threatening to cause Palermo trouble. The police buy the disguise, but the Shadow (who doesn't appear in costume until a third of the way through) does not. However Palermo operates out of a penthouse that has deathtraps out the wazoo; he's untouchable, but he has to stay there and use henchmen to take out the Shadow. It's move, counter-move, move some more.
This would get five stars if not for the handling of Palermo's lover, a nurse. She's so in thrall that she murders a lover for him, but after the Shadow seduces information out of her, he gives her a free pass (she's paid her debt — no, I don't think so). Still this is a fun pulp thriller.
Profile Image for Craig.
6,422 reviews180 followers
October 30, 2017
The Shadow's adventures were chronicled in well over three hundred pulp magazine adventures, and this one from January of 1932 was only the sixth to appear. The magazine Shadow was quite different from the radio version, and I've always preferred the radio episodes. In the written stories you can never be quite sure who's who from story to story, whereas in the audio dramas Lamont Cranston is always The Man. The Death Tower is a good, solid early case, but is set before much of the familiar magazine back-story is established. Doc Savage and The Spider and The Avenger are my favorites, but The Shadow was better known and is arguably the ultimate iconic pulp hero.
Profile Image for Jeff.
667 reviews12 followers
October 14, 2022
This is one of the best Shadows books -- maybe the best -- that I have read so far. It's creepy, atmospheric, and has a villain that could easily be in a noirish b-movie (I can imagine Boris Karloff or Bela Lugosi in the role).
Profile Image for Michael P..
Author 3 books74 followers
April 25, 2024
I continue to admire Gibson's craftmanship, a lot, but the ending here is too convoluted to be satisfying. Why, you'd think that guy was paid by the word.
Profile Image for Raime.
421 reviews9 followers
April 15, 2025
Excellent, entertaining fast pulpy fun. Evil genius with a giant arab servant in a dangerous booby-trapped lair.
6,233 reviews40 followers
January 19, 2016
January 1, 1932

The title indicates a tower of some kind but actually there's no tower at all. There is a forty story apartment building, though. The top houses Doctor Albert Palermo, the villain of the story. He has his servant kill people sometimes,though sometimes he does the deed himself. The reason the building is called the Death Tower is because the good doctor has filled the place with loads of traps (paranoid much?).

Clyde Burke makes his first appearance, and we find out about yet another disguise the Shadow uses, that of George Clarendon. Burbank also makes an appearance. There's also an unusual female villain, Thelda Blanchet. Very strangely, she does not pay for her crimes.
Profile Image for Rich Meyer.
Author 50 books57 followers
July 23, 2013
Excellent adventure of the Shadow! The man in black faces off against a sly criminal doctor with an affectation for the Orient and a love of money and murder. Well-written and staged, there's a lot of action and twists in this one. Definitely a bit dated, but a very fun read.
Profile Image for Little Timmy.
7,409 reviews60 followers
November 18, 2020
When it comes to pulp heroes there are 2 or 3 great standouts and the Shadow is one of those. The stories are fast paced and action filled. The mystery just adds to the excitement. With his army of agents to help the Shadow never lets you down for a great read. Highly recommended
Profile Image for Alex.
1 review
April 5, 2012
Another fun read in the Shadow series.
Profile Image for Jeff Chase.
86 reviews
June 20, 2015
I would have liked more of the Shadow in this book. I did enjoy the way the bad guy (no spoilers here!) met his fate.
Profile Image for John Oswalt.
47 reviews1 follower
December 19, 2016
Bad, formulaic writing. Simple, repetitive plots. Why do I keep reading these? I think my mind has been clouded.
Profile Image for Andy.
1,155 reviews2 followers
May 3, 2017
What evil lies in the hearts of men? The Shadow knows.
Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews

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