The Wheel of Death was the lead story in the second issue of the eponymous pulp magazine which was published monthly for a decade beginning in October of 1933. It's a rather standard pulp action detective story, with a crime lord using women and drugs to seduce wealthy citizens so that he can blackmail them. It has some interesting bits of hidden passageways and derring-do but doesn't incorporate many of the wild elements and crazy plots that were to become the hallmark of the series in later stories. (Though at one point we find that the doors to the illicit gambling house are guarded by a pair of naked women painted silver and gold, and I wondered if that had been the inspiration for the famous scene in Fleming's Goldfinger.) The first two novels were published with the author listed as R.T.M. Scott but are almost surely the work of two different authors, a father and son who both worked in the pulp field and shared the same name. All of the rest of the 118 novels were published with the house name Grant Stockbridge, and the majority were written by Norvell W. Page, who was a great adventure writer. This one is quite different in tone and style from the first one, is much longer than the majority of the later novels and doesn't have nearly the same feel for the characters that Page developed. For example, at one point Wentworth forces a crook to disrobe at gunpoint, ties him to the bed with picture-hanging wire, and proceeds to whip him with a belt until he confesses; Page's Spider would never have been so crude. It's also marred by some very sexist and racist attitudes; Ram Singh is continuously referred to in the text as "the boy," and the women characters frequently faint in the face of unpleasantness. The real Nita Van Sloan was never so frail. We're told on page 128, stated as fact, not as part of the story: "She had plenty of courage, but after all she was a woman, and a woman should not have too much nerve." Huh? Sush attitudes weren't uncommon in the pulp era, but we came to expect better from The Spider. Skip this one and try one of the Stockbridge sagas.