Captain Future was one of the most famous pulp heroes of the World War Two era. He starred in his own magazine in a series of adventure novels, most of which were written by Edmond Hamilton. Allen Steele revamped and refurbished and rebooted the character for modern and more mature readers with his novel Avengers of the Moon, which was published by Tor Books in 2017. It was supposed to be the first in a trio, but with the untimely passing of the renowned David Hartwell, the editor of the project, Tor made the ill-advised and unfortunate decision to not continue with the series. The publisher of Amazing Stories magazine (talking about reboots!) published the first part of the second novel six months or so ago under the (questionable) title of Captain Future in Love, and The Guns of Pluto is the second part. Another installment is listed as forthcoming at the end of the book, 1,500 Light Years From Home. This one ends on a cliffhanger, as did the previous installment, but that's kind of de rigueur for pulp serials, even if I do usually find it annoying. This one picks up the storyline of Hamilton's The Magician of Mars pretty well, and Curt, Otho, Grag, and Simon (along with two agents of the Interplanetary Police Force, Curt's girlfriend Joan and her boss Ezra), find themselves on their way Pluto in the trusty Comet II another pulse-pounding adventure. They also have Curt's old girlfriend (who's become an agent for the criminal organization) along in custody, which provides some tension with Joan. There were a couple of points that I didn't like (one of the main characters is disposed rather hastily for no apparent reason, and I wasn't convinced by a tribe of Plutonian cannibals), but overall it's a fine space opera adventure. In true pulp tradition, I'm anxious for the next issue! This one also contains a Captain Future story by Edmond Hamilton from a 1950 issue of Startling Stories magazine, which was also a lot of fun. It was neat to compare Steele's version side-by-side with the original. The stories are nicely illustrated, but the cover is rather poor.