Hopefully Oscar poured his secret ingredient into the vat and-wham!-He had his vanishing cream. But he didn't want the real thing!
William P. McGivern wrote many short fiction stories and novellas for the science fiction and adventure pulp magazines throughout the 1940s and 1950s. This novelette (approx 12,500 words), “The Visible Invisible Man” was originally published in Amazing Stories magazine in December 1940 with the illustration by Frank R. Paul.
Hopefully Oscar poured his secret ingredient into the vat and-wham!-He had his vanishing cream. But he didn't want the real thing!
William P. McGivern wrote many short fiction stories and novellas for the science fiction and adventure pulp magazines throughout the 1940s and 1950s. This novelette (approx 12,500 words), “The Visible Invisible Man” was originally published in Amazing Stories magazine in December 1940 with the illustration by Frank R. Paul.
William P. McGivern is well known for his hard-boiled detective and police action pieces, such as Night of the Juggler and Odds Against Tomorrow. He also wrote television screenplays in his later years including scripts for the TV series “Ben Casey,” “Adam-12,” and “Kojak” and the William Castle film “I Saw What You Did” (1965). But in the early years he wrote science fiction and adventure pulp stories.
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Overview
Hopefully Oscar poured his secret ingredient into the vat and-wham!-He had his vanishing cream. But he didn't want the real thing!William P. McGivern wrote many short fiction stories and novellas for the science fiction and adventure pulp magazines throughout the 1940s and 1950s. This novelette (approx 12,500 words), “The Visible Invisible Man” was originally published in Amazing Stories magazine in December 1940 with the illustration by Frank R. Paul.