This is the third anthology of short fiction in a series that's stated intent was to bring back the spirit of the superhero pulps for the modern (the book appeared in 1977) age. It's the third anthology but volume six in the series because numbers three through five were full-length individual novels. It was a nifty concept that was executed with a lot of verve and enthusiasm, but the results weren't as good as one might have wished. Philip Jose Farmer's Greatheart Silver is the only repeater from the first pair of books, and it was more enjoyable than the debut but still didn't really grab me. I enjoyed the biographical section on the great pulp writer Edmond Hamilton, but I'm not too sure it really fit the theme. Ron Goulart's Shinbet was all right, but I liked his Gypsy from the earlier volumes better. Ben Bova's Orion was good, not your typical Bova hard-science kind of rigorous thing at all, but fun. My favorite story was Galactic by Arthur Byron Cover, a terrific (as the cover blurb says): "incredible mix of high-fantasy heroics, low-budget monsters, and-- hard-boiled fiction!" All of the art was very good and added a lot to the book, especially the work of Alex Nino, Ralph Reese, Terrry Austin, and the Steve Hickman cover of the Cover. I liked this volume more than the first books, but it didn't quite live up to what it might've been.