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Silhouette portrait of G. A. Wells, a male profile facing right against a dark background.

G. A. Wells

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G. A. Wells (active 1917–1938) was a prolific pulp-era author whose identity remains uncertain. Believed to have been from Ohio and described as a traveler, Wells published several dozen stories across a wide range of popular magazines, including Adventure, The Black Cat, Detective Story Magazine, Western Story Magazine, and Top-Notch Magazine. His work reflects the versatility typical of pulp writers of the period, moving between frontier adventure, mystery, and popular fiction. He contributed a single tale, “The Ghoul and the Corpse,” to Weird Tales in March 1923.

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Stories (1)

The Ghoul and the Corpse

G. A. Wells·1923·24 min read

Chris Bonner arrives at a remote trading post in Alaska with an extraordinary and disturbing tale: while prospecting in a desolate valley, he discovers a prehistoric ape-man frozen in a glacier and, against his better judgment, thaws the corpse—only to find it reviving to horrifying life. Published in the weird fiction tradition, this story exemplifies early 20th-century anxieties about evolution, the dangers of scientific curiosity, and the terror of confronting evolutionary history made flesh. Readers should expect a classic frame narrative with an unreliable narrator and an ambiguous ending that leaves the truth deliberately uncertain.