Pulphouse collapsed after wildly over-expanding the number of titles published every year, including several commercially unviable lines (such as the
Short Story Paperback/Hardback line), leaving at least one title (
Harlan Ellison's
Ellison Under Glass) paid for but undelivered. In the Fall of 1996,
Jerry Oltion published an anthology entitled
Buried Treasures, subtitled "An Anthology of Unpublished Pulphouse Stories," which, with the approval of Rusch and Smith, was designed to look like an issue of
Pulphouse Hardback. Many of the authors who got their start publishing in Pulphouse publications or working for Rusch and Smith have gone on to have successful careers as science fiction and fantasy authors. Some authors who debuted in Pulphouse magazines include
Adam-Troy Castro and
Marina Fitch. Oltion and
Nina Kiriki Hoffman were also closely connected to Pulphouse ==References==