Pulp isn't a genre my dude, there were S&W, Sci-Fi, Science Fantasy, Mistery, Adventure, Horror, Western and Lewd Pulps.
Despite your protestations, the vast majority of people use the term to describe a genre. A genre of preposterous action where a transgender lesbian British Commando fights Nazis riding robot dinosaurs. Oh, and Cthulhu is usually involved in some way as well.
As for the magazines of that description, I've read many from the Pulp Magazine Archives on archives.org. I tend to stick to Detective and Western pulps as those were the most popular and, thus, hired the best authors. I also have lots of reprints made by a company called Nostalgia Ventures. Mostly Shadow and Doc Savage. Unfortunately, the company went out of business before I could complete my collections.
But for me, you can't talk about the pulps without talking about Radio Dramas which is what got me into pulps in the first place. Sadly, many series are lost, but I recommend any episodes of Gunsmoke, The Shadow, and a crime series called Johnny Dollar. One series I'd like to find is Jack Armstrong, an adventure series that was what inspired Johnny Quest. What I like about Radio Dramas is that it's the media that is the most like RPGs, with all the action being spoken dialog.