Mon 7 Jan 2008
Addenda to CRIME FICTION IV: Van Siller, Muriel Howe & others.
Posted by Steve under Authors , Crime Fiction IV[2] Comments
I spent some time with Part 21 this afternoon, largely in the S’s. There’s a PI series of sorts that Kevin Burton Smith doesn’t know about, yet, but what I also came across Van Siller, a writer with a lengthy career and over 20 books to her credit. There’s very little to be discovered about her on the Internet, and I have the strong feeling that she’s very nearly been forgotten.
FARROW, MICHAEL DAVID. 1944- . Pseudonym: Tommy Sledge, q.v.
HOWE, DORIS KATHLEEN. 1904-1994. Add as a new author entry. Ref: CA. English author of many works of romantic fiction under her own name and as Mary Munro & Kay Stewart. Joint pseudonym with sister Muriel Howe: Newlyn Nash, q.v.
HOWE, MURIEL. Maiden name and working byline of Muriel Howe Smithies, ca.1912-. Add tentative year of birth; also add joint pseudonym with sister Doris Kathleen Howe, 1904-1994: Newlyn Nash, qq.v. As Muriel Howe, the author of two mystery novels included in the (Revised) Crime Fiction IV. See below.
The Affair at Falconers. Macdonald, UK, hc, 1957.
Pendragon. Macdonald, UK, hc, 1958.
NASH, NEWLYN. Add as a new author entry. Joint pseudonym of sisters Doris Kathleen Howe, 1904-1994, and Muriel Howe [Muriel Howe Smithies] ca.1912- , qq.v. Under this pen name, the author of two romance novels with strong criminous content.
The Affair at Claife Manor. John Gresham, UK, hc, 1963. [The disappearance of a woman is invesigated by her brother.]
Wild Garlic. John Gresham, UK, hc, 1962. Setting: Mediterranean Island.
SILLER, VAN. Pseudonym of Hilda van Siller, 1911-1982, q.v. Under this pen name, an American writer and author of more than 20 crime and mystery novels published between 1943 and 1974, some only in the UK. Series characters: Richard Massey (2 books), Allan Stewart (3 books), and Pete Rector (2 books). Massey appears in her first book (Echo of a Bomb, Doubleday Crime Club, 1943), which was a wartime espionage affair taking place in New York City and Virginia; its cover is shown below.

The Red Geranium. Hammond, UK, hc, 1966. Delete: not criminous.
SKINNER, MICHAEL. 1924- . Pseudonym: Nicholas Spain, q.v.; other pseudonyms: Alix De Marquand, Cynthia Hyde. Under his own name, the author of three crime thrillers included in the (Revised) Crime Fiction IV. All three were published in the UK by Robert Hale between 1978 and 1983.
SLEDGE, TOMMY. Add as a new author entry. Pseudonym of Michael David Farrow, 1944- , q.v. Occupation, under this name: actor, “standup detective.” Besides his longtime stage routine – sample lines: “I just rolled into town. Boy, do my sides hurt.” – the author of two humorous private eye novels. SC: Tommy Sledge, in both titles. His short radio plays have also aired on stations across the country as Tommy Sledge’s Dime Novel.

Eat Lead, Clown! Full Court Press, pb, 1987. “This is one gumshoe who’s in over his head – in hilarious hijinks and murderous mirth!”
Kiss It or Die! Private Shadow Press, pb, 1995.
SMITHIES, MURIEL HOWE. ca.1912- . Working byline: Muriel Howe, q.v.
SPAIN, NICHOLAS. Pseudonym of Michael Skinner, 1924- , q.v. Under this pen name, the author of two crime novels included in the (Revised) Crime Fiction IV.
Name Your Vice. Kozy Books, pb, 1963. Delete the dash previously assigned. Add setting: New York City.

Wine, Women & Bullets. Kozy Books, pb, 1963.
van SILLER, HILDA. 1911-1982. Pseudonym: Van Siller, 1911-1982, q.v.
January 8th, 2008 at 2:27 pm
According to Baudou & Schléret, Van Siller for the most part of her career was believed to be a man; she was “outed” by Rex Stout. The couple of books of hers I read were competent, if nothing special, suspense novels with more than romantic bent.
January 8th, 2008 at 3:15 pm
Xavier
Even though I’ve only looked at her books with quick glances here and there, your assessment of her books sounds right on the money to me. And the “romantic bent” you mention became more and more pronounced as her career went on. Eventually — once “outed,” perhaps? — her books were published as ‘damsel in distress’ stories, as Doubleday’s Crime Club called them. (See The Mood of Murder, 1966, as a prime example.)
Steve