Thu 22 May 2008
The Compleat KENN DAVIS.
Posted by Steve under Authors , Bibliographies, Lists & Checklists , Crime Fiction IV[12] Comments
At the end of my previous post on Zekial Marko, better known to paperback collectors and mystery fans as John Trinian, I hinted at a small piece of information that turned up in his online obituary.
Namely, that Marko had a brother named Kenn Davis. The double N immediately caught my eye. Could this be the same Kenn Davis, the mystery writer? Turns out that he is, and I hadn’t known it before. It was also news to Al Hubin, author of Crime Fiction IV, but after doing some investigating on my own, if it was a secret, it hasn’t been very well kept. People on various blogs and Yahoo groups have pointed it out on several occasions in the past.
So it’s not exactly breaking news, but it’s still reason enough to talk about Kenn Davis’s books. Expanded slightly from his entry in CFIV:
DAVIS, KENN. 1932- . Series character: CB = PI Carver Bascombe. All books are paperback originals.
The Dark Side [with John Stanley]. Avon 30957, pb, December 1976. [CB]
The Forza Trap. Avon 44552, pb, June 1979 [CB]
Bogart ’48 [with John Stanley]. Dell 10853, pb, February 1980
Dead to Rights. Avon 78295, pb, August 1981
Words Can Kill. Gold Medal 12667, pb, May 1984 [CB]
Melting Point. Gold Medal 12901, pb, May 1986. [CB]
Nijinsky Is Dead. Gold Medal 13096, pb, 1987 [CB]
As October Dies. Gold Medal 13097, pb, 1987 [CB]
Acts of Homicide. Gold Medal 13351, pb, 1989 [CB]
Blood of Poets. Gold Medal 13352, pb, 1990 [CB]
In spite of the number of books, I have a feeling that both Kenn Davis and Carver Bascombe are fairly well forgotten today. Even though I believe I have all but one or two of the books, they’re boxed away where I can’t get at them. (You’ve heard that before.) So far I’ve been able to come up with only a few cover images, which you will see both above and below.
But did you know, as I certainly didn’t — and I’ll get back to Carver Bascombe shortly — that Kenn Davis is also a well-known California-based artist, and has been for over 50 years? Taken from a website illustrating some of his work, one of which is shown here:
Kenn Davis and John Stanley also co-wrote the screenplay for the comedy-horror film Nightmare in Blood, the storyline described on IMDB as: “Attendees at a horror-film convention in San Francisco keep disappearing. It turns out that the guest of honor is a real vampire…” Kenn Davis was the producer, and John Stanley directed. More on the making of the movie here, written by John Stanley himself. (No, that is not him in the coffin below.)
As for Carver Bascombe, from the second of the two websites linked to in the above paragraph, Stanley says:
“It was Kenn’s idea to write a story about a black San Francisco detective named Carver Bascombe. (This was before anyone had ever heard of John Shaft or Richard Roundtree.) We had even found a San Francisco-based stage actor, John Cochran, to play the Bascombe role.
“And then came a big mistake: American-International offered to buy the script from us, but because we had promised John Cochran that the three of us would make the film come hell or high water, we turned it down. (Primarily because they wanted the script without us attached as would-be film wreckers.) We should have taken the offer but we were young and idealistic–and very idiotic.
“(Dark Side of the Hunt didn’t completely die. A few years later it would be novelized by Kenn as The Dark Side –- my name was on it but I really didn’t write it –- and published by Avon. Kenn would go on to write an entire series about Carver and his San Francisco adventures.)
As it happened, The Dark Side was nominated for an Edgar in 1976 as Best Paperback Original. (Note that by the time the book was published, the movie Shaft had already appeared, in 1971, based on Ernest Tidyman’s 1970 novel) From the cover of The Dark Side:
Kevin Burton Smith in the online January Magazine has this to say about the series:
“Bascombe’s a young Vietnam vet with a military police background, who’s now an ambitious, art-loving private eye and part-time student working his way through law school in San Francisco. Bascombe’s passion comes in handy, because his cases invariably involve the arts somehow, be it opera, drama, literature, art photography, ballet, painting or poetry.
“The first few novels in this series were uneven, but by the fourth one, the Shamus-nominated Melting Point (1986), Davis had really hit his stride, with Bascombe sweating out a long, hot summer waiting to hear if he’s passed the bar, while at the same time he hunts down a missing sculptor.”
Of special note, the link above leads to a long article by Kevin about black PI’s, a complete overview from a historical perspective. It’s well worth your reading.
[UPDATE] 01-18-10. I have bad news to report. Kenn Davis died six days ago at the age of 77. For a wonderful tribute to him as an author, check out Jeff’s piece about him on The Rap Sheet. I am pleased to say that Mr. Davis saw this post I did on him (see Comment #7). I am not pleased to say that in spite of all good intentions, an interview I kept meaning to do with him never happened. I wish it had.
May 22nd, 2008 at 12:26 pm
I didn’t know Davis and Trinian were brothers. I read THE DARK SIDE and wasn’t too impressed, though I did keep the book. I’m a little surprised to discover that I bought none of the Gold Medal titles.
May 22nd, 2008 at 1:33 pm
As Kevin says, the first few books were uneven, then Davis began finding his voice for the character. I’m not sure if I have the last one, but I have all of the others. I even read one — long, long ago.
And since I did, the review I wrote for it has got to turn up, sometime.
December 5th, 2008 at 3:51 pm
I started reading Carver Bascombe books in the mid-80’s and always wondered who the author really was… I had forgotten about the books until I read your article(thank you).
I enjoyed the Carver Bascombe novels and I
wish Kenn Davis would write more…
Kem
December 5th, 2008 at 4:44 pm
Kem
Re your last line, it doesn’t appear to be likely, but I echo your sentiment. I wonder if Davis thinks well enough of them to get them back into print, as some authors are doing.
— Steve
January 2nd, 2009 at 12:44 pm
Steve,
keep writing the great articles.
Have a great New Year in 2009…
kem
January 16th, 2009 at 12:30 am
[…] 01-16-09. A long article on Kenn Davis appeared earlier here on the blog, and it includes a complete listing of all his books and a lot more about his life. I […]
February 23rd, 2009 at 12:20 am
Thank you all for remembering me and Stanley and Carver Bascombe. And for the bit about my painting career. I have spent far more years painting than writing. As for films, I’d like to correct one bit: on Nightmare in Blood I was mainly the cinematographer/Director of Photography; as well as a minor producer, with John Stanley as the major producer. He and I also wrote the screenplay (as noted). As an artist I have a strong sense of the visual and a background in photography, so it was my job to photograph NIB, and John Stanley to direct.
If there is more interest anyone can contact me at sivad@rcip.com and I’ll try to answer questions.
May 29th, 2010 at 3:17 pm
I wanted to thank you for your coverage of my husband’s career and I’m so glad to see that he read it before he died.
Kenn was quite a renaisance man although he claimed that he was more of a dabbler. His brother Zekial Marko died a few months before Kenn and Kenn had made a long treck to his brother’s bedside by bus because he couldn’t drive anymore. He came home after Marko’s (John Trinian)death loaded down with a great sorrow… only to have his daughter commit suicide the next month … then winter was truly upon us. I think he just let go and in many ways, he warned me… I just wasn’t listening.
May 29th, 2010 at 4:03 pm
Dear Mrs Davis
I am so sorry. As readers, we still have his books to remember him by. I’m sure you have even better memories of him and your life together before his passing. Thanks for stopping by and telling us more about him.
Best wishes
— Steve Lewis
February 25th, 2013 at 7:23 pm
Yesterday I bought an artpiece that sung to me.
It is an original ink drawing by Mr. Davis dated 1957 titled “Blind Man’s Bluff”.
I researched later to find this site and several others.
Wow. I have something very special.
Thank you Kenn Davis.
September 30th, 2021 at 11:16 am
I have 4 of Kenn Davis paintings, I brought them with me when I moved to Sweden. I like them very much, he was a true artist. He will be remembered here in Sweden too, my two sons love his paintings!
June 27th, 2022 at 10:30 pm
[…] The Compleat Kenn Davis. […]