Back in January of 2009, I posted an article by Nicholas Flower about his role in creating new titles for Charles Williams’ crime novels when they were published in the UK by Cassell.

    The piece was updated in February, and in March cover images of five more dust jackets of books in the Cassell series were added, thanks to Bill Pronzini, along with new commentary about them by Nicholas.

    Cassell published fifteen Charles Williams thrillers, though, and until last week there were only twelve that were included in Nicholas’ article. And there things stood, until now, thanks to some helpful online booksellers who very kindly supplied us with images of the three that were missing. All fifteen covers are now part of that original post.

    I hope you’ll go back and take a look. You can find the post here. I think it’s worth the visit, or even a revisit!

                    — Steve

The 2010 NYC Vintage Paperback and Collectable Book Expo
by WALKER MARTIN


   Just back from attending this long running one day event that Gary Lovisi has managed to organize for over 20 years on an annual basis. Over 50 sellers in a large dealers’ room selling vintage paperbacks, pulps, new books, and original artwork. Prices seemed very reasonable to me and I managed to find several of my Dime Mystery pulp wants.

   Steve and I had discussed the problems in attending this show because we both were limping around due to overexertion. Steve couldn’t make it, but I manage to survive the train ride from Trenton, NJ to NYC with the help of long time collector Digges La Touche.

   We arrived at the show at a little after 9:00 am Sunday and were immediately met with the delicious aroma of old books and pulp paper. The crowd appeared even bigger than last year and consisted mainly of elderly book collectors of the male gender. There were a few females trying to reign in their husbands and boyfriends passionate love of collecting but it was a losing battle.

   You know what I’m referring to: the age-old battle between the non-collector and the collector. These battles have led to the breakup of many a marriage, and many a collection has been ordered sold by the courts in order to split the proceeds. A collector’s worst nightmare!

   There were numerous guests selling and signing their books. Too many to mention but I do want to give special note to someone I consider the most notable writer present: Ron Goulart. Not only has he been a professional writer for over 40 years but he has written some excellent books on the pulps such as Cheap Thrills, The Dime Detectives, The Hardboiled Dicks and others. C. J. Henderson had a table selling his numerous books and driving collectors nuts by yelling at them to come and visit “The Wonderful of Me”. This of course just scares everyone away.

   As we all know, a great part of the fun of collecting involves the many friends that we make over the years. Here are some notes about the collectors I talked to at the show:

   Tom Lesser. One of the great West Coast paperback collectors who organizes the annual LA Paperback Convention each year. He just had a bypass operation, and I’m happy to report he is up and about and looking better than ever.

   Dan Roberts. Another serious paperback and art collector who has one of the largest collections in the world.

   Paul Herman. Pulp and art collector who always has interesting items at his table.

   Ed Hulse. Publishing and editor of Blood n Thunder magazine which deals with the pulp and movie world.

   Nick Certo. A major pulp, paperback and art dealer.

   Mark Halegua. Organizer of the Gotham Pulp meeting every month in NYC.

   David Saunders. Artist and author of many articles in Illustration Magazine. He is the author of the excellent book on Norman Saunders and the new book on Ward, the pulp artist.

   Rich Harvey. Organizer of the annual Pulp Adventure Con in Bordentown, NJ.

   Chris Eckhoff. Dealer and expert in the field of paperback erotic novels.

   The above are just a sample of the crazed and over the top dealers and collectors that you can meet at this convention. The paperback collecting field is wide open, and most paperbacks are very inexpensive. This show and the LA show should not be missed, especially if you live within two or three hours driving distance. Collecting books has been called the grandest game in the world and this show proves it.

REVIEWED BY WALTER ALBERT:         


LORRAINE OF THE JUNGLE

LORRAINE OF THE LIONS. Universal, 1925. Norman Kerry, Patsy Ruth Miller, Fred Humes, Doreen Turner, Harry Todd, Philo McCullugh, Joseph J. Dowling.

Scenario by Isadore Bernstein & Carl Krusada; screenplay by Isadore Bernstein. Director: Carl Krusada. Shown at Cinevent 42, Columbus OH, May 2010.

   Herewith a feminist Tarzan ripoff that I wouldn’t have missed for anything other than a screening of the sole surviving print of London After Midnight.

   After a storm demolishes the ship bringing Lorraine (Patsy Ruth Miller), her parents, and their jungle circus back from an Australian tour, Lorraine is washed up on a desert island, where she is raised by one of the surviving animals, a gorilla named “Bimi” (played by Fred Humes).

LORRAINE OF THE JUNGLE

   Years later, her wealthy grandfather; who’s been searching for survivors, enlists the aid of an itinerant psychic (Norman Kerry) who leads a rescue party to the island, returning the initially reluctant Lorraine, along with Bimi, to civilization, represented by her grandfather’s palatial San Francisco mansion.

   The print was excellent, and even though I kept telling myself that this was pure, unadulterated schlock, the kid in me didn’t believe a word of it.

LORRAINE OF THE JUNGLE

   I would give this an unconditional recommendation for the junior set if it were not for an unfortunate plot turn that involved Bimi and cast a pall over the traditional happy ending.

   Would Tarzan have treated Kala the way Lorraine treated Bimi? I think not.

   I was also bothered by the fact that Kerry and the lead villain both sported the same pencil-thin moustache, were slender in build, and tended to wear what appeared to be the same grey suit.

   Well, what do you expect of a film in which the only real emotional resonance comes from a man in a gorilla suit?

LORRAINE OF THE JUNGLE

GEORGES SIMENON IN THE NEWS
by Tise Vahimagi


SEAN CONNERY Columbe

   In mid-September 2010 the Library of Congress proudly announced that not only had it (the Library’s Moving Image Section) discovered some 68 rare British TV recordings in the Library’s National Educational Television (NET) Collection but they were handing over digital copies of this treasure trove representing Britain’s “golden age of television” to a very grateful British Film Institute (BFI).

   These treasures include such rare finds as Sean Connery and Dorothy Tutin in Jean Anouilh’s Colombe (BBC, 1960), the Zeffirelli-directed (stage) Much Ado About Nothing (BBC, 1967) and director-producer Rudolph Cartier’s Rembrandt (BBC, 1969).

   Perhaps for the crime and mystery buff, one of these treasures is (I am delighted to say) the 1966 BBC series Thirteen Against Fate, long considered “missing, believed wiped.” Now, along with the few surviving episodes held by the BFI, the discovery of the rest of the series (ten additional episodes from the Library of Congress) makes this, finally, a “complete” series. Soon, hopefully, all will be available for viewing; and, perhaps, one day, they’ll be out on DVD!

   The following quotes are from the the British editions of the daily newspapers:

    ● The series’ producer Irene Shubik said, at the time: “These plays are not for the squeamish. They are not light detective stories, but intense psychological studies of individuals deeply involved in the aftermath of murder or death.” (The Sun, 13 July 1967).

    ● “At the its best the series has given an insight into the criminal mind and brought a welcome relief from the cliché of the effortless, infallible and more or less immaculate detective.” (Daily Telegraph, 8 August 1966).

    ● “The new Simenon series made an excellent start on Sunday. It is unlikely to be as popular as its predecessor [Maigret, BBC 1960-63)] for it lacks a reiterative figure like Maigret to give it a common stamp.
    “Simenon is a master of naturalism, and absolute accuracy of detail and careful selection of that detail are essential for transposing him.” (Financial Times, 22 June 1966).

    ● “An intelligent television crime series that concentrates on the character of the criminal instead of the almost invariably successful process of detection is overdue.” (Daily Telegraph, 20 June 1966).

    ● “With Irene Shubik as producer the plays are so thoroughly and carefully set in their time and place that the atmosphere generated becomes a powerful element in their appeal.” (The Guardian, 27 June 1966)


   This seems like an appropriate opportunity to present an episode guide for your perusal:

THIRTEEN AGAINST FATE

A BBC production. Produced by Irene Shubik. Transmitted via BBC1: June to September 1966. Based on 13 non-Maigret stories by Georges Simenon.

1. The Lodger (transmitted 19 June)
Script: Hugh Leonard. Director: James Ferman.
Cast: Zia Mohyeddin, Gwendolyn Watts, Gemma Jones.
Based on Simenon story “Le Locataire” (1934).

    ● “The first of the new series was strong on all these points [previous Financial Times quote]. Hugh Leonard didn’t compromise with the tale itself, a grimy little murder committed out greed and lust.” (Financial Times, 22 July 1966).

    ● “‘The Lodger’ was the first of 13 Simenon stories adapted for television, and it contained, surprisingly, not a whiff of Maigret, garlic or pipe-smoke. It was about the agony of a murderer on the run, and the terror of a simple Belgian family at discovering their paying guest is a killer.
    “It kept its promise of being unsuitable for the squeamish, and, although the end was inevitable, it was a tense and moving experience.” (The Sun, 20 June 1966).

    ● “The series made a telling, if high-pitched, start, dramatised by the admirable Hugh Leonard. The police get their man, but this is incidental, and the play chiefly shows what can be explored once the Maigrets and Barlows [the latter in reference to a popular Police Detective character played by Stratford Johns in the UK police series Softly, Softly (1966-69)] of this world are moved to one side.” (Daily Telegraph, 20 June 1966).

    ● “Everybody concerned made a powerful affair of ‘The Lodger,’ the first of 13 novels by Georges Simenon to be shown on BBC1.” (The Times, 20 June 1966).

2. Trapped (26 June)
Scr: Julia Jones. Dir: George Spenton-Foster.
Cast: Ronald Lewis, Keith Buckley, Sylvia Coleridge.
Based on “Cours d’Assises” (1941).

    ● “The second of a series of plays is a better test than the first; though the first impact is over, familiarity has not had time to set in. In the second of the Simenon plays on BBC1 last night the quality of the production was more firmly established than in the first, and on this showing they are going to be very good. Simenon’s stories in this series are about criminals rather than detection.” (The Guardian, 27 June 1966).

    ● “Those who turned to BBC1 last night hoping that the second of the new Simenon series woul provide them with a nice, cosy murder mystery, must have had an uncomfortable time.
    “Simenon, of course, is concerned with crime, not with setting puzzles for his readers, and crime is on the whole a depressingly sordid business. Because character is destiny, a young petty criminal finds himself sentenced for a murder he has not committed.” (The Times, 27 June 1966).

3. The Traveller (3 July)
Scr: Stanley Miller. Dir: Herbert Wise.
Cast: Kenneth J. Warren, Hywel Bennett, André van Gyseghem.
Based on “Le Voyageur de la Toussaint” (1941).

4. The Widower (10 July)
Scr: Clive Exton. Dir: Silvio Narizzano.
Cast: Joss Ackland, Henry Gilbert, Patricia Healey.
Based on “Le Veuf” (1959).

5. The Judge (17 July)
Scr: Hugh Leonard. Dir: Naomi Capon.
Cast: Alexander Knox, John Ronane, Peter Howell.
Based on “Les Témoins” (1955).

6. The Schoolmaster (24 July)
Scr: Alun Richards. Dir: Peter Potter.
Cast: Stephen Murray, Helen Cherry, Cyril Shaps.
Based on “L’Evadé” (1936).

7. The Witness (31 July)
Scr: John Hale. Dir: John Gorrie.
Cast: Pamela Brown, Daphne Heard, Moultrie Kelsall.
Based on “Le Haut Mal” (1933).

8. The Friends (7 August)
Scr: Anthony Steven. Dir: Michael Hayes.
Cast: Jessica Dunning, Frederick Jaeger, Sandor Elès.
Based on “Chemin sans issue” (1938).

9. The Survivors (14 August)
Scr: Stanley Miller. Dir: Rudolph Cartier.
Cast: Lila Kedrova, David Buck, Kathleen Breck, Terence de Marney.
Based on “Les Rescapés du Télémaque” (1938).

10. The Son (21 August)
Scr: Jeremy Paul. Dir: Waris Hussein.
Cast: Joan Miller, Simon Ward, Jack Woolgar, Clive Dunn, [way down the cast list] Lila Kaye.
Based on “Les Destins des Malous” (1947).

11. The Murderer (28 August)
Scr: Clive Exton. Dir: Alan Bridges
Cast: Frank Finlay, Michael Goodliffe, Annette Crosbie, Lyndon Brook.
Based on “L’Assassin” (1937).

    ● “The original story was particularly interesting, concentrating as it did upon the mind and motive of a murderer who was never finally charged, and [Clive] Exton built a powerful play upon it.
    “It was set in a respectable little Dutch town where Dr. Kuperus shot his wife and her lover and the story follows his gradual disintegration as he becomes the object of suspicion.” (The Guardian, 29 August 1966).

12. The Suspect (4 September)
Scr: Donal Giltinan. Dir: Michael Hayes.
Cast: Marius Goring, Mary Miller, Peter Halliday.
Based on “Les Fiançailles de M. Hire” (1933).

    ● “Goring conveyed movingly the confusion and uncertainty of a man with some petty vices trying to cope with the police and the treacherous advances of a girl who is shielding the real killer.” (The Sun, 5 September 1966).

13. The Consul (11 September)
Scr: Leo Lehman. Dir: John Gorrie.
Cast: Jonathan Burn, Michele Dotrice, Jeannette Sterke.
Based on “Les Gens d’en Face” (1933).

Editorial Comment: A complete listing of this recently uncovered cache of vintage BBC programs can be found here. (Scroll down.)

THIS COULD BE THE NIGHT Jean Simmons

THIS COULD BE THE NIGHT. MGM, 1957. Jean Simmons, Paul Douglas, Anthony Franciosa, Julie Wilson, Neile Adams, Joan Blondell, Ray Anthony & His Orchestra. Screenplay: Isobel Lennart; based on short stories by Cornelia Baird Gross. Director: Robert Wise.

   Why, one wonders, did they film this charming comedy/musical in CinemaScope but shoot it in black and white? Anytime I can see Jean Simmons in color, I’d jump at the chance, but that’s me. And black and white, too, if that’s the only chance I get.

   I may be wrong about this, but I recall reading somewhere that This Could Be the Night was the last MGM musical to be filmed in black and white, and if so, it’s one fact it should be noted for. Another such fact, and this one I’m sure of, is that the movie marks the film debut of Tony Franciosa, a handsome as well as talented actor (in my opinion) whose charm seemed to show up more on TV than it did on the large screen – not that he became a huge star there, either.

   He plays the co-owner of a New York City nightclub where Jean Simmons, a schoolteacher in the day, comes to work as a secretary at night. The other owner, the older one, is Paul Douglas, a gruff sort of guy who may have been a gangster in his day, takes a shine to her, while in the case of Tony Armatti (Franciosa), it’s dislike at first sight.

THIS COULD BE THE NIGHT Jean Simmons

   In the case of Anne Leeds (that’s Jean Simmons), nicknamed Baby almost immediately by the all of the dancers and staff as well as the two owners, it is a case of why should a recent graduate from Smith College (I hope I remember that correctly) find life in a nightclub so exciting? She is a virgin, as everyone wonders right off, although the word is never used (greenhorn, anyone? “nice girl”?) but no one (naturally) dares ask until the curvaceous singer Ivy Corlane (Julie Wilson’s character) does.

   She reports back: “No hits, no runs, no errors.”

   And of course Baby takes over the place, teaching the striptease dancer how to win a cooking contest and win a new stove, for example, and helping a busboy pass an algebra test so his father will allow him to change his name.

THIS COULD BE THE NIGHT Jean Simmons

   You also realize that in movies like this, what dislike at first sight eventually turns into, which of course complicates things. (Follow the link to a short but critical clip found on YouTube.)

   Misunderstandings ensue, Baby quits her job, and it’s all great fun. The ending is wrapped up all too quickly, but otherwise I found this admittedly shallow if not completely tall tale of a film rather charming, as I said in my opening remarks, and I shall repeat the word now.

   Even if as a former math teacher I have to point out that it’s cheating to have someone else do your algebra problems for you.

THIS COULD BE THE NIGHT Jean Simmons

Reviewed by MIKE GROST:

ERLE STANLEY GARDNER TCOT Perjured Parrot

ERLE STANLEY GARDNER – The Case of the Perjured Parrot. William Morrow & Co., hardcover, 1939. Pocket #378; 1st printing, August 1947. Reprinted many times, in both hardcover and soft.

   Gardner wrote a series of Western short tales set in desert locales for Argosy magazine (1930-1934). Some of these were collected in Whispering Sands (1981). “Law of the Rope” (1933) and “Carved in Sand” (1933) mix mystery puzzle plot elements, with the sleuth’s reconstruction of events during a crime by tracking trails left in the desert. This sort of reading of physical trails and evidence at a crime scene goes back to Gaboriau in mystery fiction.

ERLE STANLEY GARDNER TCOT Perjured Parrot

   The Case of the Perjured Parrot (1939) is a Perry Mason tale, set not in the desert, but in a mountain forest. But it has another hermit-like nature-lover, like several of the desert tales, and an emphasis on reading clues from a murder scene to reconstruct a crime.

   These clues are indoors at a fishing cabin, not outside, however, making a further difference from the desert tales. Some of this detection is done not by Perry Mason, but by a country sheriff whose good at “reading trail.”

   The long opening (Chapters 1-5) tells a pleasantly elaborate tale, with a great flow of story and several nice twists and turns. Gardner is especially good at spinning out plot.

ERLE STANLEY GARDNER TCOT Perjured Parrot

   The solution (Chapters 12-14) is none too surprising, and the novel does not excel therefore as a puzzle plot mystery. Still, the solution’s twists are decent, and continue both the deductions from crime scene clues and the book’s pleasing flood of story.

   The Case of the Perjured Parrot consists of one long murder investigation, of a single murder. It is more unified than many Gardner books. There is no preliminary mystery subplot in the opening chapters either: Perry Mason starts investigating the murder in the first chapter. Perry works less to defend a single client in this tale, and more purely as a detective, as well.

    The Case of the Perjured Parrot, like the desert-set The Case of the Drowsy Mosquito, has a bit of high technology in it. Gardner perhaps had some artistic association between nature settings and technology, in his story-creation process.

   Recommended.

— Very slightly revised from A Guide to Classic Mystery and Detection, by Michael E. Grost, with permission.


ERLE STANLEY GARDNER TCOT Perjured Parrot

Reviewed by DAVID L. VINEYARD:         


RAMPAGE. Seven Arts/Warner Brothers, 1963. Robert Mitchum, Elsa Martinelli, Jack Hawkins, Sabu. Screenplay: Robert Holt & Marguerite Roberts, based on the novel by Alan Caillou. Director: Phil Karlson.

    Anna (Elsa Martinelli) mistress of hunter Otto Abbott (Jack Hawkins) : What of the hunter, Otto? Is the hunter only satisfied when he makes of his prey a trophy, a thing to possess?

RAMPAGE Robert Mitchum

    Harry Stanton (Robert Mitchum) is the world’s greatest animal trapper. Otto Abbott is the world’s greatest hunter. The Munich Zoo has hired the two of them to go on Shikar (safari) in Malaya to bring back two tigers, and the prize of the expedition … the Enchantress, a legendary leopard with many kills to her name.   [NOTE: See Comment #1.]

    Harry: Anything can happen on Shikar. Some things you plan, some things you don’t.

   From the first, the laid back Harry is intrigued and repulsed by Otto Abbott. The charming German lives for the kill and for acquisition of trophies — including his beautiful young mistress Anna (Elsa Martinelli), who he displays her as another of his trophies.

    Anna is much younger than Otto. He took her out of an orphanage when she was only fourteen, and he takes some pride in her lovers, her faceless lovers, but Harry is something different — Harry promises to have a face.

   Once in Malaya Otto finds himself playing second fiddle to Harry and he doesn’t like it. The local chief doesn’t like his arrogant ways, and Anna begins to see Harry more and more as a man with a face.

RAMPAGE Robert Mitchum

   They capture the first two tigers easily, but Otto alienates the chief and they lose the help of the locals so Harry has to trap the Enchantress with only the help of his trackers led by Sabu (in his next to last film).

   By the time Harry traps the Enchantress in a native temple Anna is in love with him and Otto has faced both his mortality and his courage — broken without a gun to back it up. Otto’s world has been turned upside down and Anna is planning to leave him. Worst of all is Anna’s pity.

    Otto: I had a talent for killing. Now it’s gone. Abbott the hunter is finished. What of Abbott the man?

   The train reaches Munich and the Enchantress escapes:

    Otto: What was it you said about the law in the jungle? Survival wasn’t it? Well, let’s see you survive.

RAMPAGE Robert Mitchum

   Now Harry and Anna with the Munich police as beaters must stalk the rooftops of the city for the killer cat while Otto hunts them.

   Rampage is a fine old fashioned adventure film based on a novel by adventure writer Alan Caillou. Caillou, in addition to writing such books as Journey to Orassia, Assault on Agathon, and the “Cabot Cain” and “Col. Tobin” series, was a busy character actor whose extensive career included roles in too many television series to count and playing Inspector Lestrade in the 1972 made-for-television The Hound of the Baskervilles and uncredited in The List of Adrian Messenger (Inspector Seymour) and Journey to the Center of the Earth (the Rector). He was a regular on the science fiction comedy series Quark as “the Head” and appeared in the mini series Centennial, and as Fergus in four episodes of My Three Sons.

   Phil Karlson had a long and varied career, directing everything from Kane Richmond as The Shadow to Dean Martin as Matt Helm, but he also helmed fine adventure films like Rampage and the classic film noir Kansas City Confidential.

RAMPAGE Robert Mitchum

   Rampage also benefits from a terrific film score by Elmer Bernstein that ably enhances the action and mood and a great song written with Mack David. That and Karlson’s direction, a first rate cast, and literate script raise it far above the simple adventure film it actually is.

   The film ends memorably on an apartment rooftop with Harry trapped between the maddened Enchantress and murderous Otto with a gun.

    Otto: I should have killed you when I had the chance.

   This kind of film may seem old hat compared to today’s kinetic CGI ridden action films, but it is nice to watch it and notice the care taken to develop character and relationships.

RAMPAGE Robert Mitchum

   The three leads, and even Sabu and his wife and the old chief are deeper and more rounded than many of their contemporaries today in a similar type of film. It’s that level of writing and direction that give this film a little something missing in many modern films.

   The more leisurely style allows the actors room to show a little depth and dimensionality and adds to the tension so when the action does occur it is explosive.

   In short, it’s a movie and not a live action cartoon. Nothing wrong with live action cartoons, but films like Dark Knight, Inception, the Bourne films, and the Daniel Craig Bond’s show that modern audiences can appreciate the deeper characterization and more rounded characters.

   Rampage is a slick smart adventure film that will leave you well satisfied, and what more can you want from an adventure movie? It’s an old fashioned popcorn movie. Get the microwave ready, heat up the butter, and stock up on Junior Mints, this is old time movie making the way it used to be done with style and genuine storytelling skill.

   At the time it was just another good film, but now it is a reminder of the skills once common in movie making.

RAMPAGE Robert Mitchum

A 1001 MIDNIGHTS Review
by Bill Pronzini:


LEO BRUCE – Case for Three Detectives. Stokes, US, hardcover, 1937. Hardcover reprint: Academy Chicago, October 1980; trade paperback, 1985. British edition: Geoffrey Bles, hardcover, 1936.

   Case for Three Detectives is at once a locked room mystery worthy of John Dickson Carr and an affectionate spoof of the Golden Age detectives created by Sayers, Christie, and Chesterton.

LEO BRUCE Case for Three Detectives

   When Mary Thurston is found in her bedroom, dead of a slashed throat, during a weekend party at her Sussex country house, it seems to all concerned an impossible, almost supernatural crime:

   The bedroom door was double-bolted from the inside; there are no secret passages or other such claptrap; the only windows provide no means of entrance or exit; and the knife that did the job is found outside the house.

   The following morning, three of “those indefatigably brilliant private investigators who seem to be always handy when a murder has been committed” begin to arrive. The first is Lord Simon Plimsoll (Lord Peter Wimsey): “… the length of his chin, like most other things about him, was excessive,” the narrator, Townsend, observes.

   The second is the Frenchman Amer Picon (Hercule Poirot): “His physique was frail, and topped by a large egg-shaped head, a head so much and so often egg-shaped that I was surprised to find a nose and mouth in it at all, but half-expected its white surface to break and release a chick.”

   And the third is Monsignor Smith (Father Brown), “a small human pudding.” The three famous sleuths sniff around, unearth various clues, and arrive at separate (and elaborate) conclusions, each accusing a different member of the house party as Mary Thurston’s slayer.

   But of course none of them is right. The real solution is provided by Sergeant Beef of the local constabulary, “a big red-faced man of forty-eight or fifty, with a straggling ginger moustache, and a look of rather beery benevolence.”

   Along the way there is a good deal of gentle humor and some sharp observations on the methods of Wimsey, Poirot, and Father Brown. The prose is consistently above average, and the solution to the locked room murder is both simple and satisfying.

   Sergeant Beef is featured in seven other novels by Leo Bruce (a pseudonym of novelist, playwright, poet, and scholar Rupert Croft-Cooke), most of which have been reissued here by Academy Chicago in trade paperback. Among them are Case Without a Corpse (1937), Case with Four Clowns (1939), and Case with Ropes and Rings (1940). Each is likewise ingeniously plotted and diverting.

         ———
   Reprinted with permission from 1001 Midnights, edited by Bill Pronzini & Marcia Muller and published by The Battered Silicon Dispatch Box, 2007.   Copyright © 1986, 2007 by the Pronzini-Muller Family Trust.

COLIN D. PEEL – Snowtrap. Doubleday Crime Club, US, hardcover, 1985. Hardcover reprint: Detective Book Club, 3-in-1 edition, no date. No paperback edition. First published in the UK: Robert Hale, hardcover, 1981.

COLIN D. PEEL

   A New Zealander by choice and an Englishman by birth, Colin Peel has written at least 15 spy/adventure thrillers since 1973. Of these, this is the only one I’ve read. And if it weren’t the third in this particular volume of a Detective Book Club three-in-one, it might have been a while before the opportunity arose again — of Peel’s sizable output, only two of his novels have been published in the US in paperback (neither one this one).

   I say this even though I once upon a time took it upon myself to collect all of the hardcover Doubleday Crime Club mysteries. That was a long time ago, and I probably had a copy at one time, but if I still do, I am embarrassed to say that I could not locate it if I had to.

   And as long as I am digressing, let me recommend the DBC editions as a source of (usually) inexpensive detective stories, mysteries and spy adventures like this one, books that never came out in paperback, like this one, and which almost always provide solid and non-negotiable amounts of entertainment, like this one.

   And sometimes even more, as the Mignon Warner book (Speak No Evil) reviewed here not so long ago proves, and the one by H. Paul Jeffers (Murder on Mike) as well. That this one’s the lesser of the three does not mean it’s not worth reading. Far from it!

   But as far as spy thrillers go, it’s short — only about 190 pages of medium to large-sized print — and even though former military flyer John Vega might have been a character worthy of further (um) characterization, the book’s simply too short to be more than event-oriented.

   Vega and Lynne Morrow, the girl (of course) who gets him involved with activities well over his head, are the only people in the story who are more than shadows, and if they were to step sideways, you probably wouldn’t see either one of them either.

COLIN D. PEEL

   It starts with Vega hijacking a Mirage jet at an Australian airport, bombing a nearby uranium mine, and blasting two freighters out of the open sea. It’s one heck of an opening act, that’s for sure, and the twist that quickly snaps back at him is a doozie as well.

   What the story needs, and doesn’t quite get, is a finale that’s worthy of these spectacular attention-grabbing devices. Restricted, I’m sure, by the limitations in wordage, set by the markets he was writing for, Peel does his best, but even in 1981 the ending’s one that had been done before, and with the characters so indifferently involved up to then, he simply comes up short, gasping and (figuratively) out of breath.

   When you’re competing in Ian Fleming territory, in other words, as an author, you can’t just let it slip away at the end.

— August 2003

[UPDATE] 09-16-10. A better count of Colin Peel’s novels appears to be in the two dozen or so range, including two written under two different pen names. I have not yet determined if all are criminous, a category that includes spy and espionage fiction, but the good news is that as of last year, the author was still writing: The Rybinsk Deception (as seen above) came out in 2009.

REVIEWED BY BARRY GARDNER:


FRANK C. STRUNK Jordan

  FRANK C. STRUNK – Jordan’s Showdown. Berkley Jordan #2; Walker, hardcover, 1993.

   This is the second in a series set in Kentucky coal-mining country in the Depression era. I missed the first, Jordan’s Wager (Walker, 1991).

   Berkley Jordan is about 50, and after being defeated in a bid for the Sheriff’s office is working for a lady who runs a poolroom and gambling house. He broke up with his true love after events in the first book, and is feeling a bit down about it.

   The book opens with a hired assassin shooting a miner on his front porch. We don’t know who, or why. The stage is quickly set as we learn that the union is coming to the mining town where Jordan lives, or at least the miners hope it is.

   Jordan is determined to stay neutral, but it’s proving hard. Not only are the miners pressuring him, but the owner of the mining town calls him in and asks him to help in avoiding a possible bloodbath. Jordan remains stubborn, but then the assassin kills again. This time the victim is close to Jordan, and he can remain aloof no longer.

FRANK C. STRUNK Jordan

   This is both a regional and historical crime novel (not really a mystery) and Strunk handles both aspects well, evoking the atmosphere of both time and place. He switches viewpoints among Jordan, the killer, and the mine owners, and moves the story along effectively. Union boss John L. Lewis and Kentucky Lieutenant Governor “Happy” Chandler (baseball fans will remember him) make appearances toward the end.

   As I said, it really isn’t a mystery; we know who and why long before the end. It is, however, a well done story with believable characters and an appealing lead. I enjoyed it, and I’d like to read more of Strunk.

— Reprinted from Ah, Sweet Mysteries #10, November 1993.


Bibliographic Note:   Unfortunately there were no further appearances of Berkley Jordan, only the two books and that was all. Frank C. Strunk did write another novel, though, one that appears in the Revised Crime Fiction IV, and that’s Throwback (Harper, 1996). It also takes place in rural Appalachia, but in the present day. An interview with the author can be found here.

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