Thu 22 Aug 2024
JEROME ODLUM – Each Dawn I Die. Bobbs-Merrill, hardcover, 1938. To be published by Stark House Press as a Staccato Books imprint edition in September. (See comment #4.) Film: First National/Warner Brothers, 1939, withe James Cagney, George Raft.
Frank Ross is a reporter digging up dirt on the corrupt local administration when he gets sapped by some goons and set up on a phony vehicular homicide rap. And sent up to prison for 20 years.
“When you first came here, you imagined that every day would bring your release. Then you started figuring in weeks, then months. And now you’re beginning to feel it’s nearly hopeless. And you hate all the world and God and Jesus Christ for letting you in for a mess like this. You don’t want any part of them…. When you came here, you had no intention of adopting the code of the convict. But now you’re not only a convict by number and garb; you’re also a convict at heart. That’s what the dumb taxpayers and yard sprinklers and grass mowers and God and Jesus Christ and all the rest of the world have done for you. That’s what prison has made of you. The hell with all of them.”
It’s a good prison yarn with plenty of gory details. Then the ending goes all Hollywood on you and everything’s smiles, rainbows and cotton candy. But until that point you’ve got a solid story of prisoners, the weasels running the prison and their succubae. But for the ending, I liked it.
August 22nd, 2024 at 9:26 pm
Jerome Odlum, the author of this book, has his own Wikipedia page:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerome_Odlum
It’s sparse, but it does have lists of both the books he wrote as well as what he did in Hollywood as a screenwriter. (A lot more on each count than I was aware of.)
August 23rd, 2024 at 5:05 am
It’s been years, but I remember I found the screen version quite impressive. For once, it seems, Hollywood captured the spirit of the novel.
August 23rd, 2024 at 7:41 am
Never read the book, but I do remember the Warner Bros. movie with Cagney. Really terrific! Thanks for the review!
August 23rd, 2024 at 1:57 pm
Stark House Press will be releasing their Staccato Books imprint edition of this work in September which includes an absorbing essay on Odlum’s life by David Rachels, especially interesting in the context of this book, as Odlum himself was an ex-convict.
Good news of course to those seeking to read a book published nearly 90 years ago and of course otherwise rare and pricey for a copy not rescued from the gutter before or after the rats had gnawed on it.
August 23rd, 2024 at 7:43 pm
Thanks for the advance info, Bill. I was wondering why I couldn’t find a proper reprint edition of the book since its first publication. I’m sure glad it has, and I’ve added the info to Tony’s review. (He’s told me about the Stark House edition too.)
August 23rd, 2024 at 10:03 pm
Raft gives one of his better screen performances in the film.
Odlum later wrote the hard-boiled private eye novel THE MIRABLIS DIAMOND, which had to be one of the most ubiquitous works to pop up in almost every secondhand bookstore I entered back in the day. His last book was PRIVATE DETECTIVE, which I suspect features the same hero as DIAMOND.
August 25th, 2024 at 12:44 am
If I recall a-rightly, I always found the plot kinda fantastic and contrived. A newspaperman is framed and sent to da Big House? Unravels a case of blind justice from within greystone walls? Despite the two ‘firebrand’ leads, the yarn always seemed stretched beyond credulity …