Louis Trimble’s Stab in the Dark is one half of an Ace double novel, the other half of which—Jonathan Gant’s Never Say No to a Killer—we powered through in one day back during the fall of 2017. Ordinarily when you finish half of one of these doubles you start right in on the back side, but you know how easily distracted we are. We finally got around to Stab, though, and it pits a secret agent against a group of blackmailers in possession of dirty photos of important people. Sounds fun, doesn’t it? But there’s nothing special here. We assume Trimble did better work elsewhere. 1956 on this, with unattributed cover art.
1940—Smedley Butler Dies
American general Smedley Butler dies. Butler had served in the Philippines, China, Central America, the Caribbean and France, and earned sixteen medals, five of which were for heroism. In 1934 he was approached by a group of wealthy industrialists wanting his help with a coup against President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and in 1935 he wrote the book War Is a Racket, explaining that, based upon his many firsthand observations, warfare is always wholly about greed and profit, and all other ascribed motives are simply fiction designed to deceive the public.