Fredric Brown’s Madball was hard as hell to get at anything approaching a reasonable cost but we finally scored a copy. It’s one of the more famous novels in the fertile carny niche, and had two amazing covers which you see above, the first by Griffith Foxley for the 1953 Dell edition, and the second by Mitchell Hooks for the 1962 Gold Medal edition. What’s a madball? It’s a gazing crystal. What’s Madball about? After an insurance settlement a carnival worker comes into a couple of thousand bucks. When he’s murdered his nest egg seems like the motive. But what nobody knows—or what nobody is supposed to know—is that he’d also been an accomplice in a bank robbery and possessed not just a couple of thousand dollars, but more than $40,000. That’s about $380,000 in today’s money—sufficient to inspire desperation and bloodthirsty viciousness. Madball is set apart by its weird backdrop, its odd carny denizens, its multi-pov narrative, and its sexual frankness. It’s a mad tale, improbably plotted, testing the limits of believability, but recommended. See more carny fiction here, here, and here.
1939—Batman Debuts
In Detective Comics #27, DC Comics publishes its second major superhero, Batman, who becomes one of the most popular comic book characters of all time, and then a popular camp television series starring Adam West, and lastly a multi-million dollar movie franchise starring Michael Keaton, then George Clooney, and finally Christian Bale.