From the moment a man meets her nothing goes right again.
We thought we’d take another trip through the sinister brain of Sax Rohmer. His phantasmal criminal mastermind Sumuru, aka the Madonna, intrigued us in 1950’s Nude in Mink. In 1951’s sequel Sumuru (you see a Gold Medal edition above with Barye Phillips cover art) she’s fled London for New York City, where she’s once again orchestrating a global reordering that requires the downfall of men from positions of power. This time Rohmer’s protagonists are special agent Drake Roscoe and newspaperman Tony McKeigh, though the first book’s Mark Donovan and Claudette Duquesne—now married—also put in an appearance, and come to believe Sumuru wants to abduct their toddler daughter for eventual indoctrination into the evil Order.
But it’s mainly Roscoe and McKeigh’s show, as the cat-and-mousing crisscrosses Manhattan, and detours to Fort Lauderdale, before Sumuru once again—no spoiler here since the series went five books—gives her pursuers the slip and leaves them angry, baffled, a bit admiring of her brilliance, but frightened too. We love how they call Sumuru “a greater menace than the atom bomb.” There’s a good lesson there—Rohmer thinks it’s better for men to reign in hell than to serve in heaven. That’s a catchy line. Wonder who said that? Doesn’t matter. Global peace is not an aspiration if men can’t run the show. We don’t think Rohmer meant for these books to be an indictment of the patriarchy, but if you squint they read that way. We managed to get the first three books of this series, so we’ll get around to the next entry later.
Thinking back, I probably phrased the request wrong. I should have said I wanted a big juicy part in a show.
This is nice cover work for Nick Quarry’s 1960 crime caper Till It Hurts. It was painted by Barye Phillips, and clues in readers that there’s a show business backdrop to the tale. It’s not Hollywood, though—it’s New York City’s television industry, with a double dip into the jazz music scene. The story follows private eye Jake Barrow as he wanders into an alley where a man is being brutally beaten by three organized crime thugs. It turns out the victim is a private eye too, and he was being warned off a case. He takes the message to heart, and basically leaves his client in Barrow’s lap.
The client is Loretta Smith, who wants to prove that her musician husband was framed for murder, then in turn murdered by cops to cover up the frame. Despite the professional beating he witnessed, Barrow gets talked into the case and immediately focuses his attention on one cop in particular who lives in implausible luxury on a yacht. It’s a dangerous gambit to try to prove a cop is a killer, and those perils quickly mount to untenable levels. Barrow has a little help though—his pal and sometime lover is an undercover cop named Sandy, who’s separately investigating drug connections in the Manhattan jazz scene. Maybe there’s a link between her case and Barrow’s.
This was a good book. It moves fast and has a nice cast of characters, including a now-grown child actress Barrow was in love with when he was a kid. It becomes clear early that the bad cop angle isn’t a red herring, but that’s fine. The yacht-ensconced villain is so mean and deadly that no subterfuge is needed to keep reader interest, as strategic maneuvering between opposite sides and bursts of action lead up to a kinetic climax. We learned that Till It Hurts is entry four in a Jake Barrow series, so we’ve got the first book winging its way here via international mail. But this one stood alone just fine.
You got loose! Great! Untie me. Now would be good. Or...are you still mad I got you into this in the first place?
This cover is part of a series Barye Phillips was commissioned to paint for Signet Books’ Mickey Spillane novels, however The Long Wait isn’t part of Spillane’s legendary Mike Hammer series. Instead, in this tale he introduces a new character, George Wilson, and immediately dumps him into deep trouble. Wilson rolls into the fictional gambling haven of Lyncastle seeking to avenge the honor of his friend Johnny McBride, who had fled town five years earlier, a suspect in the murder of the district attorney.
Wilson looks enough like McBride that he’s able to assume his identity, which certainly throws the locals for a loop. The cops immediately try to arrest him for the murder but they have no evidence except fingerprints, and weirdly, Wilson doesn’t have any because his were burned off during a fiery bus crash. It gets even weirder. The crash caused amnesia. But Wilson remembers his buddy McBride because he also survived the crash, leading to the pair becoming pals afterward. Later, though, McBride dies falling off a bridge (unlucky, these two).
As the Lyncastle section of the story develops, you get a crime kingpin, a femme fatale who’s kept naked so she can’t leave the house, and other hard-boiled elements. While Wilson is no Mike Hammer, he’s plenty tough. He even makes a couple of hardened thugs faint dead away just by glaring at them. Spillane tops all the craziness off with a triple-twist ending. Degree of difficulty—high. Deductions—several. But the old routine is still pretty fun when it comes from a legend like Mickey.
Oh my God, my head is murdering me and I'm pretty sure I didn't even score last night.
Some nights don’t go as planned. But ours went fine, thanks. Hope yours was good too. The Awakening of Jenny, written by Lillian Colter and published in 1950, is pretty much as you’d guess from the title and Barye Phillips cover art. The rear cover confirms it—a woman named Jenny Adams searches for sexual and romantic fulfillment by going through a succession of men. The focus doesn’t seem to be on titillation, but on psychological drama. It was a successful book, from what we gather, but Colter never wrote anything afterward, which has caused most vintage book aficionados to determine that she was a pseudonym.
It's lovely out here, but the serenity and quiet just magnify everything about each other we dislike.
Barye Phillips handled the cover chores for Ted Stratton’s 1954 novel Wild Breed, and as you can see by looking at the original reproduction we’ve included, the piece he produced was fine art adjacent. At least it looks that way to us. Compared to much of his other work, the detail here suggests a different frame of mind in execution, if not even a planned usage outside the realm of paperback covers for the finished piece. Its dimensions normally would have required that the work be radically cropped, but Fawcett Publications solved that by placing a solid rectangle at top to hold the text and Gold Medal logo, reducing the required trimming to a minimum. The editors knew quality when they saw it.
Maybe it's too soon to bring it up, but if you ever remarry maybe choose someone who isn't a Red Sox fan.
Awhile back we put together a small collection of vintage paperback covers featuring hanging figures. The above cover for Joseph Shearing’s The Golden Violet is an addition to that group. Shearing was actually Margaret Gabrielle Vere Long, who earned acclaim writing numerous historical and gothic horror novels, with The Golden Violet part of the latter group. The cover on this Dell edition was painted by Barye Phillips. Side note: the Red Sox are going to miss the playoffs again, and they might even finish last. We’re devastated—not. That’s for you, Dan. With love, of course.
Except for a few quaint customs she clings to, she's a typical conservative society lady.
Love at first sight, and marriage on first night. At least a few mid-century writers worked this theme, and readers seemed to buy it. A few descriptions of how beautiful the woman was and voilà—hearts and wedding bells. But whether it actually worked as a device depended upon plot and writing skill. Eric Hatch, in his 1952 novel The Golden Woman, uses the exotic surroundings of Port-au-Prince, Haiti to weave the spell needed to make readers believe a fantastically rich young virgin named Yvette du Chambrigne and a naval officer named Walter Moore meet, fall in love, and marry over the course of a night and day. The romantic but reckless decision brings them into conflict with the Haitian elite, as Yvette has defied her powerful father’s wishes to marry her off for political gain to a cruel army general named La Borde.
Yvette is Haitian, but she’s also white. Well, near enough to count, though as Hatch writes the character, her smidge of African blood makes her—in some mysterious way that must have made sense to readers back in the day—primitive. We know, we know. We didn’t write the thing. We just work here. Hatch’s protagonist Walter Moore says he wouldn’t care if Yvette were fully and visibly black, but since she’s by any realistic measure fully and visibly white, he would say that, wouldn’t he? Whether the young lovers are culturally compatible becomes a key question of the story, and this brackets a central plotline in which Moore becomes swept up in—you guessed it—revolution. We’ve read a few books now that have used the same idea. In this case, Moore basically leads the revolution. While riding a horse. And carrying a sword. While under the protection of the voodoo god Mala. Sounds silly, right? It is. But we have to admit it’s also fun.
Eric Hatch is remembered today for his books 1101 Park Avenue (filmed in 1936 as My Man Godfrey) and The Year of the Horse (filmed as The Horse in the Gray Flannel Suit). With The Golden Girl he reminds readers that if you got one drop of ink in the milk, the milk was perceived to be fully ink. Even today, someone who is three quarters white and one quarter black is going to be seen as black. The Golden Woman is, in the Year of Our Division 2023, a reminder that ideas around “purity” still predominate—even if unconsciously—for many people. But leaving that fraught discussion aside and judging the book solely as a thriller, it’s worth a read, absurd though the story may be. If you’re interested in island adventures in general, or Haiti in particular, we say go for it. The art on this Gold Medal edition is by Barye Phillips, influenced by a Life magazine photo from 1948, which you see below.
Above you see a cover for The Avenger, written by Matthew Blood and published in 1952. It’s a detective novel that reads like a parody. It was the first of two starring hard-boiled private dick Morgan Wayne, and it’s immediately clear why the character lasted only two outings. In many hard-boiled detective books the hero is unrealistically tough and the women unbelieveably pliant, but here that’s taken to a ridiculous extreme, only with poor writing that makes clear that this is not a parody, but a serious attempt at urban crime drama in the Spillane mold. At one point the anti-hero Wayne bites the head off a crook’s prized goldfish then shoots him. This is all in pursuit of the person who killed Wayne’s new secretary Lois, who he’d been looking forward to laying:
He concentrated fiercely on visualizing her as she must be waiting for him now. That was the only drawback to this affair. There hadn’t been enough build-up. Not enough expectation. Nothing at all of the slow and delicious burning that gradually takes complete possession of a man during the period of delightful dalliance that generally precedes the consummation of a civilized love affair.
So much wrong with that paragraph. Delightful dalliance that precedes consummation? But we’ll let it pass: She must be waiting for him in her apartment now, damn it. Soaking up the warmth of a hot bath while she waited for him and anticipated his coming. He savagely cursed the circumstances that were keeping them apart, and unconsciously trod the accelerator closer and closer to the floor boards…
That’s pretty bad too. Anyway, Wayne arrives at Lois’s apartment to find her dead and mutilated, and along the road to solving the crime he’s pursued sexually by a sixteen-year-old, her mother, and various other cock-starved characters, before climbing the ladder to the person who ordered the murder and taking care of business. It’s all written in the same graceless fashion as the above examples. The amazing part is that Matthew Blood was a pseudonym for W. Ryerson Johnson and David Dresser. There’s no excuse for two brains producing a half-witted book. We do like the cover art, though, and no wonder—it’s Barye Phillips again.
This Cameron Kay fella might just amount to something one day.
Cameron Kay was a pseudonym used by literary leading light Gore Vidal when he was short of cash and needed to publish and get paid fast. He’d used other pseudonyms for this purpose, including Edgar Box and Katherine Everard. It took him about three weeks to produce 1953’s Thieves Fall Out, and he made three grand on the deal. It’s one of those books where a money-seeking rando goes to a foreign country and immediately inserts himself into the biggest caper going for hundreds of miles around—and does it, improbably, with great ease, while seeming to think, irrationally, that it’s a good idea. This character, named Peter Wells, ultimately turns sour on the venture and must figure out a way to flee Egypt with his true love by his side.
Though Vidal is not at the heights he’d reach in his best writing, you already know that going in. In the final analysis he gets the job done, like a good carpenter working on a quick side project. We glanced at a few reviews after finishing the story and they seem to miss the point that Vidal does exactly what adventure fiction requires. Saying the book’s plot is stock is like saying dance music is repetitive. It has to be that way to make you dance. Because of the identity of the author, it feels as if reviewers try to flaunt their intellectual bona fides by trashing the result. We’re not going to do that. The book is satisfactory.
What Vidal does especially well is local color—though refracted through a wealthy Western prism that few Egyptians would appreciate. Yet it’s clear he tries to be egalitarian, if imperfectly, and he crafts a tale with unique characters. There’s a piano playing hunchback who hides behind a wall and looks at his nightclub through a peephole, a beautiful French countess who was once the mistress of Egypt’s top Nazi, and a fresh young beauty who’s the unrequited love of King Farouk of Egypt—who has her followed everywhere by his secret police. Those ideas are unusual, for sure, but they’re not as farfetched as some reviewers would like you to think.
We make that statement confidently because we’ve lived in the wilder world. In Guatemala we met an ex-judge from a proximate country who had fled because of being targeted for death by the new ruling party, but who was a drunk who craved public enjoyment and had shaved his head and grown a beard in order to hang in dive bars unrecognized. Was his story true? Maybe. He had a judicial identification card he eventually showed us that looked real enough. Real enough, in fact, that we gave him a wide berth from then on, thinking that if he was assassinated we didn’t want to be in the line of fire. It may not sound real, but there you go. It happened.
Therefore we don’t agree with reviewers who think Vidal’s characters are intentionally absurd, and that he was pushing the envelope of how bizarre he could make his cast. Such people exist. Vidal would have found them. They make Thieves Fall Out a fascinating read. The book isn’t top of the genre, nor bottom, but it’s unique, and has a fun climax tied into the burgeoning Egyptian revolution and the real-life fire that destroyed one of the most famous hotels in the world. Here’s what Thieves Fall Out is in summation: readable, distracting, and just leftfield enough to let you know the author is someone with a different take on the world, who’d later distill his ideas into fiction that would make him a literary sensation.
They say no sacrifice is too great. She might disagree.
There’s always the potential for spoilers when discussing books, but we don’t have to worry about that with The Pyx, because the honchos at Fawcett Publications teased its weirdness on the front and rear covers, which means you can’t help but know it isn’t a standard crime novel. And if you’re Catholic, you don’t even need the teasers. The title is enough to suggest where the story goes.
John Buell’s tale deals with a Montreal prostitute named Elizabeth Lucy who apparently commits suicide, but who we get to know via flashback chapters titled, “The Past.” As you’d guess, the other chapters are titled, “The Present,” and in those a police detective tries to determine whether Lucy leapt off a penthouse balcony, fell off by accident while high on heroin, or was pushed.
It’s a good book, well written, heavily atmospheric and at times abstract, with cool little moments like, “The rhythm of the wipers was like time running ahead.” It’s clear why it’s been reprinted more than once, and why the book spawned a 1973 movie. We recommend it, and we suggest staying away from any detailed reviews (or any descriptions of the film) before you read it. It’s from 1959 with Barye Phillips on the cover chores.
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.
1953—Crick and Watson Publish DNA Results
British scientists James D Watson and Francis Crick publish an article detailing their discovery of the existence and structure of deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA, in Nature magazine. Their findings answer one of the oldest and most fundamental questions of biology, that of how living things reproduce themselves.
1967—First Space Program Casualty Occurs
Soviet cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov dies in Soyuz 1 when, during re-entry into Earth’s atmosphere after more than ten successful orbits, the capsule’s main parachute fails to deploy properly, and the backup chute becomes entangled in the first. The capsule’s descent is slowed, but it still hits the ground at about 90 mph, at which point it bursts into flames. Komarov is the first human to die during a space mission.
1986—Otto Preminger Dies
Austro-Hungarian film director Otto Preminger, who directed such eternal classics as Laura, Anatomy of a Murder, Carmen Jones, The Man with the Golden Arm, and Stalag 17, and for his efforts earned a star on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame, dies in New York City, aged 80, from cancer and Alzheimer’s disease.
1998—James Earl Ray Dies
The convicted assassin of American civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr., petty criminal James Earl Ray, dies in prison of hepatitis aged 70, protesting his innocence as he had for decades. Members of the King family who supported Ray’s fight to clear his name believed the U.S. Government had been involved in Dr. King’s killing, but with Ray’s death such questions became moot.
1912—Pravda Is Founded
The newspaper Pravda, or “Truth”, known as the voice of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, begins publication in Saint Petersburg. It is one of the country’s leading newspapers until 1991, when it is closed down by decree of then-President Boris Yeltsin. A number of other Pravdas appear afterward, including an internet site and a tabloid.
1983—Hitler's Diaries Found
The German magazine Der Stern claims that Adolf Hitler’s diaries had been found in wreckage in East Germany. The magazine had paid 10 million German marks for the sixty small books, plus a volume about Rudolf Hess’s flight to the United Kingdom, covering the period from 1932 to 1945. But the diaries are subsequently revealed to be fakes written by Konrad Kujau, a notorious Stuttgart forger. Both he and Stern journalist Gerd Heidemann go to trial in 1985 and are each sentenced to 42 months in prison.