In Winchell Barry’s Scarlet City ambitious anti-heroine Lora Paton insinuates herself into the inner workings of a big city’s political and vice machines by using her own inner workings on various lustful men. Her constant sexual activity leaves her by turns empowered and embittered, depending on how her scheme to get her main man into the governor’s mansion is going at any given moment. If she can get him elected, they’ll marry and live on the taxpayer’s dime happily ever after. But is he playing straight with her? Hint: politicians are generally scum.
Scarlet City is pretty frank stuff from Barry, who was in reality longtime television writer Leo Rifkin. Through various plot convolutions he manages to get Lora in bed with five different men, each a rung on her ladder to the top. The book was originally published in 1953, with this Beacon edition coming in 1960. It was also reprinted in a 1954 issue of Daring magazine, so its mix of easy sex, political chicanery, and strange bedfellows must have done well on newsstands. It’s not going to be studied in any creative writing classes, but we’ll admit we liked it.