David Westheimer’s Day into Night is a more serious novel than its cover would lead you to believe. It was originally published in 1950 as The Magic Fallacy, and the fallacy is the one harbored by youth that everything in life is beautiful. Westheimer promptly proves otherwise by telling the tale of a sixteen-year-old boy named Pershing who is stricken when his mother leaves his father, and later absorbs another blow when his father’s remarries to a twenty-year-old femme fatale. You know where this leads—the new bride homes in on Pershing’s missile. Westheimer went on to publish the hit thriller Von Ryan’s Express, source for the movie of the same name. The top notch cover on this Popular Library paperback is by Rudolph Belarski, from 1952.
Who's the hottest? I'm the hottest. Who's the coolest? I'm the coolest.