SIBLING RIVALRY

Which sister is best? It's impossible to choose.

Above are two editions of the Lee Roberts novel Little Sister, which came from Fawcett Publications with cover art posed by a model. The edition we read is the 1954 at top, with the model looking straight ahead. The one at bottom, where she’s looking at the viewer and has a cigarette, we borrowed from Flickr. It’s from 1952. Photo covers are often blah, but ones from this era can occasionally be nice. Check here and here for examples. The two above certainly catch the eye. The model, unfortunately, is unattributed, as they nearly always were on these.

Roberts, aka Robert Martin, is a relatively reliable author, so we went into this one eager. Little Sister has at its core a take on the Sternwood Sisters from The Big Sleep. Both Prosper sisters are beautiful, with older Vivian fiercely protective of younger Linda, who’s a simple-minded vamp always getting into trouble. In this case, Linda drunkenly pulls her car up to the family’s Cleveland estate one morning with a corpse in the trunk. Private dick Andrew Brice had already been called in by Vivian to break up Linda’s engagement to a presumed gold-digger, and is on the premises when this latest baffling situation arises.

In short order Brice is hired by another party to make sure the marriage happens. The conflict of interest doesn’t cause him any qualms at all. What does is that he’s soon drugged, beaten, shot at, and led around in circles by both Prosper sisters, resulting in thorough confusion. Detectives are expected to solve these conundrums, but instead Brice gets an explanation from the villain, who lays out the entire dastardly plot in an arrogant soliloquy. This is rarely a great choice for an author to make, but the book manages to be entertaining up to that point, so we won’t be too hard on Roberts for taking the easy exit. Little Sister is recommendable—but only just.

Why should I wait to go into mourning when I already know you'll be dying soon?

The lady in black on the cover of Once a Window was painted by Robert McGinnis, and she’s a brilliant femme fatale depiction, even if she’s only tangentially related to the story. Lee Roberts’ 1959 thriller is about a greedy kept man who throws his rich wife off a boat into the middle of Lake Erie, but is shocked to find days later that she survived. Instead of turning her husband in, the wife pretends she has amnesia and has no idea how she ended up in the water. Her plan is to confront her husband, with whom she’s still in love. It’s not easy to understand her behavior. Does she really think she can salvage a relationship in which her partner tried to murder her?

Roberts forges ahead with this dubious theme. Meanwhile, the other women in his narrative are equally confounding. The husband’s sidepiece girlfriend is too naive and gullible to realize she’s hooked up with a sociopath, while a third important female character is delusional with love for a dead paramour. Was Roberts making a statement about women and their giving hearts? Maybe, but it isn’t a flattering one. There’s being too trusting to see the forest for the trees; and there’s recovering from a murder attempt with love still aflame. The latter, we can’t buy. But even if the book was unrealistic, it wasn’t bad.

Why am I on the beach this morning in lingerie and one shoe? Let's just say the ball didn't end at midnight.

This piece of art for Lee Roberts’ If the Shoe Fits was painted by Robert McGinnis and it’s one you see around often, probably because it’s a top effort, at least in our view. In addition, the lettering is wonderful, with its two red dots over each “i.” The Crest Books paperback, we understand by looking around online, is usually copyright 1960, but our copy carries a date of 1959. The art relates to the novel only tangentially—missing high heels and whom they might fit are a key element, however they were worn by a fully dressed woman, not by a lingerie clad femme fatale. But as always the final result from McGinnis is amazing. It’s possible he custom painted it for the story—with a bit of artistic license taken.

Between the covers, Roberts, aka Robert Martin, spins the tale of a smalltown murder. Young playboy Paul Anway has his head bashed in while sitting lakeside in his convertible, and certain people had reason to hate him—the gamblers to whom he owed four grand, the two women he was dating, the jilted boyfriend of one, a sleazy detective hired for strongarm work, and possibly others. As it happens, all of them had the opportunity to kill Anway, a feat achieved through the gimmick of having him tailed to the secluded site of his eventual murder by three cars at the same time, with two of the drivers unaware that they’re involved in a coincidental caravan. It sounds strange, but it works, particularly because the existence of these tails is revealed only in flashback.

The one person who isn’t tailing Anway is the protagonist Clinton Shannon—local doctor, county coroner, and all around nice guy. Conceiving Shannon as both a trusted doctor and a city official allows Roberts to provide the character access to almost every event that occurs, a useful trick in a murder mystery. Shannon makes a couple of decisions that might raise an eyebrow—rashly disclosing confidential evidence to the victim’s father, for example—but for the most part Roberts writes him as exactly the sort of capable hero stories like this rely upon. With its likeable lead and involving plotline, we think If the Shoe Fits will fit your reading list. 

For better or worse, in sickness and health, women in pulp don’t have a heck of a lot of choice about it.

Pulp is a place where the men are decisive and the women are as light as feathers. We’ve gotten together a collection of paperback covers featuring women being spirited away to places unknown, usually unconscious, by men and things that are less than men. You have art from Harry Schaare, Saul Levine, Harry Barton, Alain Gourdon, aka Aslan, and others.

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HISTORY REWIND

The headlines that mattered yesteryear.

1919—Luxemburg and Liebknecht Are Killed

Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht, two of the most prominent socialists in Germany, are tortured and murdered by the Freikorps. Freikorps was a term applied to various paramilitary organizations that sprang up around Germany as soldiers returned in defeat from World War I. Members of these groups would later become prominent members of the SS.

1967—Summer of Love Begins

The Human Be-In takes place in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park with between 20,000 to 30,000 people in attendance, their purpose being to promote their ideals of personal empowerment, cultural and political decentralization, communal living, ecological preservation, and higher consciousness. The event is considered the beginning of the famed counterculture Summer of Love.

1968—Cash Performs at Folsom Prison

Johnny Cash performs live at Folsom State Prison in Folson, California, where he records a live album that includes a version of his 1955 hit “Folsom Prison Blues.” Cash had always been interested in performing at a prison, but was unable to until personnel changes at his record company brought in people who were amenable to the idea. The Folsom album was Cash’s biggest commercial success for years, reaching number 1 on the country music charts.

2004—Harold Shipman Found Hanged

British serial killer Harold Shipman is found dead in his prison cell, after hanging himself with a bedsheet. Shipman, a former doctor who preyed on his patients, was one of the most prolific serial killers in history, with two-hundred and eighteen murders positively attributed to him, and another two-hundred of which he is suspected.

1960—Nevil Shute Dies

English novelist Nevil Shute, who wrote the books A Town Like Alice and The Pied Piper, dies in Melbourne, Australia at age sixty-one. Seven of his novels were adapted to film, but his most famous was the cautionary post-nuclear war classic On the Beach.

1967—First Cryonics Patient Frozen

Dr. James Bedford, a University of California psychology professor, becomes the first person to be cryonically preserved with intent of future resuscitation. Bedford had kidney cancer that had metastasized to his lungs and was untreatable. His body was maintained for years by his family before being moved to Alcor Life Extension Foundation in Arizona.

Any part of a woman's body can be an erogenous zone. You just need to have skills.
Uncredited 1961 cover art for Michel Morphy's novel La fille de Mignon, which was originally published in 1948.

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