Eunice Sudak was a prolific author, but one whose bibliography is padded by numerous film novelizations, including X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes and The Raven, after Roger Corman’s tongue-in-cheek version of the Poe tale. One of her original pieces of fiction was 1966’s The Ice Pick in Ollie Birk, a comedic romp about a widow forced to become a prostitute to survive. That concept is just ripe for humor, right? Almost writes itself. Anyway, the widow discovers the eponymous Ollie Birk dead on her living room sofa with her ice pick in his ear, and of course must extricate herself from this sticky situation. Who did it? Perhaps the rowdy Russians down the hall. The novel is notable for its beat slang, if not its technical merit, and the Lancer Books paperback is notable for its unusual cover art of the lead character Leona Trafalgar dancing with an ice pick in her mouth. We love this image, but it’s uncredited, sadly.
Woman in critical condition after accidentally swallowing ice pick.