Friday, December 31, 2021

The Twelve Dames of Christmas, 2021: #7

Celebrating this festive season with brassy bombshells.



Assignment: Seduction, by “George Cassidy,” aka William E. Vance (Merit, 1963). Vance wrote primarily westerns under his own name, but used the Cassidy pseudonym when penning what we now fondly refer to as “sleaze fiction” (The Flesh Market, Bait, Wanton Bride, etc.). Illustration by Robert Bonfils.

Thursday, December 30, 2021

The Twelve Dames of Christmas, 2021: #6

Celebrating this festive season with brassy bombshells.



Sweet and Deadly, by Verne Chute (Popular Library, 1952). Illustration by A. Leslie Ross. The back cover can be seen here.

Wednesday, December 29, 2021

The Twelve Dames of Christmas, 2021: #5

Celebrating this festive season with brassy bombshells.



Don’t Hang Me Too High, by J.B. O’Sullivan (Pocket, 1956). This is the eighth novel to star Steve Silk, a boxer turned unlicensed private eye in New York City. Other entries in James Brendan O’Sullivan’s series include Death Came Late (1945), I Die Possessed (1953), and Someone Walked Over My Grave (1954). This book’s rear cover can be found here.

Illustration by James Meese.

Tuesday, December 28, 2021

The Twelve Dames of Christmas, 2021: #4

Celebrating this festive season with brassy bombshells.



The Big Boodle, by Robert Sylvester (Permabooks, 1955). As Dan Stumpf recalls in Mystery*File, this novel—originally published in 1954—is “set in pre-Castro Cuba and deal[s] with P.I. Ned Sherwood’s efforts to disentangle himself from an elaborate counterfeit scheme involving Mexican film stars, Cuban hit-men, ex-revolutionaries and corrupt officials.” The story was adapted into a 1957 film starring Errol Flynn. I can’t find an authoritative biography of Sylvester (1907-1975), but the Facebook page Vintage Paperbacks and Book Covers says he “was an American drama and amusement writer for the New York Daily News and for twenty years wrote the syndicated column ‘Dream Street’ about the stage. He was also a press agent for Bob Hope and other luminaries …” Beyond The Big Boodle, Sylvester is said to have published four other novels, among them We Were Strangers (1949) and The Second Oldest Profession (1952).

The Big Boodle’s cover art is credited to Robert Schulz.

Monday, December 27, 2021

The Twelve Dames of Christmas, 2021: #3

Celebrating this festive season with brassy bombshells.



Slow Burn, by Jack Ehrlich (Dell, 1961). This is the second of Ehrlich’s crime novels starring a parole officer named Robert Flick. Illustration by Robert K. Abbett.

Sunday, December 26, 2021

The Twelve Dames of Christmas, 2021: #2

Celebrating this festive season with brassy bombshells.



Pure Sweet Hell, by “Malcolm Douglas,” aka Ronald Douglas Sanderson (Gold Medal, 1957). Illustration by Barye Phillips.

Saturday, December 25, 2021

The Twelve Dames of Christmas, 2021: #1



After posting two showcases of vintage paperback book covers featuring “Dame” in their titles—first in 2016, and again in 2018—I pretty much used up my resources. But then I remembered that I still had a wide variety of book fronts sporting “dame” in their cover teaser lines. So this morning, as my distinctive way of honoring the legendary “12 days of Christmas” (December 25 to January 5), I am posting the first of what will be a dozen fronts with “dame” superimposed somewhere amid their artwork.

Harry Charles “H.C.” Witwer (1890-1929) was an Athens, Pennsylvania-born journalist, short-story author, and comic-strip writer. Before being hired as a reporter for newspapers (among them the Brooklyn Eagle and The Sun, both in New York City), he worked as a boxing manager, and later penned boxing yarns for Collier’s magazine. His boxing novel, The Leather Pushers, was originally published (by Grosset & Dunlap) in 1921. As Thomas Hauser explained in his review of that book, posted several years back in a fight-focused blog called The Sweet Science,
The story is told in the first person by an unnamed narrator, a likable rogue who manages a young heavyweight prospect named Kane Halliday a/k/a Kid Roberts. It’s pulp fiction with a plot and ring action that are melodramatic to the point of being unbelievable. But Witwer had a wonderful way with words and conveyed the essence of boxing in a manner that encouraged the reader to suspend disbelief.
The Internet Archive offers the full novel here.

Interestingly, a silent film serial, likewise titled The Leather Pushers and inspired by Witwer’s popular boxing fiction, debuted in 1922. It was scripted, at least in part, by future movie producer Darryl F. Zanuck. That series employed a protagonist named Kane Halliday, too, though it’s not at all clear how closely it followed the plot of Witmer’s novel; episodes are said to have been self-contained and complete in their own right. It’s equally unclear as to how many of those two-reel installments were shot: Wikipedia puts the number at 18, but the Internet Movie Database (IMDb) says there were only half a dozen. In any case, prints of only a trailer for the series and two episodes—viewable here and here—are known to still exist.

The lovely paperback edition of Witwer’s The Leather Pushers featured atop this post was published by Popular Library in 1950. Its cover was painted by Earle K. Bergey. If you would like to read the plot description on the back of that book, simply click here.

Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Because I Needed a Trimble Fix …



Cargo for the Styx, by Louis Trimble (Ace, 1958). This was published as part of a paperback “double novel,” with J.M. “Jay” Flynn’s Terror Tournament on the flipside. Unfortunately, the cover artist for Cargo is unidentified.

READ MORE:A P.I. Mystery Revew—Louise Trimble, The Surfside Caper,” by Steve Lewis (Mystery*File).

Wednesday, December 8, 2021

All Hands at the Ready



Give the Little Corpse a Great Big Hand, written by “George Bagby,” aka Aaron Marc Stein (Dell, 1955). This was the delightful fifth novel starring Inspector Schmidt of the New York Police Department and his sidekick and chronicler, George Bagby. The exquisite cover art was done by Victor Kalin.



Give the Boys a Great Big Hand, written by “Ed McBain,” aka Evan Hunter (Permabooks, 1961). This was the 11th entry in McBain’s acclaimed 87th Precinct series, set in Isola, a fictionalized version of New York City. Sadly, the cover illustration is not credited.