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The Deadly Pay-Off by William H. Duhart

The Deadly Pay-OffBill Kelly’s introduction reveals that William H. Duhart wrote only two novels and a handful of short stories during his brief, impressive career as a crime fiction writer. This is a reprint of the first, originally published as Gold Medal 805 in 1958.

Although Duhart was Black, his protagonist, Tank Tabor, is White; it’s likely he had to be to sell the novel back in the late 1950s. Nevertheless, he include a sidekick of sorts, Jock Adams, a former black inmate, who Tabor met in stir. Jock is savvy, honest, and somewhat of an unsung hero without whose help Tabor probably wouldn’t have had as much success as he finally manages to squeeze out of the constricting circumstances he funnels himself into.

Tabor works for kingpin Arky Calahan who runs just about every criminal enterprise in Milwaukee. Calahan gives Tabor a few hours to dissuade his PI brother, Bill Tabor, to drop his investigation into the murder of a reporter who purportedly has damning evidence against Calahan. If Tank doesn’t get the job done quick, Bill is headed for the morgue.

Duhart weaves an intricate tale of tension, high-stakes gambles, and pounding action. His writing is crisp, delivered in a luscious, hardboiled rhythm that defines the time and place of the setting. Black Gat 41 is a prime opportunity to (re)discover a lost writer and a lost original crime classic. A perfect pay-off of the BG series charter.

Available for pre-order now. Due out in December 2022.

The Collected Adventures of The Drifter Detective Vol. 2

The Collected Adventures of The Drifter Detective Vol. 2The first volume of this captivating  series introduced Jack Laramie, who travels the great western byways in search of cash-flush clients in need of a private detection. His mobile office is a horse trailer hauled behind a worn, but still running DeSoto classic.

Volume One left me a with a waity case of Laramie fever, with the only known cure being Volume Two. Well, round two did not disappoint, meeting and exceeding every  unreasonable expectation I brought to its pages.

Featuring four engaging novellas by Laramie’s crack scribes—every one a gem—this extra thick volume collects the balance of Jack Laramie’s case files. Over 300 pages of pure PI pleasure with a western/noir twang. Could be a long wait for the next one, but if I live long enough to see it, save me a place at the front of the queue.

The Girl in 304 by Harold R. Daniels

The Girl in 304 by Harold R. DanielsThis is the second novel by Harold R. Daniels, after his Edgar-nominated first novel, In His Blood (1955). The Black Gat reprint includes an introduction by George Kelley, slightly updated from its original appearance in The Mystery Fancier (Jul/Aug 1979). Kelley presents a succinct synopsis of each of Daniels’ crime books along with commentary on the writer’s growth.

The novel follows Georgia Sheriff Ed Masters’ investigation into the death of a Jane Doe discovered nearly naked in a remote area. The striking girl of the cover never appears alive in the story. Daniels delivers an engaging murder mystery, with tight plotting, believable characters, and solid writing. If there is any fault in the novel, it’s Daniels’ fastidious attention to detail. It’s all well done, but he could’ve left out some of the procedure and allowed the story to move at a slightly faster pace. Fortunately, the book overcomes this minor flaw with its numerous strengths and I hope Stark House/Black Gat will see fit to revisit the author’s other novels.

Sheriff Masters is the senior lawman you expect him to be—experienced, smart, and savvy, but what sets him apart from the pack is his ability to see the person he’s with. He adjusts his interviews/interactions based on the person he’s questioning. This nuance gives the character real depth.

Fans of classic crime fiction and paperback collectors will not want to miss Black Gat 40: The Girl in 304. Available for pre-order now.

Grimhaven

GrimhavenA sobering account of the author’s time in San Quentin in the 1920s. Much of Tasker’s prison life was closely controlled and passed almost entirely in the company of other inmates. Tasker’s memoir delves into the effects of such a punishing existence, where boredom and forced participation are monotonously thrust upon the entire population. How does one remain civil—or sane—under such conditions?

Tasker’s rare outlet became writing, which he pursued along with a small group of fellow convicts. It eventually led to this brutal, insightful account, and upon his early release to a modest career as a screenwriter in Hollywood.

For fans of true crime stories, Grimhaven provides a riveting, inside account of what happened to criminals after conviction in 1920s America. Plus, the paperback volume includes a fascinating bio of Robert Joyce Tasker by Woody Haut.

Out of print for decades, the Stark House imprint Staccato Crime brings Grimhaven back into print this September. Available for pre-order now.

Blood Alley by A.S. Fleischman

Blood Alley by A.S. FleischmanA prolific author, Albert Sidney Fleischman wrote novels as A.S. Feischman and Sid Fleischman. Blood Alley was his eighth novel and draws from the cultural and geographic sides of his experiences in the Far East during WWII. Later in his career, Fleischman wrote primarily children’s stories. Blood Alley is unique in that he wrote both the novel and the screenplay for the Batjac film production starring John Wayne and Lauren Bacall.

American Merchant Mariner, Tom Wilder, is taken prisoner by Chinese Communists after they seize his ship. He is sprung from prison through a carefully planned escape bought and paid for by the town of Chiku Shan, whose residents need a ship’s captain familiar with the waters off the coast to aid their to Hong Kong. The only ship they have access to is a wood-burning, stern wheeler, capable of a top speed of about eight knots.

The story is rich with intrigue, dangerous scrapes with discovery throughout Communist territory, and steeped in local customs and topographic detail. Although the part of the movie Tom Wilder was originally cast with Robert Mitchum, Wayne eventually got the part; and reading the book, it’s far easier to imagine Wayne as the nearly one-dimensional, macho-man Captain Wilder than Mitchum.

Stark House does fans of Gold Medal’s 1950s PBOs a real service by bringing this one back to print. It’s a thrill-packed adventure with a terrific introduction by David Lawrence Wilson, who knew the author prior to Fleischman’s death in 2010 at age 90.

Stark House provided the novel for review. Publication release: August 2022

How to Commit a Murder

How to Committ a MurderFirst published about 1930, How to Commit a Murder provides Danny Ahearn’s (1901–1960) first-hand account of a slew of criminal activities, divided into chapters on jewelry stores, fur joints, straight stickups, car theft, politicking, protection, rackets, crap games, defending yourself after a pinch—and the crowning jewel of the title: murder—and how to get away with it. A fascinating account of the author’s life as a hardcore criminal. 

Ahearn didn’t exactly write this baby, he narrated it. His editor, John S. Clapp—who wrote the original introduction for the first edition (which is reprinted here)—actually recorded Ahearn’s sometimes rambling account of this “how to” textbook and then painstakingly transcribed the whole thing. What you get is Ahearn’s authentic voice, oozing in big city street-savvy vernacular, and informed by his in-depth knowledge of that which he speaks. You can tell in short order, he knows exactly what he’s talking about. It’s captivating, immersive, and richly embellished. The only minor annoyance is Ahearn’s penchant to ramble. He doesn’t always connect the dots in his stream-of-consciousness revelations and sometimes jumps from one thought to another—all relevant to the chapter at hand—but not always sewn up tight with no loose ends.

How to Commit a MurderThat said, if you’re a fan of true crime exposés, this book’s hefty convictions far outweigh any petty offenses. Staccato Crime series co-editor Jeff Vorzimmer provides a short Preface to Gary Lovisi’s engaging 21st Century introduction to this Stark House Press jazz-age nonfiction gem.

Advance Review Copy provided by Stark House Press.
Release Date: June 2022. Available for pre-order from Stark House and amazon.

A Sherlock Holmes Notebook

A Sherlock Holmes NotebookStark House Press will release Gary Lovisi’s A Sherlock Holmes Notebook: A Cornucopia of Sherlockania in May 2022. This nearly 200 page trade paperback is packed full of essays, trivia, and collective treasures sure to please and enlighten fans and followers of the great detective’s adventures. Like many, I was introduced to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Holmes and Watson while still in school. I read many of Doyle’s stories and watched quite a few of the movies and TV series produced over the years, but I had no idea of the extent to which the creation inspired first pastiches, and later new adventures, once the Canon fell into the public domain.

Lovisi shares the fruits of his lifelong pursuit of all kinds of Sherlockania with readers. Whether you’re a die-hard fanatic or a casual fan, there is plenty to delight in here through his series of over 20 articles and reviews, complemented with dozens of cover images of collectable first editions, paperbacks, translated volumes, card sets, plays, films, and even Doyle’s correspondence with Robert Louis Stevenson. Although Holmes is the center of all the attention, Lovisi does include a bit on Doyle’s other fan favorite, Professor Challenger, of The Lost World, The Poison Belt, and The Land of Mist.

A Sherlock Holmes NotebookA Sherlock Holmes Notebook by Gary Lovisi is a joy to read from first page to last. Whether you’re a serious collector of Sherlockania or a casual fan, you’ll find numerous leads to pursue in secondary markets out of curiosity or to satisfy a newly-stoked fervor.

Nostalgia Digest Spring 2022

Nostalgia Digest Spring 2022Nostalgia Digest [Book 48, Chap. 2, Spring 2022, April-May-June 2022] ed. Steve Darnall (Funny Valentine Press, $5.00, 64pp, digest) Cover: Bing Crosby
1 • Hello, Out There in Radioland! • Steve Darnall • ed
2 • A Few Moments With . . . Leonard Maltin • Steve Darnall • iv
4 • Bing Crosby, Transcribed • Martin Grams, Jr. • ar
10 • Television’s First Family [Mary Kay and Johnny] • Garry Berman • ar
14 • Necrology of 2021 • Anon • ob
22 • Confessions of a Baseball Card Collector • Dave Reddall • ar
25 • CELEBio: Gene Kelly • Official Bio by MGM 1954 • bg
28 • The Man of Many Voices [Santos Ortega] • Denise Noe • ar
32 • Those Were the Days [program guide April-May-June] • Anon • schedule
40 • Don’t Make Me Over [Ann Sheridan] • Jordan Elliott • ar
46 • Suspense: The Final Year • Keith Scott • ar
54 • Having a Wonderful Crime [Burke’s Law] • Michael Barrett • ar
61 • Mail Call • lc

Nostalgia Digest website

Contents formatted for inclusion in Phil Stephensen-Payne’s Galatic Central reference website.
FictionMags Index Family Item Types & Other Abbreviations key.

Killer by Robert Silverberg

Killer by Robert SilverbergComing soon: Black Gat No. 37.

Originally published as Passion Killer by Don Elliott for Sundown Reader in 1965, this sleaze paperback seems like an odd choice for the Black Gat imprint. Maybe it’s an experiment to test the waters. Weighing in at 163 pages, I’d guess well over three quarters of this is one boring soft-core sex scene after another. Marie and Dolores’ cups runneth over explicitly above the waist, but anything below is a mere hint and a wink other than their rear ends that are described a lot like their tatas sans nipples.

The plot that moves intermittently forward as interludes between all the sex scenes ain’t bad. It could’ve easily been the basis for a good crime novel about a rich dude who hires a hit man to snuff his wife so he can marry his much younger, voluptuous girlfriend. Obviously, Silverberg can write. Unfortunately, the soft porn dominates too many pages and I couldn’t wait to finish unfulfilled.

Collectors will want this volume to keep their Black Gat runs complete, but I hope if Stark House continues with this genre they’ll  spin it off in a line of its own.

Killer by Robert Silverberg back cover

Bare•Bones No.9

Bare•Bones No.9

bare•bones [#9 Winter 2022] ed. Peter Enfantino, John Scoleri (Cimarron Street Books, $9.95, 114pp, digest)
1 • Contents Page
2 • Dueling Editorials • John Scoleri, Peter Enfantino • ed
3 • The Beagle has Landed [The Evolution and Possible Offspring of A.E. van Vogt’s “Black Destroyer”] • Matthew R. Bradley • ar; illustrations by Allen Koszowski
14 • James Bond’s Illegitimate Cousins [“Eurospy” films of the sixties] • William Schoell • ar
25 • The Private Eye Procedural [Joe Gores’ DKA File Series] • J. Charles Burwell • ar
38 • It’s Still Not About Anything [But Hickey & Boggs means everything if you’re obsessed with Los Angeles in the early ’70s] • Duane Swierczynski • ar
46 • Universal Opens the Door to a Fantastic 1974 [Boxoffice Review: March 11, 1974] • John Scoleri • ar
53 • Digging Into Crime Digests: These are the Damned [The Guide to Sure-Fire Detective Stories] • Peter Enfantino • cl
85 • S. Craig Zahler on . . . Horror Manga • ar
89 • Sleazy Alley • Peter Enfantino • rc
_89 • Carnal Cantina, John Dexter, Late-Hour Library, 1967 • br
_91 • Carnal Captive, Tony Calvano (Thomas P. Ramirez), Nightstand, 1965 • br
_91 • Lust Kill, John Dexter, Ember, 1964 • br
_93 • Swap It to Me!, Alan Marshall, Companion, 1969 • br
_93 • Sextories, Charles Miron, Kozy Books, 1960 • br
95 • R&D: The Man With Six Names [John Wyndham] • David J. Schow • cl
102 • Movies Illustrated Bonus: The Day of the Triffids! • John Scoleri • pi
108 • A Good Cast is Worth Repeating • bg

Cimarron Street Books website

Contents formatted for inclusion in Phil Stephensen-Payne’s Galatic Central reference website.
FictionMags Index Family Item Types & Other Abbreviations key.