The Chordettes.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J7c_6ieoTDM
Small House of Everything
Wednesday, December 30, 2015
Tuesday, December 29, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: COME SHARE THE WINE
Al Martino, via Germany.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYWbIvnkXMU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYWbIvnkXMU
OVERLOOKED FILM: IN THE YEAR 2889
This is a film whose title is based on a Jules Verne book. Alas, no movie was made to go along with the title. It seems that following the success of the Richard Matheson-scripted Master of the World, American International Pictures picked up the rights to Verne's In the Year 2889. Things happened and things did not happen, including that second Verne Film.
Six years later, AIP decided to remake their 1955 film Day the World Ended* and and cut-rate director Larry Buchanan (the poor man's Ed Wood) was selected to helm. But, gee, wouldn't audiences get confused between the 1955 film and its 1967 remake? But, hey, we've got this neat Jules Verne title we've never used! Why not tack that one onto the new film? No one would know, would they?
So we have a Jules Verne title over a non-Jules Verne movie that is almost word-for-word and scene for scene as as cheesy but fairly popular 50s flick.
Anyway, In the Year 2889 was released as a made-for-television movie with an aging Paul Peterson as star. Peterson has been one the original Mickey Mouse Club mouseketeers until fired (alleged by Big Walt himself) after punching a casting director in the stomach. Peterson became a household name when he was cast, when he was twelve, as Jeff Stone in The Donna Reed Show. This led to a minor (and brief) recording career (his TDRS castmate, Shelley Fabares, proed to have much longer staying power). When TDRS ended after eight seasons, audiences had a hard time picturing "Jeff Stone" as an adult. As his career slid downhill, so did his first marriage when his wife left him for actor Bill Bixby. At the urging of Mickey Rooney, Peterson left Hollywood and entered college. He then wrote 16 fairly popular men's adventure novels, and ran a limosine service for a decade. Today, he is well-respected as an advocate for current and former child actors, earning him the sobriquet of "the patron saint of former child actors."
Also included in the cast:
Enjoy.
https://archive.org/details/InTheYear28891967
* Not to be confused with the 2001 television movie The Day the World Ended. Neither title has anything to do with the 1930 novel by Sax Rohmer.
Six years later, AIP decided to remake their 1955 film Day the World Ended* and and cut-rate director Larry Buchanan (the poor man's Ed Wood) was selected to helm. But, gee, wouldn't audiences get confused between the 1955 film and its 1967 remake? But, hey, we've got this neat Jules Verne title we've never used! Why not tack that one onto the new film? No one would know, would they?
So we have a Jules Verne title over a non-Jules Verne movie that is almost word-for-word and scene for scene as as cheesy but fairly popular 50s flick.
Anyway, In the Year 2889 was released as a made-for-television movie with an aging Paul Peterson as star. Peterson has been one the original Mickey Mouse Club mouseketeers until fired (alleged by Big Walt himself) after punching a casting director in the stomach. Peterson became a household name when he was cast, when he was twelve, as Jeff Stone in The Donna Reed Show. This led to a minor (and brief) recording career (his TDRS castmate, Shelley Fabares, proed to have much longer staying power). When TDRS ended after eight seasons, audiences had a hard time picturing "Jeff Stone" as an adult. As his career slid downhill, so did his first marriage when his wife left him for actor Bill Bixby. At the urging of Mickey Rooney, Peterson left Hollywood and entered college. He then wrote 16 fairly popular men's adventure novels, and ran a limosine service for a decade. Today, he is well-respected as an advocate for current and former child actors, earning him the sobriquet of "the patron saint of former child actors."
Also included in the cast:
- Quinn O'Hara, a Scottish-born actress who enjoyed an active career from the Sixties through the Nineties, including brief (but regular) minor parts on Dallas and Trapper John, M.D. She played Sinistra in The Ghost in the Invisible Bikini.
- Charla Doherty, whose first credited role was in one episode of The Donna Reed Show; her last credited role was this one -- bookending her career with Paul Peterson. Doherty's main acting career lasted about six years, including 15 episodes of Days of Our Lives. Sadly, she died at age 41 of pancreatis brought on by acute alcoholism. Despite her demons, she active in feeding the homeless.
- Neil Fletcher. Who he? Nine credits in low budget SF/horror programmers, including playing the Secretary of Defense in Mars Needs Women. another Larry Buchanan stinker.
- Hugh Feagin. Also who he? This was his first credited role. His thirteen other credits included roles as Gimp Murphy, Shopkeeper, Farm Husband, Doctor, Police Officer, Tommy, Nick, and Jim.
- Max Anderson. Another who he? He played "Officer" in High Yellow, "Witness" in The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald, and who knows what in Beauty and the Cave, Common Law Wife, The Student Teachers, and Ruby and Oswald. (Three of these films were Larry Buchanan? Can you guess which ones?)
- Billy Thurman, a character actor who specialized in gruff roles, often a cop or a redneck. Like Max Anderson, he played "Witness" in The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald. (One of this film was a Larry Buchanan. Can you gue...oh, never mind.)
- Byron Lord, not to be confused with Lord Byron. This guy had roles in such immortal classics as Co-ed Fever, Party Girls, Sands of Ecstasy, The Sex Shuffle, Scarlet Negligee, and Ready for Anything! Do I detect a theme?
Enjoy.
https://archive.org/details/InTheYear28891967
* Not to be confused with the 2001 television movie The Day the World Ended. Neither title has anything to do with the 1930 novel by Sax Rohmer.
Monday, December 28, 2015
INCOMING
- Mike Carey, Vicious Circle. A Felix Castor fantasy thriller. A missing ghost case drags Castor "and his loved ones into the middle of a horrific plot to raise oneof hell's fiercest demons." Carey earned his chops writing comic books and I am a big fan of his Lucifer series based on the Neil Gaiman character. This book sounds like a good 'un.
- Edward Mandell House (no relation), Philip Dru: Aministrator. Noted political novel from 1912 about the military overthrow of the U.S. government, beginning in 1920. Colonel House is perhaps best known as a confidant and advisor to President Woodrow Wilson. According to the back cover blurbs on this edition, the book "copyrighted fascism" before Mussolini and has had "a greater impact on American government than the Communist Manafesto, Mein Kampf, or any other tract of politcal extremism." This book is the second of only three published by Roger Welch University Press (the first was a book by Welch and the third was a book extrapolated from a Czechoslovakian Communist party strategy paper from the early Fifties which planned a totalitarian takeover of a democracy) . Roger Welch, of course was the founder of the John Birch Society, and Roger Welch University was an online univeristy founded in 2005 (two decades after Welch's death) to grant an associates degree in liberal arts. As of 2010, the university was listed as being "inactive." Just as well, says I, having no taste for political bovine excrement extremism.
- "M. E. Kerr" (Marijane Meaker) The Books of Fell. YA omnibus of three novels: Fell, Fell Back, and Fell Down. Meaker's YA books have won just about every award possible in that genre. Mystery readers may best know her for the paperback thrillers published as "Vin Packer." Among her many collectible books are those exploring lesbianism published in the Fifites and Sixties as by "Ann Aldrich." Whatever name she uses, whatever genre she writes in, she's noted for complex characters, complex situations, and lucid prose.
- Tim Lebbon, Fears Unknown. Horror collection of four novellas. two of which won the British Fantasy Award. Good stuff.
Saturday, December 26, 2015
Friday, December 25, 2015
CHRISTMAS MUSIC: O COME, O COME EMMANUEL
Since it's Christmas and since this is Kitty's favorite...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPHh3nMMu-I
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kN4wxfTyORg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FsU0x27e3Dw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FqkUPUSY8ds
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0Wy2u9TENo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vatvUREAPY0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UIGSuLlM-R4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d5-YvcUs2qM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XsaL11cEvdE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oF7CST5pFtg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bVEw-5AzJzk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DQ0ghB-O7RE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7OVroRS06HI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hu992ELI_qQ
This post has been brought to you by the Christmas Overkill Department. And, yes, it is Deb-worthy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPHh3nMMu-I
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kN4wxfTyORg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FsU0x27e3Dw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FqkUPUSY8ds
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0Wy2u9TENo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vatvUREAPY0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UIGSuLlM-R4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d5-YvcUs2qM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XsaL11cEvdE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oF7CST5pFtg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bVEw-5AzJzk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DQ0ghB-O7RE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7OVroRS06HI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hu992ELI_qQ
This post has been brought to you by the Christmas Overkill Department. And, yes, it is Deb-worthy.
FORGOTTEN BOOK: MARK KILBY STANDS ALONE
Mark Kilby Stands Alone by "Robert Caine Frazer" (John Creasey) (1962)
I don't think anyone could ever call John Creasey a great writer but he was a pretty good one. I've read perhaps one-tenth of his more than 600 books and have never been disappointed. As has been said before, sometimes you're not in the mood for steak; sometimes you just have to have a good hamburger. Well, that's Creasey. His best work, arguably, was the Commander George Gideon series (written under his J. J. Marric pseudonym) and, again arguably, some of the novels in his long-running Inspector Roger West series. Other people may have their own nominees -- Lord knows there's enough to choose from.
His Mark Kilby series is one of his shorter ones -- six novels published by Pocket Books from 1959 to 1962. To my knowledge this is the only Creasey series to first appear as U.S. paperback originals. Mark Kilby Stands Alone was the penultimate book in the series.
Kilby is an ex-MI5 agent who moved to America after his wife and son were killed. There, he began working for the Regal Investment Security Corporation (R.I.S.C.), perhaps the wealthiest private financial grooup in the world. As their major troubleshooter, Kilby has unlimited resources. His weapons of choice are spring-loaded flexible knives he has hidden on his person. He is resourceful and fearless. Need I mention that he's incredibly handsome? Although not loathe to killing, he has a high moral code and sense of duty. And he reverse tithes, keeping only ten percent of his earnings and giving the rest to charity. Someone this too-good-to-be-true should really grate on the reader, no? Yet I really liked the character; in many ways he reminded me of Leslie Charteris' The Saint.
About the story. With the death of her uncle, Elizabeth Saxon inherits the Saxon Gold and Silver Mining Company in Nevada. In recent years the mines have been played out, but a recent discovery of a vein of gold and raised the company's hopes. Elizabeth leaves her job as a London travel agent and prepares to sail to America to take over the reins of the company. But someone doesn't want her to do this. Liz has an uncomfortable feeling that she's being watched. Minutes after being ensconced aboard the ocean liner, she answers a knock on the door. Opening it, a man lunges toward her with a knife. Kilby (who had been hiding in the shower, naturally) disarms the man. He learns that the would-be killer was working for a powerful mobster named Cellini. We learn that R.I.S.C. had invested a sizable sum with Liz's uncle to finance expansion of the mines and that the company anticipated further investment but, with the murder of the uncle, the mine had been closed off by armed guards, allowing no outsiders access. Thus Kilby's great concern for Liz's life.
With us so far? Good, because things begin to speed up from here. A woman who was mistaken for Liz is murdered. Kilby goes into Cellini's heavily guarded lair and kidnaps the mobster's mistress. Said mistress falls in love with Kilby. (Liz, by the way, had already fallen for him. He's just that kind of guy.) Kilby allows himself to be taken by Cellini's men. A hooker with a heart of gold falls for Kilby. Another escape. Bloodshed. Many people try to kill Kilby. A final showdown at the Nevada mines. A big secret revealed. R.I.S.C.'s investment is saved. So is the girl. So is another girl. Well, two out three ain't bad. The end.
A fast-paced, fun read. Nothing major...just a darned good way to spend a few hours. Kilby, as is the case with many of Creasey's characters, threatens to become habit forming.
**********
Patti Abbott, our Fearless Forgotten Books leader is taking a few well-deserved weeks off. Todd Mason, over at his Sweet Freedom blog, will be collecting the links this week, and the next, and the next. Patti will be back to keep the Forgotten Books gang in line on January 15 for Richard s. prather week.
*********
Whatever beliefs you may or may not hold, I sincerely wish each of you a meaningful and joyous day. May all good things follow you thoughout the new year. Peace.
I don't think anyone could ever call John Creasey a great writer but he was a pretty good one. I've read perhaps one-tenth of his more than 600 books and have never been disappointed. As has been said before, sometimes you're not in the mood for steak; sometimes you just have to have a good hamburger. Well, that's Creasey. His best work, arguably, was the Commander George Gideon series (written under his J. J. Marric pseudonym) and, again arguably, some of the novels in his long-running Inspector Roger West series. Other people may have their own nominees -- Lord knows there's enough to choose from.
His Mark Kilby series is one of his shorter ones -- six novels published by Pocket Books from 1959 to 1962. To my knowledge this is the only Creasey series to first appear as U.S. paperback originals. Mark Kilby Stands Alone was the penultimate book in the series.
Kilby is an ex-MI5 agent who moved to America after his wife and son were killed. There, he began working for the Regal Investment Security Corporation (R.I.S.C.), perhaps the wealthiest private financial grooup in the world. As their major troubleshooter, Kilby has unlimited resources. His weapons of choice are spring-loaded flexible knives he has hidden on his person. He is resourceful and fearless. Need I mention that he's incredibly handsome? Although not loathe to killing, he has a high moral code and sense of duty. And he reverse tithes, keeping only ten percent of his earnings and giving the rest to charity. Someone this too-good-to-be-true should really grate on the reader, no? Yet I really liked the character; in many ways he reminded me of Leslie Charteris' The Saint.
About the story. With the death of her uncle, Elizabeth Saxon inherits the Saxon Gold and Silver Mining Company in Nevada. In recent years the mines have been played out, but a recent discovery of a vein of gold and raised the company's hopes. Elizabeth leaves her job as a London travel agent and prepares to sail to America to take over the reins of the company. But someone doesn't want her to do this. Liz has an uncomfortable feeling that she's being watched. Minutes after being ensconced aboard the ocean liner, she answers a knock on the door. Opening it, a man lunges toward her with a knife. Kilby (who had been hiding in the shower, naturally) disarms the man. He learns that the would-be killer was working for a powerful mobster named Cellini. We learn that R.I.S.C. had invested a sizable sum with Liz's uncle to finance expansion of the mines and that the company anticipated further investment but, with the murder of the uncle, the mine had been closed off by armed guards, allowing no outsiders access. Thus Kilby's great concern for Liz's life.
With us so far? Good, because things begin to speed up from here. A woman who was mistaken for Liz is murdered. Kilby goes into Cellini's heavily guarded lair and kidnaps the mobster's mistress. Said mistress falls in love with Kilby. (Liz, by the way, had already fallen for him. He's just that kind of guy.) Kilby allows himself to be taken by Cellini's men. A hooker with a heart of gold falls for Kilby. Another escape. Bloodshed. Many people try to kill Kilby. A final showdown at the Nevada mines. A big secret revealed. R.I.S.C.'s investment is saved. So is the girl. So is another girl. Well, two out three ain't bad. The end.
A fast-paced, fun read. Nothing major...just a darned good way to spend a few hours. Kilby, as is the case with many of Creasey's characters, threatens to become habit forming.
**********
Patti Abbott, our Fearless Forgotten Books leader is taking a few well-deserved weeks off. Todd Mason, over at his Sweet Freedom blog, will be collecting the links this week, and the next, and the next. Patti will be back to keep the Forgotten Books gang in line on January 15 for Richard s. prather week.
*********
Whatever beliefs you may or may not hold, I sincerely wish each of you a meaningful and joyous day. May all good things follow you thoughout the new year. Peace.
Thursday, December 24, 2015
UNDERAPPRECIATED MUSIC: JO STAFFORD
Jo (the Jo was either for Jocinta or Josephine; accounts differ) Stafford (1917-2008) was one of the most successful pop singers of the mid-Twentieth century. Her recording of "You Belong to Me" was a huge hit in 1952. By 1955, she had more record sales than any other female singer. She was the lead singer for The Pied Pipers when Tommy Dorsey hired them for his orchestra, where Stafford became a solo vocalist. Her work with the USO during World War II brought her the nickname "GI Jo."
The link below takes you to more than 150 recordings, including some with Frank Sinatra, Gordon Macrae, Gene Autry, Frankie Laine, Dick Haymes, Ella Fitzgerald, and Bing Crosby, among others. The link is set up so you can pick and choose the numbers you want to hear. Sample a few songs from this great talent and you find yourself listening to many more.
https://archive.org/details/JoStafford-29-190
The link below takes you to more than 150 recordings, including some with Frank Sinatra, Gordon Macrae, Gene Autry, Frankie Laine, Dick Haymes, Ella Fitzgerald, and Bing Crosby, among others. The link is set up so you can pick and choose the numbers you want to hear. Sample a few songs from this great talent and you find yourself listening to many more.
https://archive.org/details/JoStafford-29-190
THE ADVENTURES OF THE SAINT: SANTA CLAUS IS NO SAINT
Au contraire, Simon Templar, I think he might be. Well maybe not on this Christmas Eve 1950 radio episode.
Enjoy. ( I'm sure you're on the real Santa's list of good boys and girls.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XC85ZnSRwfY&list=PLS_d1HpIl9rI0U8tGV9YMbpINe70O9fBv
Enjoy. ( I'm sure you're on the real Santa's list of good boys and girls.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XC85ZnSRwfY&list=PLS_d1HpIl9rI0U8tGV9YMbpINe70O9fBv
Wednesday, December 23, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST AND MAYBE IT SHOULD STAY THERE: SANTA CLAUS, THE ORIGINAL HIPPIE
Homer and Jethro.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RczOlLRr6pw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RczOlLRr6pw
BAD CHRISTMAS JOKE FOR ENGLISH MAJORS WEDNESDAY
What do they call Santa's helpers?
Subordinate Clauses.
Subordinate Clauses.
Tuesday, December 22, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: RAINY NIGHT IN GEORGIA
Don't know about Georgia, but it's a rainy night in Florida.
Here's Brook Benton.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDRbF80NKDU
Here's Brook Benton.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDRbF80NKDU
OVVERLOOKED PROMOTIONAL FILM: STAMP DAY FOR SUPERMAN (1954)
Hey, kids! It's real important to buy U.S. Savings Stamps! Don't believe me? Just ask Superman! Oh, wait...Superman is busy saving Lois from kidnappers. Gee, I hope he saves Miss Lane in time tell to all us kids at Jimmy Olsen's old school all about U. S. Savings Stamps and how neat they are!
SPOILER ALERT! He does.
Phew!
Anyway, the whole gang is here: George Reeves, Noel Neille, Jack Larson, and John Hamilton. They're joined by Tristam Coffin as Principal Garwood and and Billy Nelson as the burglar/kidnapper Blinky. (Question of the day: How evil can a villain named Blink be? Discuss. this will count for ten percent of your final grade.)
This 18-minute short was co-produced by Superman, Inc. and the U. S. Department of the Treasury.e
This promotional film was never shown as part of the Adventures of Superman television show but still has the distinction of being the last episode filmed in black and white. It also happens to be the only relic of that show to be in the public domain.
Enjoy this campy piece of history.
https://archive.org/details/StampDayForSUPERMAN
SPOILER ALERT! He does.
Phew!
Anyway, the whole gang is here: George Reeves, Noel Neille, Jack Larson, and John Hamilton. They're joined by Tristam Coffin as Principal Garwood and and Billy Nelson as the burglar/kidnapper Blinky. (Question of the day: How evil can a villain named Blink be? Discuss. this will count for ten percent of your final grade.)
This 18-minute short was co-produced by Superman, Inc. and the U. S. Department of the Treasury.e
This promotional film was never shown as part of the Adventures of Superman television show but still has the distinction of being the last episode filmed in black and white. It also happens to be the only relic of that show to be in the public domain.
Enjoy this campy piece of history.
https://archive.org/details/StampDayForSUPERMAN
Monday, December 21, 2015
INCOMING? NAH, NOT QUITE
Once again a week with no incoming. Next week does not look promising either; company's coming in for the next ten days and, as for Christmas...no one gives me books because the odds are that I already have what they would give.
Oh, well. So, instead of an incoming post today, enjoy this 1912 cartoon from Winsor McCay, the man who gave us Little Nemo, Gertie the Dinosaur, and Dreams of a Rarebit Fiend.
https://archive.org/details/WinsorMcCay1912HowAMosquitoOperates
Oh, well. So, instead of an incoming post today, enjoy this 1912 cartoon from Winsor McCay, the man who gave us Little Nemo, Gertie the Dinosaur, and Dreams of a Rarebit Fiend.
https://archive.org/details/WinsorMcCay1912HowAMosquitoOperates
Sunday, December 20, 2015
MARK HAMILL'S JOKER MONOLOGUE
I don't know when I will see the new Star Wars movie, but it won't be anytime soon. I no longer see movies in theaters. Too much noise. Too much talking. Too much rudeness. And stay off my lawn.
But I am a fan of Star Wars (in a limited way). I am also a Batman fan (again, in a limited way). So why not celebrate the new movie by combining the two?
Enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWCfDdydwt8
But I am a fan of Star Wars (in a limited way). I am also a Batman fan (again, in a limited way). So why not celebrate the new movie by combining the two?
Enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWCfDdydwt8
HYMN TIME
The Sons of the Pioneers.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=StRzrTywUaM&list=PLJ3X0XM_SmvPutsT59kVxNHE1Y9B8kcR-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=StRzrTywUaM&list=PLJ3X0XM_SmvPutsT59kVxNHE1Y9B8kcR-
Saturday, December 19, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: I CAN'T GIVE YOU ANYTHING BUT LOVE
From 1935, Connie Boswell.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZk3fOzKpQ4&list=PLF78440F051A8F999
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZk3fOzKpQ4&list=PLF78440F051A8F999
TOM CORBETT, SPACE CADET -- VOLUME 2, #1 (MAY-JUNE 1955)
With the death of actor Al Markim late last month, my thoughts turned to Tom Corbett, Space Cadet, the television series that helped informed my childhood and the one in which Markim portrayed Astro the Venusian in all 58 episodes that aired from 1951 to 1955.
Tom Corbett had a lengthy inception before being born on television. Tom was the brain child of writer Joseph Greene, the first glimmering of the space cadet was in a proposed comic book, circa 1945. When that idea did not get anywhere, Greene worked on a radio script tentatively titled "Space Academy." This drew the attention of Rockhill Studios, which worked with Greene to develop the script into a television show. Robert A. Heinlein, in 1948, published his juvenile SF novel Space Cadet, and it was felt that "Space Cadet" would be a far more commercial title than "Space Academy, so the rights to the words "Space Cadet" were purchased from Heinlein. (For many years now, it has been hinted that the Tom Corbett series and character were based on that Heinlein novel, but only those two words directly came from the noted SF writer. There are, however,,a number of similarities between Corbett and Heinlein's book. Coincidence? ) By 1949, Tom Ranger and the Space Cadets (Tom Ranger being the original name for Corbett) was developed as a syndicated newspaper comic strip -- but again, nothing came of it.
By 1950, however, CBS used the unpublished strip and, changing the name of the character, premiered Tom Corbett, Space Cadet. A year later, Tom Corbett, Space Cadet began a run as a newspaper comic strip. Betwen 1952 and 1954, Greene wrote the Dell comic book based on the character. Also in 1952, Grossett & Dunlap began published a series of Tom Corbett novels by the pseudonymous "Carey Rockwell," who may or may not have been Greene, who otherwise may or may not have had input in the writing and/or editing of the series.* There were eight Tom Corbett novels in the series, which listed Willy Ley as "scientific advisor." The television show, meanwhile, moved to ABC** and ABC also aired a short-lived Tom Corbett radio show. The show moved to the Dupont Network for its fourth season and to NBC for its fifth and final season.
Tom Corbett's popularity with kids of the early Fifties ushered in a tsunami of promotional items. There was a musical recording, original cast records of the Cadets' adventures, a View-Master program, a lunch box, a pocket watch, coloring books, a pop-up book, Marx toys, Pep cereal tie-ins, and so on and so on.
So, who were Tom and the Cadets? Tom is a cadet at the Space Academy, training for a career inthe Solar Corps. Fellow cadets Astro and Roger Manning join Tom in his adventures, many of which are aboard the training ship Polaris and on nearby planets...and distant star systems. Heady stuff for a child of the Fifties.
On television and radio, Tom was played by Frankie Thomas, Jr., Astro (as noted above) by Al Markim, and Roger Manning by Jan Merlin. In 1954, Merlin was replaced by Jack Grimes, playing Cadet T. J. Thistle. Semi-regular cast members included Ed Bryce as Captain Steve Strong and Carter Blake as Commander Arkwright. Frank Sutton, who went on to become Gomer Pyle's Sergeant Carter, appeared in six episodes as Eric Raddison. Other familiar faces included Tom Poston (uncredited) and chimpanzee J. Fred Muggs.
Back to the comic books. Dell Comics dropped the title after issue #11 in 1954, after which Prize Comics picked up the option, publishing the issue linked below -- the first of three from Prize. This issue has a cover by Marvin Stein and interior art by Stein and Mork Meskin; at least two of the stories were scripted by Greene.
In this issue, Tom and his pals find themseles on an experimental spaceship in "The Spaceship of Doom," encounter a strange being in the Venusian swamps in "Octopus Tree," and try to mediate a dispute in "The Spaceways of Peril."
Enjoy.
http://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=27683
* Another theory has Richard Jessup as the man behind the "Carey Rockwell" name.
** For some reason, the show's run on ABC was interrupted mid-stream with a three-month sojourn to NBC before bouncing back to ABC.
Tom Corbett had a lengthy inception before being born on television. Tom was the brain child of writer Joseph Greene, the first glimmering of the space cadet was in a proposed comic book, circa 1945. When that idea did not get anywhere, Greene worked on a radio script tentatively titled "Space Academy." This drew the attention of Rockhill Studios, which worked with Greene to develop the script into a television show. Robert A. Heinlein, in 1948, published his juvenile SF novel Space Cadet, and it was felt that "Space Cadet" would be a far more commercial title than "Space Academy, so the rights to the words "Space Cadet" were purchased from Heinlein. (For many years now, it has been hinted that the Tom Corbett series and character were based on that Heinlein novel, but only those two words directly came from the noted SF writer. There are, however,,a number of similarities between Corbett and Heinlein's book. Coincidence? ) By 1949, Tom Ranger and the Space Cadets (Tom Ranger being the original name for Corbett) was developed as a syndicated newspaper comic strip -- but again, nothing came of it.
By 1950, however, CBS used the unpublished strip and, changing the name of the character, premiered Tom Corbett, Space Cadet. A year later, Tom Corbett, Space Cadet began a run as a newspaper comic strip. Betwen 1952 and 1954, Greene wrote the Dell comic book based on the character. Also in 1952, Grossett & Dunlap began published a series of Tom Corbett novels by the pseudonymous "Carey Rockwell," who may or may not have been Greene, who otherwise may or may not have had input in the writing and/or editing of the series.* There were eight Tom Corbett novels in the series, which listed Willy Ley as "scientific advisor." The television show, meanwhile, moved to ABC** and ABC also aired a short-lived Tom Corbett radio show. The show moved to the Dupont Network for its fourth season and to NBC for its fifth and final season.
Tom Corbett's popularity with kids of the early Fifties ushered in a tsunami of promotional items. There was a musical recording, original cast records of the Cadets' adventures, a View-Master program, a lunch box, a pocket watch, coloring books, a pop-up book, Marx toys, Pep cereal tie-ins, and so on and so on.
So, who were Tom and the Cadets? Tom is a cadet at the Space Academy, training for a career inthe Solar Corps. Fellow cadets Astro and Roger Manning join Tom in his adventures, many of which are aboard the training ship Polaris and on nearby planets...and distant star systems. Heady stuff for a child of the Fifties.
On television and radio, Tom was played by Frankie Thomas, Jr., Astro (as noted above) by Al Markim, and Roger Manning by Jan Merlin. In 1954, Merlin was replaced by Jack Grimes, playing Cadet T. J. Thistle. Semi-regular cast members included Ed Bryce as Captain Steve Strong and Carter Blake as Commander Arkwright. Frank Sutton, who went on to become Gomer Pyle's Sergeant Carter, appeared in six episodes as Eric Raddison. Other familiar faces included Tom Poston (uncredited) and chimpanzee J. Fred Muggs.
Back to the comic books. Dell Comics dropped the title after issue #11 in 1954, after which Prize Comics picked up the option, publishing the issue linked below -- the first of three from Prize. This issue has a cover by Marvin Stein and interior art by Stein and Mork Meskin; at least two of the stories were scripted by Greene.
In this issue, Tom and his pals find themseles on an experimental spaceship in "The Spaceship of Doom," encounter a strange being in the Venusian swamps in "Octopus Tree," and try to mediate a dispute in "The Spaceways of Peril."
Enjoy.
http://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=27683
* Another theory has Richard Jessup as the man behind the "Carey Rockwell" name.
** For some reason, the show's run on ABC was interrupted mid-stream with a three-month sojourn to NBC before bouncing back to ABC.
Friday, December 18, 2015
FORGOTTEN BOOK: RALPH 124C 41+
Ralph 124C41+: A Romance of the Year 2660 by Hugo Gernsback (1925)
What can one say about Hugo Gernsback that has not already been said, either in vitriol or in admiration?
Gernsback, born in Luxemburg in 1884, transplanted to the United States in 1904, was a pioneer in popularizing both electronics and science fiction -- which he originally called "scientifiction." Inventor, publisher, dreadful writer, meretricious businessman, crook and scoundrel, Gernsback was the man whose name is used for the most coveted awards in science fiction. Gernsback is also the one whom H. P. Lovecraft unaffectionately dubbed "Hugo the Rat."
Gernsback had a thirst for science and a strong interest in radio electronics. He made his first real money importing radio parts from Europe and selling them in America. To help popularize amateur radio, he began publishing Modern Electronics in 1908, essentially a combination of a radio and electronics catalogue and a magazine. He founded the Wireless Association of America, a group for amateur radio enthusiasts. He owned a radio station, WRNY New York. In 1913 he founded Electrical Experimenter, which later became Science and Invention. He used these magazines to publish early scientifiction stories, some of his own. In 1926 he published Amazing Stories, the first professional science fiction magazine. Through this magazine, he encouraged the founding of science fiction fandom.
Throughout his lifetime, Gernsback edited or published 56 magazines, beginning with Modern Electronics and ending with Sexology. High flying business practices, bankrupcies (some perhaps engineered by Gernsback), a willingness to skim money from the top while avoiding bill collectors,and a pile of lawsuits marked Gernsback's career. Despite the negative, one thing stands out: Gernsback was deeply interested in science, in science education, and the positive role that science held for mankind's future.
He was supposed to have remarked that, for him, the perfect science fiction story would be three-quarters fiction and one-quarter science. He missed that ratio in his most famous work of science fiction; Ralph 124C 41+ comes down with equal parts plot and scientific explanation. First published as a twelve-part serial beginning with the April 1911 issue of Modern Electronics and published in book form in 1925, Ralph 124C 41+ was described by Brian Aldiss as a "tadry illiterate tale" and by Lester del Rey as "simply dreadful." The Enclopedias of Science Fiction statess that the book is "usually noted only for its inept writing and lengthy catalogue of scientific [p]redictions."
Gee, can't we give the guy a little respect?
Well. perhaps.
I know the book is only read today for its curiosity value and because of its place in the history of the field, but there is something more to it than that.
Ralph 124C 41+ is basically a love story with (as the late James Baen might say) with rivets. Ralph is one of the world's greatest scientists. The plus symbol at the end of his name is an honor given to only ten people -- the greatest of the great. Through a mixup in communications he finds himself talking (in New York) to Alice 212B 423 (in Ventalp, Switzerland). Alice is a beautiful, personable girl and Ralph finds himself at ease talking with her. Because of Ralph's awesome responsibilities, he has never before given much thought to the opposite sex; it's clear that Ralph may be seeing the error of his ways, though. Suddenly, there is a loud rumble in the background. An avalanche! somehow it's detemined that there is only fifteen minutes will crush Alice's house along with her poor innocent body.
What to do? Well, if it were anyone but Ralph 124C 41+, one would just wait to hear the sickening crunch. But Ralph is made of sterner stuff. Thinking quickly, he tells Alice to hie herself to the roof and attach "the Communico mastpiece to the very base of the power mast, and point the former to the avalanche. Then move the directoscope exactly West-by-South, and point the antenna of the power mast East-by North." Ralph then rushes to his lab puts some stuff together, fiddles with some knobs, and sends an ultrafrequency wave into the ether, and somehow (after several pages of scientific exposition theater) manages to melt the avalanche just before it would have pulverized Alice, house and all. Easy peasy. All in aday's fifteen minutes' work for a genius like Ralph.
The next day, Alice and her father show up at Ralph's door to thank him. They had taken the inaugural voyage of the new subAtlantic tunnel from Brest to New York. (Alice's father was an engineer who work on the superspeed tunnel and was able to get them on that highly-prized first trip.)
Ralph spends the next few days escorting Alice around New York, showing her the amazing scientific sights and explaining them to her in detail. Her father accompanies her as a chaperone but conveniently disappears so the couple can talk, stare in each other's eyes, canoodle, or whatever.
Ralph and Alice are in love and the whole country celebrates. The great Ralph 124C 41+ has a girlfriend. Whoop whoop. Actually, there are two who are not celebrating -- two people who harbor lusting thoughts for Alice. One is Fernand, an unscupulous inventor with a mean streak, the other is Llysanorh' (yes, the apostrophe belongs there), who is an influential Martian. Llysanorh' knows his love is in vein because of strict laws against interbreeding.
In between the many heavy scientific and didactic explanations of the wonders (a number of which were invented by Ralph) of the 27th century and Gernsback's predictions for the future (some of which -- if you squint real hard in a dim light -- have come sort of true), Alice is kidnapped and the chase is one through space toward Venus, then through space toward Mars, as Ralph masterfully creates a comet and finally must conquer death itself to win back his true love.
Despite all the creakiness and terrible prose, this is actually a fairly readable novel.
Of most interst, however, are the scientific details and extrapolations. Gernsback did use as much current informtion as possible in detailing his marvels and some of the information is passe or has been superceded. Everything is presented in a positive light. Gernsback never considered any of the negative aspects of his scientific, social, or political wonders -- things that might jump out of the page and slap a modern reader across the face.
In the twenty-first century, we have learned there's no such thing as a free lunch and that both positivve and negative effects should be well though out ahead of time. And when I say "we have learned." sadly, I don't include politicians.
What can one say about Hugo Gernsback that has not already been said, either in vitriol or in admiration?
Gernsback, born in Luxemburg in 1884, transplanted to the United States in 1904, was a pioneer in popularizing both electronics and science fiction -- which he originally called "scientifiction." Inventor, publisher, dreadful writer, meretricious businessman, crook and scoundrel, Gernsback was the man whose name is used for the most coveted awards in science fiction. Gernsback is also the one whom H. P. Lovecraft unaffectionately dubbed "Hugo the Rat."
Gernsback had a thirst for science and a strong interest in radio electronics. He made his first real money importing radio parts from Europe and selling them in America. To help popularize amateur radio, he began publishing Modern Electronics in 1908, essentially a combination of a radio and electronics catalogue and a magazine. He founded the Wireless Association of America, a group for amateur radio enthusiasts. He owned a radio station, WRNY New York. In 1913 he founded Electrical Experimenter, which later became Science and Invention. He used these magazines to publish early scientifiction stories, some of his own. In 1926 he published Amazing Stories, the first professional science fiction magazine. Through this magazine, he encouraged the founding of science fiction fandom.
Throughout his lifetime, Gernsback edited or published 56 magazines, beginning with Modern Electronics and ending with Sexology. High flying business practices, bankrupcies (some perhaps engineered by Gernsback), a willingness to skim money from the top while avoiding bill collectors,and a pile of lawsuits marked Gernsback's career. Despite the negative, one thing stands out: Gernsback was deeply interested in science, in science education, and the positive role that science held for mankind's future.
He was supposed to have remarked that, for him, the perfect science fiction story would be three-quarters fiction and one-quarter science. He missed that ratio in his most famous work of science fiction; Ralph 124C 41+ comes down with equal parts plot and scientific explanation. First published as a twelve-part serial beginning with the April 1911 issue of Modern Electronics and published in book form in 1925, Ralph 124C 41+ was described by Brian Aldiss as a "tadry illiterate tale" and by Lester del Rey as "simply dreadful." The Enclopedias of Science Fiction statess that the book is "usually noted only for its inept writing and lengthy catalogue of scientific [p]redictions."
Gee, can't we give the guy a little respect?
Well. perhaps.
I know the book is only read today for its curiosity value and because of its place in the history of the field, but there is something more to it than that.
Ralph 124C 41+ is basically a love story with (as the late James Baen might say) with rivets. Ralph is one of the world's greatest scientists. The plus symbol at the end of his name is an honor given to only ten people -- the greatest of the great. Through a mixup in communications he finds himself talking (in New York) to Alice 212B 423 (in Ventalp, Switzerland). Alice is a beautiful, personable girl and Ralph finds himself at ease talking with her. Because of Ralph's awesome responsibilities, he has never before given much thought to the opposite sex; it's clear that Ralph may be seeing the error of his ways, though. Suddenly, there is a loud rumble in the background. An avalanche! somehow it's detemined that there is only fifteen minutes will crush Alice's house along with her poor innocent body.
What to do? Well, if it were anyone but Ralph 124C 41+, one would just wait to hear the sickening crunch. But Ralph is made of sterner stuff. Thinking quickly, he tells Alice to hie herself to the roof and attach "the Communico mastpiece to the very base of the power mast, and point the former to the avalanche. Then move the directoscope exactly West-by-South, and point the antenna of the power mast East-by North." Ralph then rushes to his lab puts some stuff together, fiddles with some knobs, and sends an ultrafrequency wave into the ether, and somehow (after several pages of scientific exposition theater) manages to melt the avalanche just before it would have pulverized Alice, house and all. Easy peasy. All in a
The next day, Alice and her father show up at Ralph's door to thank him. They had taken the inaugural voyage of the new subAtlantic tunnel from Brest to New York. (Alice's father was an engineer who work on the superspeed tunnel and was able to get them on that highly-prized first trip.)
Ralph spends the next few days escorting Alice around New York, showing her the amazing scientific sights and explaining them to her in detail. Her father accompanies her as a chaperone but conveniently disappears so the couple can talk, stare in each other's eyes, canoodle, or whatever.
Ralph and Alice are in love and the whole country celebrates. The great Ralph 124C 41+ has a girlfriend. Whoop whoop. Actually, there are two who are not celebrating -- two people who harbor lusting thoughts for Alice. One is Fernand, an unscupulous inventor with a mean streak, the other is Llysanorh' (yes, the apostrophe belongs there), who is an influential Martian. Llysanorh' knows his love is in vein because of strict laws against interbreeding.
In between the many heavy scientific and didactic explanations of the wonders (a number of which were invented by Ralph) of the 27th century and Gernsback's predictions for the future (some of which -- if you squint real hard in a dim light -- have come sort of true), Alice is kidnapped and the chase is one through space toward Venus, then through space toward Mars, as Ralph masterfully creates a comet and finally must conquer death itself to win back his true love.
Despite all the creakiness and terrible prose, this is actually a fairly readable novel.
Of most interst, however, are the scientific details and extrapolations. Gernsback did use as much current informtion as possible in detailing his marvels and some of the information is passe or has been superceded. Everything is presented in a positive light. Gernsback never considered any of the negative aspects of his scientific, social, or political wonders -- things that might jump out of the page and slap a modern reader across the face.
In the twenty-first century, we have learned there's no such thing as a free lunch and that both positivve and negative effects should be well though out ahead of time. And when I say "we have learned." sadly, I don't include politicians.
Thursday, December 17, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: SPORTING LIFE
Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aPB0lZ_UQSw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aPB0lZ_UQSw
ELLERY QUEEN: THE ADVENTURE OF THE GREEN GORILLAS
From February 12, 1947, an episode of The Adventures of Ellery Queen with guest "sleuth" Jose Ferrer.
Ellery Queen first hit the radio waves as a detective in 1939. The show went through a number of cast changes, networks, and sponsors over the years. This episode was on NBC Radio and sponsored by Anacin. Lawrence Dobkin played Ellery, Bill Smith played Inspector Queen, and Charlotte Keane* played Nikki Porter. The script was by Manfred Lee and Tom Everitt.
The Green Gorillas of the title are a gang of juvenile deinquents run by a self-styled Fagin -- that is, until Ellery intervenes.
Enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=chJSqqzwguo&list=PLhy3viR2kCCCXmoUUup6dmrhtAhCS6zVo
* Not Kitty's aunt. That Charlotte Keane is in her late eighties and is alive and well in Coeur d"Alene. A wonderful person.
Ellery Queen first hit the radio waves as a detective in 1939. The show went through a number of cast changes, networks, and sponsors over the years. This episode was on NBC Radio and sponsored by Anacin. Lawrence Dobkin played Ellery, Bill Smith played Inspector Queen, and Charlotte Keane* played Nikki Porter. The script was by Manfred Lee and Tom Everitt.
The Green Gorillas of the title are a gang of juvenile deinquents run by a self-styled Fagin -- that is, until Ellery intervenes.
Enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=chJSqqzwguo&list=PLhy3viR2kCCCXmoUUup6dmrhtAhCS6zVo
* Not Kitty's aunt. That Charlotte Keane is in her late eighties and is alive and well in Coeur d"Alene. A wonderful person.
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: TODAY
Jefferson Airplane. (Kitty likes this one.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uokp0aEiT-A
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uokp0aEiT-A
BAD JOKE WEDNESDAY
So a duck walks into a bar and asks the bartender. "Got any bread?"
The bartender tells him, "No."
And the duck asks again, "Got any bread?"
'I already told you, no."
Then the duck asks a third time, "Got any bread?""
This goes on a half dozen more times and finally the bartender loses his cool and yells, "Look, if you ask me if I have any bread, I'm oging to take your @#$%^& bill and nail it to the bar!"
The duck thinks for a minute, then asks, "Got any nails?"
The bartender explodes. "No!"
"Got any bread?"
The bartender tells him, "No."
And the duck asks again, "Got any bread?"
'I already told you, no."
Then the duck asks a third time, "Got any bread?""
This goes on a half dozen more times and finally the bartender loses his cool and yells, "Look, if you ask me if I have any bread, I'm oging to take your @#$%^& bill and nail it to the bar!"
The duck thinks for a minute, then asks, "Got any nails?"
The bartender explodes. "No!"
"Got any bread?"
Tuesday, December 15, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: IT'S A HAP-HAP-HAPPY DAY
Famed British comedian Arthur Askey sings this Oscar-nominated song, first performed by Pinto Colvig in the 1939 animated movie Gullivver's Travels.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mht0yYEOBG8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mht0yYEOBG8
OVERLOOKED FILM: GULLIVER'S TRAVELS (1939)
Popeye as Gulliver?
No, thank goodness, although that was the original plan for this animated feature from Max and David Fleischer. That concept was deep-sixed for the decision to "rotoscope" the title character. ("Rotoscoping" was a process invented by Max Fleischer in which a live model is photographed and the photographs are then traced over for both motion and details thus giving a more realiztic appearance to the animation.) The man who provided the model (and voice) of Lemuel Gulliver was a radio announcer named Sam Parker. Parker ironically won the part through a radio contest. Parker's only other film credits would be as a voiceover in two shorts during the early Forties.
Billed as Swift's "immortal fantasy," Gulliver's Travels overlooks much a Dean Swift's satire, although it does have an anti-war sensibility that was unusual for its day.
The movie was the Fleishers' response to Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Preiously their sudio had concentrated on short features (Popeye, Betty Boop, Superman, and others).
The artwork is exquisite, the music is good (one song was nominated for an Oscar), and the whole movie sheer pleasure for animation buffs.
You're in for a treat. Enjoy.
https://archive.org/details/gullivers_travels1939
No, thank goodness, although that was the original plan for this animated feature from Max and David Fleischer. That concept was deep-sixed for the decision to "rotoscope" the title character. ("Rotoscoping" was a process invented by Max Fleischer in which a live model is photographed and the photographs are then traced over for both motion and details thus giving a more realiztic appearance to the animation.) The man who provided the model (and voice) of Lemuel Gulliver was a radio announcer named Sam Parker. Parker ironically won the part through a radio contest. Parker's only other film credits would be as a voiceover in two shorts during the early Forties.
Billed as Swift's "immortal fantasy," Gulliver's Travels overlooks much a Dean Swift's satire, although it does have an anti-war sensibility that was unusual for its day.
The movie was the Fleishers' response to Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Preiously their sudio had concentrated on short features (Popeye, Betty Boop, Superman, and others).
The artwork is exquisite, the music is good (one song was nominated for an Oscar), and the whole movie sheer pleasure for animation buffs.
You're in for a treat. Enjoy.
https://archive.org/details/gullivers_travels1939
Monday, December 14, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: BORN UNDER A BAD SIGN
Big Mama Thornton.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rq0B1gp4ic8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rq0B1gp4ic8
INCOMING
- "Max Brand" (Frederick Faust), The Gentle Desperado. Western fix-up novel from three stories first piublished in Western Story Magazine in 1927 under the name "George Owen Baxter."
- Swanee Ballman, Tamarind. Christian thriller. A stranger file a motion to remove the cross from the water tower in a small Florida town. Bad things happen. I normally don't give this type of book a second glance but I was intrigued by the cover painting by Andy Davenport. Will the coer be the only decent thing about the book? Time will tell.
- Edgar Rice Burroughs, Tarzan and the Foreign Legion. A late in the series addition, and oneof the very few I have not read. (I had a copy many moonsago but it went walkabout.) An American bomber crashes in Sumatra and one of the passengers -- guess who? -- rips off his clothes, dons a loinclothe and goes out to face the jungle. Joined by allies from different nations, Tarzan takes on the Japanese occupiers.
- Jackson Cole" (house name), Border Hell. A Ranger Jim Hatfield western. Hatfield was createdin 1936 by A. Leslie Scott writing as "Jackson Cole" for Ned Pines' Texas Rangers pulp magazine. Scott moved onto paperback novels in the early Fifties, both writing and re-writing Hatfield stories. Since new Hatfield stories were also appearing in Pines' publications, Scott then changed the character's name and continued to write the paperbacks. Other authors of the Hatfield stories hiding under the "Jackson Cole" pen name were Tom Curry, Peter Germano, Charles Heckleman, and probably others I am unaware of. Border Hell was published as a 1952 paperback; I don't know if it had appeared in a magazine before. This time Hatfield faces a killer gang in Corpus Christie.
- "E. J. Copperman" (Jeff Cohen), An Uninvited Ghost. The second book in the Haunted Guesthouse mystery series. Alison Kirby helps the resident gumshoe ghost at her guesthouse on the occasional case. This time Alison has to deal with a reality TV crew while trying to catch a killer.
- Nelson De Mille*. Ryker #2: The Hammer of God. Best-selling author DeMille began his novelist's career with three books about NYPD cop Joe Ryker**, a hero who will do anything -- legal or not -- to get his man. (The remaining four books in the series were credited to "Edson T. Hamill" -- almost certainly a pseudonym -- who may or may not have been DeMille. The series was later rewritten -- by whom? you might well ask -- and published as by "Jack Cannon.") Anyway, in this book Ryker goes after a homicidal monk.
- Judy-Lynn del Rey, editor. Stellar #7. SF anthology with nine stories. The final volume of a distinquished anthology series.
- Martin H. Greenberg & Jim C. Hines, editors, Heroes in Training. Fantasy anthology with 13 stories about would-be heroes.
- John Masefield, The Midnight Folk. Classic children's fantasy by the one-time Poet Laureate of England. Young Kay Harker is introduced to the Midnight Folk by his black cat, Nibbins. He soon learns of a plot by evil witches to steal the lost treasure of the Harker family.
- Bruce McAllister, Dream Baby. Vietnam era novel with fantasy overtones.
- "Dean McElwain" (house name), Preacher's Law: Widow Maker/Trail of Death. Omnibus volume of the first two western novels in the seven-book series.. "McElwain" is credited with the first five books in the series, while Barry Myers wrote the final two. [Despite an anonymous internet claim that "McElwain" was a real person [the anonymous writer's grandfather, who died in 1989], the fifth book in the series has been credited to David Robbins; I have no idea who really wrote the first four books.) Jeremy Preacher, late of Mosby's Raiders, returns home to find his plantation destroyed, his parents murdered, and his sister raped and murdered. He seeks vengeance.
- Andre Norton, creator, Tales of the Witch World. Fantasy anthology of 17 stories set in (or based on) Norton's Witch World. Witch World started out as science fiction, then morphed into fantasy as the series grew.
- E. Hoffman Price, The Devil Wives of Li Fong. Oriental fantasy novel from one of the great pulp writers. Poor Li Fong doesn't suspect that his two wives are actually spirit-demons.
- "Luke Sharp" (Frederick Glidden), The Rustlers. Western novel, "a smashing tale of cruelty and hate, rustlers and outlaws, death and vengeance." Originally published as Sunset Graze.
- Tom Rob Smith, The Farm. Psychological thriller. Is Daniel's mother really mad, or is she telling the truth and his father involved in a criminal conspiracy?
- Dennis Wheatley, The Rape of Venice. A Roger Brook historical novel. It's 1796 and Roger, on a mission for Prime Minister William Pitt, becomes involved with "a seance, a duel, a shipwreck, cannibals, slavery, kidnapping, the violation of a harem, and a desperate assault against a walled city." Phew!
- Connie Willis, Passage. SF novel of near-death expiences and obsession.
- Richard Wormser, Ride a Northbound Horse. YA western. Cav is determined to join the cattle drive and proe that a boy has a place in a cowboy's world. Wormser (1908-1997) was a prolific author of pulp, detective, western, stories. as well as movie and television tie-in novels.
- T. M. Wright, Boundaries. Horror novel. When David's twin Anne is murdered, he tries to contact her spirit to discover her murderer. The murderer, however, has different -- and deadlier -- ideas. The author passed away this Halloween from Parkinson's disease. He was 68. Another writer taken much too soon.
* For the most part DeMille's name is presented without a space. On the cover and title page of this book De Mille is spaced.
** Actually DeMille may have begun his career as "Robert Novak," author of the Supercop Joe Blaze series; some of the Ryker books may have begun life as a Joe Blaze novel. Or not. It's all ery confusing.
Sunday, December 13, 2015
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, ROSS MACDONALD
Today is the centennial birthday of Kenneth Millar, a.k.a. Ross MacDonald, the creator of Lew Archer, To celebrate, check out this 1975 episode of Writers in America interview and profile.
https://archive.org/details/cubanc_000193
https://archive.org/details/cubanc_000193
CHRISTMAS IS AN ARMS RACE
A TED talk by Georgine Getty about the intersection of Christmas and homelessness.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pfgtKWTHkDo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pfgtKWTHkDo
Saturday, December 12, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: COWBOY (SONG OF THE COWBOY)
Australian Stan Stafford sings the theme song from the 1958 Glenn Ford/Jack Lemmon film Cowboy.
This version was released by Melbourne's W&G record label.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgvZUMVUZts
This version was released by Melbourne's W&G record label.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgvZUMVUZts
NAPOLEON AND UNCLE ELBY #1 (JULY 1942)
Napoleon and Uncle Elby was a syndicated comic strip created by Clifford McBride. The character of Elby, based on McBride's uncle (a Wisconsin lumberman) was introduced in various features that McBride drew from 1927 to 1932; Elby's dog Napoleon was soon added to the strips. In 1932 Napoleon began its run as a daily strip. A Sunday strip was added in 1933, and the name of the strip was changed to Napoleon and Uncle Elby the following year. The strip ran until 1961.
Napoleon was a large, clumsy, good-hearted mut with a happy-go-lucky attitude. Uncle Elby was an overweight, older bachelor who patiently put up with Napoleon's antics. The gentle humor and distinctive artwork made the strip highlly popular. Hardcover reprint books began to appear, followed by a Big Little Book. The strip was reprinted in Eastern Color Printing's Famous Funnies, eventually leading to the one-shot comic book linked below.
Comic historian Don Markstein credits the technique used on Napoleon's facial expressions as a direct influence on Bob Clampett's Cecil the Seasick Sea Serpent.
The sole issue of Napoleon and Uncle Elby reprinted 64 of the Sunday strips.
Enjoy.
http://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=24540
Napoleon was a large, clumsy, good-hearted mut with a happy-go-lucky attitude. Uncle Elby was an overweight, older bachelor who patiently put up with Napoleon's antics. The gentle humor and distinctive artwork made the strip highlly popular. Hardcover reprint books began to appear, followed by a Big Little Book. The strip was reprinted in Eastern Color Printing's Famous Funnies, eventually leading to the one-shot comic book linked below.
Comic historian Don Markstein credits the technique used on Napoleon's facial expressions as a direct influence on Bob Clampett's Cecil the Seasick Sea Serpent.
The sole issue of Napoleon and Uncle Elby reprinted 64 of the Sunday strips.
Enjoy.
http://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=24540
Friday, December 11, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: WHITE ROOM
Jack Bruse, Ginger Baker, and Eric Clapton -- The Cream!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gd9q5I69azM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gd9q5I69azM
FORGOTTEN BOOK: THE MURDER OF ANN AVERY
The Murder of Ann Avery by Henry Kuttner (1956)
In the two years before his death (at age 42, dammit!) in 1958, Henry Kuttner wrote four mystery novels about psychoanalyst Michael Gray. These four paperback books from Pocket Books remained out of reach for most of Kuttner fans for over half a century (wwith the exception of one hardcover reprint of the final novel, Murder of a Wife, from Garland in 1983) until Haffner Press released all four in an omnibus volume, The Michael Gray Mysteries this year. (Well, not really. An outfit called Diversion Books books released The Michael Gray Novels in an e-Book format last year.) The Haffner edition also credits Kuttner's wife and often uncredited collaborator, Catherine L. Moore, as co-author.
I came across The Murder of Ann Avery (the second in the series) in one of a gazillion boxes of books I moved into our new house and decided it was past time that I read it. The paperback was issued under Pocket Books' "Permabooks" line. Don't believe it. There was nothing permanent about this book -- the physical copy anyway. The old glue gave way and the book book fell to pieces before I got to chapter 5. The remainder of the novel was read carefully -- very carefully.
Ann Avery, a beautiful housewife in her thirties, has been brutally murdered, Eddie Udall, a teenage delinquent accused of the murder, went on the run but was soon caught. According to the police, Eddie, thinking noone was at the Avery home, entered the house intent on robbery and was surprised by Ann Avery. Eddie has a record of violence and is currently on probation. He worked part-time at her husband's movie theatre tand had an opportunity to make a copy of his house keys. He was seen leaving the house on the night of the murder. When caught, he had one of Ann's rings in his posession. The switchblade he was known to have carried was missing and Ann's fatal wounds seemed to have been inflicted by a switchblade. (When the switchblade is finally found, it has type B blood on it -- Ann's blood type. A muck-raking newspaper columnist is proclaiming Eddie guilty and public pressure is on city officials to act quickly on the case.
Michael Gray is unexpectedly thrust into the case. The psychiatrist originally named by the Court has taken ill and the Court wants a professional opinion as to whether Eddie should be tried as a juvenile. Against his better judgment, Michael agrees to interview Eddie.
Eddie is uncooperative and defiant. Michael honestly does not know whether Eddie is guilty so he begins to dig further. Key people in the case appear to be withholding evidence. Eddie's foster parents seem convinced of his guilt but are ready to forgive him. Eddie's former girlfriend, now a drug addict, tried to contact him about something important on the night of the murder. Eddie's birth mother, a hopeless drunk, is trying to sell information so she can leave the coutry. Ann's husband (ad Eddie's boss) is a mean-spirited and possessive bully. Eddie's favorite teacher is suddenly spending money well beyond a teacher's salary. Eddie's former friend is now the leader of a teen-age gang. Juvenile delinquency, drug trafficking, violence, and adultery swirl around the case and Michael finds himself threatened by a mysterious person with an unknown agenda.
A good psychological mystery that, despite telegraphing a major plot point, satisfies. Michael Gray is an interesting and unusual character.
Check out the Haffner omnibus for this and the other three mysteries in the series. You won't be disappointed.
In the two years before his death (at age 42, dammit!) in 1958, Henry Kuttner wrote four mystery novels about psychoanalyst Michael Gray. These four paperback books from Pocket Books remained out of reach for most of Kuttner fans for over half a century (wwith the exception of one hardcover reprint of the final novel, Murder of a Wife, from Garland in 1983) until Haffner Press released all four in an omnibus volume, The Michael Gray Mysteries this year. (Well, not really. An outfit called Diversion Books books released The Michael Gray Novels in an e-Book format last year.) The Haffner edition also credits Kuttner's wife and often uncredited collaborator, Catherine L. Moore, as co-author.
I came across The Murder of Ann Avery (the second in the series) in one of a gazillion boxes of books I moved into our new house and decided it was past time that I read it. The paperback was issued under Pocket Books' "Permabooks" line. Don't believe it. There was nothing permanent about this book -- the physical copy anyway. The old glue gave way and the book book fell to pieces before I got to chapter 5. The remainder of the novel was read carefully -- very carefully.
Ann Avery, a beautiful housewife in her thirties, has been brutally murdered, Eddie Udall, a teenage delinquent accused of the murder, went on the run but was soon caught. According to the police, Eddie, thinking noone was at the Avery home, entered the house intent on robbery and was surprised by Ann Avery. Eddie has a record of violence and is currently on probation. He worked part-time at her husband's movie theatre tand had an opportunity to make a copy of his house keys. He was seen leaving the house on the night of the murder. When caught, he had one of Ann's rings in his posession. The switchblade he was known to have carried was missing and Ann's fatal wounds seemed to have been inflicted by a switchblade. (When the switchblade is finally found, it has type B blood on it -- Ann's blood type. A muck-raking newspaper columnist is proclaiming Eddie guilty and public pressure is on city officials to act quickly on the case.
Michael Gray is unexpectedly thrust into the case. The psychiatrist originally named by the Court has taken ill and the Court wants a professional opinion as to whether Eddie should be tried as a juvenile. Against his better judgment, Michael agrees to interview Eddie.
Eddie is uncooperative and defiant. Michael honestly does not know whether Eddie is guilty so he begins to dig further. Key people in the case appear to be withholding evidence. Eddie's foster parents seem convinced of his guilt but are ready to forgive him. Eddie's former girlfriend, now a drug addict, tried to contact him about something important on the night of the murder. Eddie's birth mother, a hopeless drunk, is trying to sell information so she can leave the coutry. Ann's husband (ad Eddie's boss) is a mean-spirited and possessive bully. Eddie's favorite teacher is suddenly spending money well beyond a teacher's salary. Eddie's former friend is now the leader of a teen-age gang. Juvenile delinquency, drug trafficking, violence, and adultery swirl around the case and Michael finds himself threatened by a mysterious person with an unknown agenda.
A good psychological mystery that, despite telegraphing a major plot point, satisfies. Michael Gray is an interesting and unusual character.
Check out the Haffner omnibus for this and the other three mysteries in the series. You won't be disappointed.
Thursday, December 10, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: THE VERY THOUGHT OF YOU
From 1941, Ray Noble and His Orchestra, with vocals by Snooky Lanson,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s4xANR5NupI&list=PLI1WPuQZi3gmpHDh1eObPj97iswFYR294
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s4xANR5NupI&list=PLI1WPuQZi3gmpHDh1eObPj97iswFYR294
THE SIX SHOOTER
"The man in the saddle is angular and long-legged. His skin is sun-dyed brown, The gun in his holster is gray steel and rainbow mother-of-pearl, its handle unmarked. People call them both 'the Six Shooter'."
That's how announcer Hal Gibney imtroduced the NBC radio drama The Six Shooter, which featured Jimmy Stewart as drifting cowboy Britt Ponset, from September 20, 1953 to June 24, 1954. The show was an attempt to relive the pre-television days when radio drama ruled the airwaves, explaining the use of a major star such as Stewart. ( An interesting sidebar to the show: Chesterfield cigarettes really, really, really wanted to sponsor The Six Shooter but Stewart refused, believing that cigarettes were not compatable with his public persona.)
Predictably, the show did not last on the radio, but it made the transition to television, although somewhat tinkered. The star was now John Payne. His character was renamed Vint Bonner. And the title was now The Restless Gun. The Six Shooter creator Frank Burt remained as show consultant throughout the run of The Restless Gun.
The episode linked below, "Britt Ponset's Christmas Carol," aired on December 20, 1953. this episode was the basis of a 1957 Christmas episode on G.E. Theater titled "The Trail to Christmas." Additionally, the original episode was syndicated (with other OTR Christmas shows) and was rebroadcast on a number of stations in December 1994.
Enjoy this holiday blast from the past.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zMo8pRMhrHU
That's how announcer Hal Gibney imtroduced the NBC radio drama The Six Shooter, which featured Jimmy Stewart as drifting cowboy Britt Ponset, from September 20, 1953 to June 24, 1954. The show was an attempt to relive the pre-television days when radio drama ruled the airwaves, explaining the use of a major star such as Stewart. ( An interesting sidebar to the show: Chesterfield cigarettes really, really, really wanted to sponsor The Six Shooter but Stewart refused, believing that cigarettes were not compatable with his public persona.)
Predictably, the show did not last on the radio, but it made the transition to television, although somewhat tinkered. The star was now John Payne. His character was renamed Vint Bonner. And the title was now The Restless Gun. The Six Shooter creator Frank Burt remained as show consultant throughout the run of The Restless Gun.
The episode linked below, "Britt Ponset's Christmas Carol," aired on December 20, 1953. this episode was the basis of a 1957 Christmas episode on G.E. Theater titled "The Trail to Christmas." Additionally, the original episode was syndicated (with other OTR Christmas shows) and was rebroadcast on a number of stations in December 1994.
Enjoy this holiday blast from the past.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zMo8pRMhrHU
Wednesday, December 9, 2015
BAD JOKE WEDNESDAY
I think all cats go to Heaven. Where else would the angels get the strings for their harps?
Tuesday, December 8, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: JOHNNY GUITAR
The fabulous Peggy Lee.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IeCWuN0dc5w
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IeCWuN0dc5w
OVERLOOKED TELEVISION: CHRISTMAS AT THE 53rd
This episode of Car 54, Where Are You?, which aired on Christmas Eve 1961, is a different from the rest of the series. This time, we have a series of Christmas sketches written into the show, included several parodies of Gilbert and Sullivan. Regulars (and semi-regulars) Fred Gwynne, Joe E. Ross, Paul Reed, Alice Ghostley, Carl Ballantine, Al Lewis, Mickey Deems and Nipsy Russell. Creator Nat Hiken's (The Phil Silvers Show) gift for assembling a talented cast is evident here.
Enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iVlv9RK-dAE&list=PLshHP0DZwRjDN8tQqasRTv5si-bKEU_Ua
Enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iVlv9RK-dAE&list=PLshHP0DZwRjDN8tQqasRTv5si-bKEU_Ua
Monday, December 7, 2015
HAPPY CENTENNIAL, LEIGH BRACKETT!
Today marks the 100th birthdayof the incredibly talented Leigh Brackett.
As Queen of the Space Opera, Brackett took us to exotic planets, both far and near. From Mars and Venus to Skaith, her planetary romances combined lush imagery with Edgar Rice Burroughs sensibilities. Not satisfied with that, she also went on to write mature science fiction such as The Long Tomorrow and The Big Jump. Her friendship and influence on such writers as Ray Bradbury had an impact on science fiction that is often overlooked. She was married to writer Edmond Hamilton for 31 years until his death.
Her first novel happened to be a mystery, No Good from a Corpse, a hard-boiled mystery in the Raymond Chandler vein. Her output in that field included five well-regarded novels (including one ghost-written for actor George Sanders) and a handful of excellent stories.
Her 1963 western Follow the Free Wind won a Spur award for best novel.
As a screenwriter, Brackett's credits are impressive: The Big Sleep (with William Faulkner), Rio Bravo (Brackett also wrote the novelization), Hatari!, El Dorado, Rio Lobo, The Long Goodbye, and The Empire Strikes Back, among others.
Although she never broached feminism in her work, Leigh Brackett can be consider a female pioneer in several genres.
Her work remains immensely readable and enjoyable.
The link below will take you to one of her stories, "The Shadows," from the February 1952 issue of Startling Stories. Enjoy.
http://www.unz.org/Pub/StartlingStories-1952feb-00085
As Queen of the Space Opera, Brackett took us to exotic planets, both far and near. From Mars and Venus to Skaith, her planetary romances combined lush imagery with Edgar Rice Burroughs sensibilities. Not satisfied with that, she also went on to write mature science fiction such as The Long Tomorrow and The Big Jump. Her friendship and influence on such writers as Ray Bradbury had an impact on science fiction that is often overlooked. She was married to writer Edmond Hamilton for 31 years until his death.
Her first novel happened to be a mystery, No Good from a Corpse, a hard-boiled mystery in the Raymond Chandler vein. Her output in that field included five well-regarded novels (including one ghost-written for actor George Sanders) and a handful of excellent stories.
Her 1963 western Follow the Free Wind won a Spur award for best novel.
As a screenwriter, Brackett's credits are impressive: The Big Sleep (with William Faulkner), Rio Bravo (Brackett also wrote the novelization), Hatari!, El Dorado, Rio Lobo, The Long Goodbye, and The Empire Strikes Back, among others.
Although she never broached feminism in her work, Leigh Brackett can be consider a female pioneer in several genres.
Her work remains immensely readable and enjoyable.
The link below will take you to one of her stories, "The Shadows," from the February 1952 issue of Startling Stories. Enjoy.
http://www.unz.org/Pub/StartlingStories-1952feb-00085
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: AIN'T GOT NO HOME
Clarence "Frogman" Henry.
(Not too sure what the girl in her underwear is doing bookending this song.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N5m_CnD9kFM
(Not too sure what the girl in her underwear is doing bookending this song.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N5m_CnD9kFM
INCOMING
Some old westerns this week, plus a mystery novel by a writer who had her own mystery,
- "Brett Austin" (Lee Floren), Rawhide Summons. Western. Rawhide Hinton summons his friend Sam Blanding to help him on his cattle ranch on California's San Rosita Island. The two face a new kind of war with sheepmen -- a war where the cattle are rustled by boat and one where "Spanish love and hate were quick and hot." This one is a 1950 paperback reprint of a 1947 book. Floren wrote some 300 books under 19 names during his career. Rawhide Summons was the first of 20 books written under the Brett Austin pseudonym.
- "John Benteen" (Ben Haas), Fargo: The Wildcatters. Western, the fifth in the series. There were 23 or 24 books in the series, all but three written by Haas. "Fargo kills but he isn't a killer. He doesn't make a big thing out of it. It's a job. And he's good at it."
- "Max Brand" (Frederick Faust), The Bells of San Filipo, Bull Hunter, Golden Lightning, and The Longhorn Feud. Westerns all. The first concerns a hidden stash of silver uncovered when an earthquake rips through a California ghost town; it was first published as a serial in Western Story Magazine in 1926. The title character in Bull Hunter goes after a killer who had gunned down his uncle; this one first appeared in a 1921 Street & Smith magazine, don't know which one (can anyone help?). In Golden Lightning, Lefty Bill Ranger is sent from Alaska to California to locate two men, not realizing that they were marked for death; from a 1931 Street & Smith magazine (again, I don't know which one). The Longhorn Feud began with an argument over a steer and escalated to a battle that left fifteen men dead with more sure to die. I don't know if this one had a magazine appearance before its 1933 book publication.
- Joseph Gage, A Score to Settle, bound with Ray Hogan's Hangman's Valley. An Ace Double western. The first is "a novel of gold-hungry men and of a gunfighter who kept his back guarded and his hand close to his holster." Hangman's Valley tells of a man framed for the death of a "hanging" judge's son.
- Holly Roth, Too Many Doctors, A CID Inspector Richard Medford mystery. Roth, a former model, wrote 13 mystery novels (including four as "P. G. Ballard" and one as "P. J. Merrill"). Too Many Doctors (first published as Operation Doctors) is about a woman who falls off a boat and loses her memory. Two years after this book was published, Roth fell off a yacht in the Mediterranean; her body was never recovered and her death remains shrouded in mystery. She was 48.
- Bertrand Shurtleff, Long Lash. A teenage "Northern." A pair of Alaskan gold prospectors are set upon by some neer-do-wells. Heroic dogs strut their stuff. And there are Mounties. This 1949 paperback is one of the short-lived Pocket Book, Jr. line.
Sunday, December 6, 2015
THE HISTORY OF OUR WORLD...IN 18 MINUTES
David Christian covers it all, from the Big Bang to the internet in this TED Talk.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yqc9zX04DXs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yqc9zX04DXs
Saturday, December 5, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: WANDERING STAR
From Paint Your Wagon, Lee Marvin.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xnbiRDNaDeo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xnbiRDNaDeo
THE ADVENTURES OF CAPTAIN TOOTSIE AND THE SECRET LEGION #1 (OCTOBER 1950)
Talk about your product placement!
Captain Tootsie was an advertising gimmick for Tootsie Roll candy. Created by C. C. Beck and Pete Constanza, two of the creators of Captain Marvel, this candy shill appeared in one-page spreads in various comic books during the Forties and early Fifties.
From Jon Morris' The League of Regrettable Superheroes (Quirk Books, 2015): "(H)e's Captain Tootsie, defender of justice, hero to children, advertising mascot for the delicious chewy taste of Tootsie Rolls!"
And: "Aided by his friends in the Secret Legion (an organization of children who probably palled around with him for the easy availablity of Tootsie Roll treats). Tootsie found himself fighting mad scientist, crooks, gangsterss, wild bears, and alien inasions in equal measure. Powering his fight against crime: a steady stream of chewy, chocolatey Tootsie Roll candies, energy-providing sugar bursts that sent Cap on a spree of general do-goodery."
If that's not enough, Morris adds that Captain Tootsie's "single page adventures took the opportunity to teach a little science, social customs, and even survivalism to the kids who consumed his intermittent adventures like so many paper-wrapped parcels of gummy goodness...[the escapades] reminded kids to stay away from sharp ledges...and taught them how sniper rifles work. Valuable information!"
Is it no wonder that Captain Tootsie got his own comic book?
After reading Jon Morris' description of this amazing superhero, I had to check it our for myself. And, upon checking it out, I just had to inflict you with it.
In this, the first issue, Captain Tootsie and his Secret Legion (Rollo, Fisty, and Fatso) travel to Venus, mess around with a rebellion, run into Venusian spiders, and then return to Earth. Filler material incudes comic adventures of Prospector Pete and of Tookie the teenage babysitter.
Strangely, The Adventures of Captain Tootsie and the Secret Legion lasted only two issues. Go figure.
(Somewhere, Bazooka Joe is thinking, "There but for fortune...")
Brace yourselves for this.
http://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=7381
Captain Tootsie was an advertising gimmick for Tootsie Roll candy. Created by C. C. Beck and Pete Constanza, two of the creators of Captain Marvel, this candy shill appeared in one-page spreads in various comic books during the Forties and early Fifties.
From Jon Morris' The League of Regrettable Superheroes (Quirk Books, 2015): "(H)e's Captain Tootsie, defender of justice, hero to children, advertising mascot for the delicious chewy taste of Tootsie Rolls!"
And: "Aided by his friends in the Secret Legion (an organization of children who probably palled around with him for the easy availablity of Tootsie Roll treats). Tootsie found himself fighting mad scientist, crooks, gangsterss, wild bears, and alien inasions in equal measure. Powering his fight against crime: a steady stream of chewy, chocolatey Tootsie Roll candies, energy-providing sugar bursts that sent Cap on a spree of general do-goodery."
If that's not enough, Morris adds that Captain Tootsie's "single page adventures took the opportunity to teach a little science, social customs, and even survivalism to the kids who consumed his intermittent adventures like so many paper-wrapped parcels of gummy goodness...[the escapades] reminded kids to stay away from sharp ledges...and taught them how sniper rifles work. Valuable information!"
Is it no wonder that Captain Tootsie got his own comic book?
After reading Jon Morris' description of this amazing superhero, I had to check it our for myself. And, upon checking it out, I just had to inflict you with it.
In this, the first issue, Captain Tootsie and his Secret Legion (Rollo, Fisty, and Fatso) travel to Venus, mess around with a rebellion, run into Venusian spiders, and then return to Earth. Filler material incudes comic adventures of Prospector Pete and of Tookie the teenage babysitter.
Strangely, The Adventures of Captain Tootsie and the Secret Legion lasted only two issues. Go figure.
(Somewhere, Bazooka Joe is thinking, "There but for fortune...")
Brace yourselves for this.
http://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=7381
Friday, December 4, 2015
FORGOTTEN BOOK: THE MARVELOUS LAND OF OZ
The Marvelous Land of Oz by L. Frank Baum (1904)
The other day I picked up a graphic novel version of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. adapted by the talented Eric Shanower and drawn by the equally talented Skottie Young. I have to confess that when I read L. Frank Baum's original novel back in the day I was less than impressed -- enough so that I never read any other books in the series. I found the graphic novel delightful, however, and wondered if I had misjudged Baum. With that in mind, I tackled the second book in Baum's Oz series, The Marvelous Land of Oz, and found it (sorry!) to be marvelous.
At the end of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, the Scarecrow was installed as the ruler of the Emerald City of Oz while Nick Chopper (the Tin Woodsman) ruled the Winkies in the land of the West. As The Marvelous Land of Oz opens, we meet Tip, a young boy being raised by a mean witch named Old Mombi. As a joke, Tip builds a pumpkin man to scare Old Mombi when she returns from meeting with an old sorceror, where she has tricked the sorceror into giving her a small powdered amount of the elixir of life. Mombi is mad at Tip for playing a trick on her; she uses the powder to bring Jack Pumpkinhead to life and -- since Jack can do all the menial and dirty chores that Tip had been doing -- decides to turn Tip into a marble statue for her garden.
Tip steals the remaining magic elixir and, with Jack, escapes from Mombi. They decide to go to the Emerald City to meet the scarecrow. Along the way, Jack uses the powder to animate a sawhorse to make the trip easier for Jack. The three arrive at the Emerald City just as General Jinjur and her rebellious army of girls conquer the city. (Their plan is to loot the city to buy pretty dresses and to have the men do all the women's work while they laze around and eat green chocolates. Baum was not the most enlightened of authors.)
Tip, Jack, and the Scarecrow escape on the Sawhorse and make their way to the land of the Winkies to ask the Tin Woodsman for help. The five then set off again for the Emerald City, figuring that the Woodsman's sharp ax will frighten Jinjur's army into submission. Along the way they are joined by Mr. H. M. (Highly Magnified) Woggle-Bug, T. E. (Thoroughly Educated). Arriving the Emerald City, our dauntless heroes find themselves trapped in the place, their only escape is to use the last of the elixir of life to animate a creature made of the mounted head of an animal called the Gump, two sofas tied together, four large leaves from a palm tree, and a broom. The Gump Thing flies them from the Emerald City and our stalwart heroes head to seek the help of glinda the Good Witch.
Ah, but General Jinjur enlists the help of Old Mombi, who uses her magic in an effort to prevent Tip & Co. from reaching Glinda. Despite Mombi's best efforts, you just know she's going to fail.
Now, here comes some logic: 1) General Jinjur usurped power from the Scarecrow, 2) the Scarecrow was named ruler by the previous ruler, the Wizard of Oz, but 3) the Wizard stole the throne from the former king, Pastoria, 4) so Pastoria should be the rightful ruler of the Emerald City but 5) although Pastoria is long-dead, the crown should go his daughter Ozma but 6) Ozma was stolen as a baby and nobody knows where she is and 6) the Wizard's old record books indicate that maybe, just maybe, Old Mombi holds the key to the puzzle.
*************SPOILER ALERT! SPOILER ALERT! SPOILER ALERT!*************
It turns out that Princess Ozma is really...Tip!
Yep. Old Mombi had taken the baby princess and, using magic, turned her into a boy named Tip. Tip (go figure) does not take the news well but, on reflection, decides that he will try being a girl and see how it works out. More magic, and Tip becomes Ozma again, and Ozma rules wisely. The end.
Phew! What a head trip! Maybe Baum was more enlightened than I thought.
Uh, Not really. I'm sure a lot of dissertations can be written (and probably) were on gender identity in this book, Baum still seems pretty hidebound and well-grounded in the sexual steroetypes of his time. The gender-switching seems to be more of a Hail Mary pass used Baum painted himself into a corner. (Baum also had to mollify a large number of female readers.)
But, then again, I could be wrong.
But what I'm not wrong about, though, is the humor, wit, and imagination that permeates the story. Political correctness aside, The Marvelous Land of Oz is a joy.
I see more Oz novels in my future.
The other day I picked up a graphic novel version of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. adapted by the talented Eric Shanower and drawn by the equally talented Skottie Young. I have to confess that when I read L. Frank Baum's original novel back in the day I was less than impressed -- enough so that I never read any other books in the series. I found the graphic novel delightful, however, and wondered if I had misjudged Baum. With that in mind, I tackled the second book in Baum's Oz series, The Marvelous Land of Oz, and found it (sorry!) to be marvelous.
At the end of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, the Scarecrow was installed as the ruler of the Emerald City of Oz while Nick Chopper (the Tin Woodsman) ruled the Winkies in the land of the West. As The Marvelous Land of Oz opens, we meet Tip, a young boy being raised by a mean witch named Old Mombi. As a joke, Tip builds a pumpkin man to scare Old Mombi when she returns from meeting with an old sorceror, where she has tricked the sorceror into giving her a small powdered amount of the elixir of life. Mombi is mad at Tip for playing a trick on her; she uses the powder to bring Jack Pumpkinhead to life and -- since Jack can do all the menial and dirty chores that Tip had been doing -- decides to turn Tip into a marble statue for her garden.
Tip steals the remaining magic elixir and, with Jack, escapes from Mombi. They decide to go to the Emerald City to meet the scarecrow. Along the way, Jack uses the powder to animate a sawhorse to make the trip easier for Jack. The three arrive at the Emerald City just as General Jinjur and her rebellious army of girls conquer the city. (Their plan is to loot the city to buy pretty dresses and to have the men do all the women's work while they laze around and eat green chocolates. Baum was not the most enlightened of authors.)
Tip, Jack, and the Scarecrow escape on the Sawhorse and make their way to the land of the Winkies to ask the Tin Woodsman for help. The five then set off again for the Emerald City, figuring that the Woodsman's sharp ax will frighten Jinjur's army into submission. Along the way they are joined by Mr. H. M. (Highly Magnified) Woggle-Bug, T. E. (Thoroughly Educated). Arriving the Emerald City, our dauntless heroes find themselves trapped in the place, their only escape is to use the last of the elixir of life to animate a creature made of the mounted head of an animal called the Gump, two sofas tied together, four large leaves from a palm tree, and a broom. The Gump Thing flies them from the Emerald City and our stalwart heroes head to seek the help of glinda the Good Witch.
Ah, but General Jinjur enlists the help of Old Mombi, who uses her magic in an effort to prevent Tip & Co. from reaching Glinda. Despite Mombi's best efforts, you just know she's going to fail.
Now, here comes some logic: 1) General Jinjur usurped power from the Scarecrow, 2) the Scarecrow was named ruler by the previous ruler, the Wizard of Oz, but 3) the Wizard stole the throne from the former king, Pastoria, 4) so Pastoria should be the rightful ruler of the Emerald City but 5) although Pastoria is long-dead, the crown should go his daughter Ozma but 6) Ozma was stolen as a baby and nobody knows where she is and 6) the Wizard's old record books indicate that maybe, just maybe, Old Mombi holds the key to the puzzle.
*************SPOILER ALERT! SPOILER ALERT! SPOILER ALERT!*************
It turns out that Princess Ozma is really...Tip!
Yep. Old Mombi had taken the baby princess and, using magic, turned her into a boy named Tip. Tip (go figure) does not take the news well but, on reflection, decides that he will try being a girl and see how it works out. More magic, and Tip becomes Ozma again, and Ozma rules wisely. The end.
Phew! What a head trip! Maybe Baum was more enlightened than I thought.
Uh, Not really. I'm sure a lot of dissertations can be written (and probably) were on gender identity in this book, Baum still seems pretty hidebound and well-grounded in the sexual steroetypes of his time. The gender-switching seems to be more of a Hail Mary pass used Baum painted himself into a corner. (Baum also had to mollify a large number of female readers.)
But, then again, I could be wrong.
But what I'm not wrong about, though, is the humor, wit, and imagination that permeates the story. Political correctness aside, The Marvelous Land of Oz is a joy.
I see more Oz novels in my future.
Thursday, December 3, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: LITTLE STAR
From 1958, The Elegants doo-wop their little hearts out.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gtxSm4qo9Ts
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gtxSm4qo9Ts
THE SHADOW: THE HOSPITAL MURDERS
Who knows what fear lurks in the hearts of men? The Shadow does. And, it appears, so does Orson Welles. Welles, of course, played the mysterious figure in the episode below. The famous catchprase, however, was voiced by Frank Readick (with an assist from a water glass to create the echo effect).
The Shadow began on the Mutual Radio Network on September 24, 1937; the last episode aired on December 26, 1954. Welles played the lead in the show for about a year, to be replaced by Bill Johnstone for fie years, then by Bret Morrison, John Archer, and Steve Courtleigh, in succession.
"The Hospital Murders" was the 47th show in the series, airing on August 14, 1938.
Enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-scB7ndNUVQ
The Shadow began on the Mutual Radio Network on September 24, 1937; the last episode aired on December 26, 1954. Welles played the lead in the show for about a year, to be replaced by Bill Johnstone for fie years, then by Bret Morrison, John Archer, and Steve Courtleigh, in succession.
"The Hospital Murders" was the 47th show in the series, airing on August 14, 1938.
Enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-scB7ndNUVQ
Wednesday, December 2, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: SEE YOU LATER ALLIGATOR
Bill Haley & the Comets.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W0bidd0Uhvk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W0bidd0Uhvk
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: GIVING YOU THE BEST I'VE GOT
Anita Baker.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQiMhAUJNMo&list=PLCA121F23BA6C08FE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQiMhAUJNMo&list=PLCA121F23BA6C08FE
FORGOTTEN TELEVISION: NO TIME FOR SERGEANTS
Here's an hour-long adaptation by Ira Levin of Mac Hyman's best-selling book No Time for Sergeants. Airing live on The U.S. Steel Hour on March 15, 1955, No Time for Sergeants starred Andy Griffith in his first television role; Griffith had previously gained attention for his monologue "What It Was, Was Football," the recording of which reached number 9 on the charts. Ira Levin expanded his hour-long script into a full musical which appeared on Broadway in October of that year, again starring Griffith as naive country boy Will Stockdale. The 1958 film version of the play teamed Griffith with Don Knotts. No Time for Sergeants was the direct inspiration for the Jim Nabors television series Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.
Andy Griffith's film debut was in the 1957 drama A Face in the Crowd. A 1960 appearanceon Danny Thomas' Make Room for Daddy as a small-town sheriff served as a pilot for The Andy Griffith Show, which introduced the world to the bucolic town of Mayberry. Griffith tried a number of television series following The Andy Griffith Show (including the short-lived Salvage 1, a show which I was very fond of) before the success of of 1986' Matlock. Griffith was a far more versatile talent than many people give him credit for.
This first version of No Time for Sergeants also features Harry Clark as Will Stockdale's nemesis Sergeant King. That same year, Clark landed the role of Msgt. Stanley Sowiki in The Phil Silvers Show (aka Sergeant Bilko); Clark appeared in 19 episodes before his early death in February 1956 at age 49.
The appeal of No Time for Sergeants, as well as the appeal of Andy Griffith, has not diminished with age.
Enjoy.
https://archive.org/details/No_Time_For_Sergeants
Andy Griffith's film debut was in the 1957 drama A Face in the Crowd. A 1960 appearanceon Danny Thomas' Make Room for Daddy as a small-town sheriff served as a pilot for The Andy Griffith Show, which introduced the world to the bucolic town of Mayberry. Griffith tried a number of television series following The Andy Griffith Show (including the short-lived Salvage 1, a show which I was very fond of) before the success of of 1986' Matlock. Griffith was a far more versatile talent than many people give him credit for.
This first version of No Time for Sergeants also features Harry Clark as Will Stockdale's nemesis Sergeant King. That same year, Clark landed the role of Msgt. Stanley Sowiki in The Phil Silvers Show (aka Sergeant Bilko); Clark appeared in 19 episodes before his early death in February 1956 at age 49.
The appeal of No Time for Sergeants, as well as the appeal of Andy Griffith, has not diminished with age.
Enjoy.
https://archive.org/details/No_Time_For_Sergeants
Monday, November 30, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: PRAIRIE FIRE
Marty Robbins was born to sing this type of song.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2theVkJGHp0&list=PLAADB0A630E9E308E
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2theVkJGHp0&list=PLAADB0A630E9E308E
INCOMING
Another week passes with my not buying any books. I'm still looking for decent places to buy books.
However...Walt just dropped off 23 of the banker's boxes of books that were stored in his garage. What an amazing feeling! It's like being reunited with old friends. Actually it IS a reunion with old friends. More boxes will be coming over the next few weeks until the enttire house is bursting with old friends! And I will be gleefully chortling and lovingly caressing each and every one of them.
What? You mean you don't lovingly caress your old friends? What is wrong with you?
However...Walt just dropped off 23 of the banker's boxes of books that were stored in his garage. What an amazing feeling! It's like being reunited with old friends. Actually it IS a reunion with old friends. More boxes will be coming over the next few weeks until the enttire house is bursting with old friends! And I will be gleefully chortling and lovingly caressing each and every one of them.
What? You mean you don't lovingly caress your old friends? What is wrong with you?
Sunday, November 29, 2015
MIGRANTS AND REFUGEES
This past week we gave thanks. Over the next few weeks many of us will be talking about peace on earth. This is the time of year when we should be showing our better side. Why, o why then are so many people showing us their irrational and bigoted side?
As always, John Oliver sets things straight.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=umqvYhb3wf4
As always, John Oliver sets things straight.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=umqvYhb3wf4
HYMN TIME
"I'll Fly Away" done by The Charlie Daniels Band.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ckGQFe2Wfrg&list=PLIWEJzD3_tOMQ5IUupIwSErugs1whrT2Q
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ckGQFe2Wfrg&list=PLIWEJzD3_tOMQ5IUupIwSErugs1whrT2Q
Saturday, November 28, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: HOTEL CALIFORNIA
My friend Beverly's fave from high school.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iqODbP1T3nk
ADVENTURES IN ELECTRICITY, NUMBER ONE (1946)
Want to know about electricty? Want to know "How the Magic Is Born...and How It Travels?" If you are a dim bulb like Johnny Powers, you probably do. Luckily Johnny's big brother Ed is a scientist with his own lab so he can explain it all to Johnny. (Ed, by the way, is a former football star so you know it's cool to be a scientist.)
This comic book -- the first of at least eight that General Electric sponsored as giveways btween 1946 and 1950 -- starts the discussion off with the generation of electricity.
At the end of this issue, Ed tells Johnny that he has "learned a lot! But...No man knows all about electricty. There's an ocean of unknown facts ahead of us.,,and we've just about got our feet wet in the water."
Er, Ed...you really don't want to get your feet wet in the water when you're messing around with electricity. Just saying'.
http://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=40840
This comic book -- the first of at least eight that General Electric sponsored as giveways btween 1946 and 1950 -- starts the discussion off with the generation of electricity.
At the end of this issue, Ed tells Johnny that he has "learned a lot! But...No man knows all about electricty. There's an ocean of unknown facts ahead of us.,,and we've just about got our feet wet in the water."
Er, Ed...you really don't want to get your feet wet in the water when you're messing around with electricity. Just saying'.
http://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=40840
Friday, November 27, 2015
FORGOTTEN BOOK: DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER
Diamonds Are Forever by Eric Flint & Ryk E. Spoor (2004)
Nope, this isn't the James Bond novel, it's a fantasy novel that was included the Baen omnibus Mountain Magic. (The omnibus also included David Drake's 1991 collection Old Nathan and Henry Kuttner's delightful Hogben stories -- at least in print form: the electronic version dropped the Kuttner stories and substituted Manly Wade Wellman's 1998 collection John the Balladeer due to restrictions from the Kuttner estate. As you probably realize, Mountain Magic is an omnibus of Appalachian fantasy stories)
Clint Slade is the first person from his Kentucky family to graduate college. A geologist and computer scientist, Clint moved to New York where he met and fell for Jodi Goldman, an acoustical engineer. Jodi is a non-religious 6'2" amazon who often lapses into Yiddish phrases in her New York City accent. (NYC has ownership of a zillion accents; it's never specified which one Jodi has.) When the book opens, Clint is telephoning his mother to inform her that he and Jodi are engaged. Mama Slade (who is one not to be denied) insists that Clint bring his fiancee to meet the family.
So it's off to the woods of Kentucky. Turns out the Slades are well-to-do and live in a large rambling house filled with all the latest gadgets and gimmicks. It also turns out that the Slades are hiding a secret. Their compound is surrounded by an electrified fence...all the windows in the house are covered with steel shutters at night...every member in the family (including Clint) carry a crowbar with them.
The original Slade house was built in the early nineteenth century by Winston Slade, who happened to discover a network of caves on the property. While exploring the caves, Winston stumbles upon a network of pools, each with rounds pebbles at the bottom. Winston recognizes the pebbles as uncut diamonds. Scooping up a bunch of them, he is interrupted by...something. He escapes and the diamonds provide the foundation of his family's wealth. Over the years, Slades have gone back to the pool to replenish their wealth.
The creatures in the caves are kobolds, which (as a boy) Clint called nomes after the creatures in the Oz books. There was a time when they interacted with humans but that time is long past with only dim memories remaining. Whatever cataclysm happened to separate the races, it also separated the various tribes/clans of nomes with the different groups warring at each other. The nomes are a crystaline life form which are part of an intertwined life essence of the earth. The diamonds that the Slades had been purloining over the centuries are important in providing strength to the nomes; when cut and polished they lose their life essence.
Clint and Joni form a detente with the nomes, only to discover that an invading army of nomes are determined to destroy the local tribe and to set off a chain of earthquakes that would level a four-state area. Without the diamonds that the Slades have taken, the good nomes are defenseless. It's up to Clint and Joni to come up behind the invaders via a complicated series of tunnels from the Mammoth Cave.
The Slades are a typical family of "capable" people a la John W. Campbell, although they appear to lack a moral compass until Joni presses the issue. Joni is probably the most Campbellesque character in a story that would fit semi-comfortably in Campbell's old Unknown Worlds magazine.
That, I fear, is the problem with the novel. It reads as if it was designed to mimic an Unknown Worlds novel but the authors lack the skill (and Campbell's editorial touch) to pull it off. Efforts to provide humor are misguided and Joni's frequent lapses into Yiddish are just plain irritating in the most twee way possible. The effort to provide a semi-rational explanation of the fantasy element also misfires.
Diamonds Are Forever ends up being a mindless time-waster -- not something to be avoided at all costs, but more of a "well, there's nothing else to read tonight, so what the heck" type of book. The biggest shame is that it's packaged with much better stories by David Drake and/or Henry Kuttner/Manly Wade Wellman. They deserve better.
Nope, this isn't the James Bond novel, it's a fantasy novel that was included the Baen omnibus Mountain Magic. (The omnibus also included David Drake's 1991 collection Old Nathan and Henry Kuttner's delightful Hogben stories -- at least in print form: the electronic version dropped the Kuttner stories and substituted Manly Wade Wellman's 1998 collection John the Balladeer due to restrictions from the Kuttner estate. As you probably realize, Mountain Magic is an omnibus of Appalachian fantasy stories)
Clint Slade is the first person from his Kentucky family to graduate college. A geologist and computer scientist, Clint moved to New York where he met and fell for Jodi Goldman, an acoustical engineer. Jodi is a non-religious 6'2" amazon who often lapses into Yiddish phrases in her New York City accent. (NYC has ownership of a zillion accents; it's never specified which one Jodi has.) When the book opens, Clint is telephoning his mother to inform her that he and Jodi are engaged. Mama Slade (who is one not to be denied) insists that Clint bring his fiancee to meet the family.
So it's off to the woods of Kentucky. Turns out the Slades are well-to-do and live in a large rambling house filled with all the latest gadgets and gimmicks. It also turns out that the Slades are hiding a secret. Their compound is surrounded by an electrified fence...all the windows in the house are covered with steel shutters at night...every member in the family (including Clint) carry a crowbar with them.
The original Slade house was built in the early nineteenth century by Winston Slade, who happened to discover a network of caves on the property. While exploring the caves, Winston stumbles upon a network of pools, each with rounds pebbles at the bottom. Winston recognizes the pebbles as uncut diamonds. Scooping up a bunch of them, he is interrupted by...something. He escapes and the diamonds provide the foundation of his family's wealth. Over the years, Slades have gone back to the pool to replenish their wealth.
The creatures in the caves are kobolds, which (as a boy) Clint called nomes after the creatures in the Oz books. There was a time when they interacted with humans but that time is long past with only dim memories remaining. Whatever cataclysm happened to separate the races, it also separated the various tribes/clans of nomes with the different groups warring at each other. The nomes are a crystaline life form which are part of an intertwined life essence of the earth. The diamonds that the Slades had been purloining over the centuries are important in providing strength to the nomes; when cut and polished they lose their life essence.
Clint and Joni form a detente with the nomes, only to discover that an invading army of nomes are determined to destroy the local tribe and to set off a chain of earthquakes that would level a four-state area. Without the diamonds that the Slades have taken, the good nomes are defenseless. It's up to Clint and Joni to come up behind the invaders via a complicated series of tunnels from the Mammoth Cave.
The Slades are a typical family of "capable" people a la John W. Campbell, although they appear to lack a moral compass until Joni presses the issue. Joni is probably the most Campbellesque character in a story that would fit semi-comfortably in Campbell's old Unknown Worlds magazine.
That, I fear, is the problem with the novel. It reads as if it was designed to mimic an Unknown Worlds novel but the authors lack the skill (and Campbell's editorial touch) to pull it off. Efforts to provide humor are misguided and Joni's frequent lapses into Yiddish are just plain irritating in the most twee way possible. The effort to provide a semi-rational explanation of the fantasy element also misfires.
Diamonds Are Forever ends up being a mindless time-waster -- not something to be avoided at all costs, but more of a "well, there's nothing else to read tonight, so what the heck" type of book. The biggest shame is that it's packaged with much better stories by David Drake and/or Henry Kuttner/Manly Wade Wellman. They deserve better.
Saturday, November 21, 2015
GRRR!
Our new internet service is not cooperating. Took me several hours to link here. Still not able to set up links on this page. Grrr.
More later. (I hope.)
Friday, November 20, 2015
FORGOTTEN BOOK: MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET
Miracle on 34th Street by Valentine Davies (1947)
This week many of the Friday Forgotten Book bloggers are posting about crime-themed holiday books. Sorry, but my choice doesn't have a crime but it does has a courtroom scene and (to stretch a point) a mystery of sorts. Miracle on 34th Street was one of the first holiday books I ever read so please indluge me. The book is certainly worthy of notice.
Most people are familiar with the 1947 film starring Maureen O'Hara, John Payne, Natalie Wood, and the delightful Edmund Gwenn; many are also familiar with the many remakes for film and television, as well as the stage and musical versions. Not that many people realize that the film was based on a story by Valentine Davies or that Davies expanded the story into a novel to coincide with the movie's release.
I'm trying to remember when I read the book, perhaps in elementary school. I'm fairly certain I got it from the Scholastic Book Club, the same place I got a copy of Robb White's The Secret Sea and James E. Gunn and Jack Williamson's Star Bridge, so it probably waS around 1956 or 1957. I'm pretty sure the copy I read was a Pocket Books edition, most likely the 1952 because I wouldn't have been interested in such "juvenile fare" by the time the 1959 edition came out. (Both editions seemed to have the same cover painting, one quite different from that in my memory, but one's memory can play tricks now, can't it?)
I needn't go into the plot. If you've seen the movie (and I know you have) you've seen the book. And I'm sure you all know there really is a Santa Claus. What interested me most at that age was learning that a favorite movie could be read as a book, and -- in some cases -- a favorite book could be turned into a movie; something that struck home even more when I read Fred Gibson's Old Yeller. I think that's about when I became enamoured with the power of words, expanding my world from The Hardy Boys to the true marvels of the power of story. Anyway, that's why Miracle on 34th Street holds such a special memory for me.
I'm willing to bet the story holds up today. There are a number of copies available from the internet and probably from many libraries. Give it a try. Maybe a little bit of its magic will rub off on you.
For more holiday-themed, mainly criminous books and a wide assortment of other "Forgotten Books," visit Patti Abbott's blog at pattinase.
This week many of the Friday Forgotten Book bloggers are posting about crime-themed holiday books. Sorry, but my choice doesn't have a crime but it does has a courtroom scene and (to stretch a point) a mystery of sorts. Miracle on 34th Street was one of the first holiday books I ever read so please indluge me. The book is certainly worthy of notice.
Most people are familiar with the 1947 film starring Maureen O'Hara, John Payne, Natalie Wood, and the delightful Edmund Gwenn; many are also familiar with the many remakes for film and television, as well as the stage and musical versions. Not that many people realize that the film was based on a story by Valentine Davies or that Davies expanded the story into a novel to coincide with the movie's release.
I'm trying to remember when I read the book, perhaps in elementary school. I'm fairly certain I got it from the Scholastic Book Club, the same place I got a copy of Robb White's The Secret Sea and James E. Gunn and Jack Williamson's Star Bridge, so it probably waS around 1956 or 1957. I'm pretty sure the copy I read was a Pocket Books edition, most likely the 1952 because I wouldn't have been interested in such "juvenile fare" by the time the 1959 edition came out. (Both editions seemed to have the same cover painting, one quite different from that in my memory, but one's memory can play tricks now, can't it?)
I needn't go into the plot. If you've seen the movie (and I know you have) you've seen the book. And I'm sure you all know there really is a Santa Claus. What interested me most at that age was learning that a favorite movie could be read as a book, and -- in some cases -- a favorite book could be turned into a movie; something that struck home even more when I read Fred Gibson's Old Yeller. I think that's about when I became enamoured with the power of words, expanding my world from The Hardy Boys to the true marvels of the power of story. Anyway, that's why Miracle on 34th Street holds such a special memory for me.
I'm willing to bet the story holds up today. There are a number of copies available from the internet and probably from many libraries. Give it a try. Maybe a little bit of its magic will rub off on you.
For more holiday-themed, mainly criminous books and a wide assortment of other "Forgotten Books," visit Patti Abbott's blog at pattinase.
Thursday, November 19, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: SILVER LAKE BLUES
The Cherokee Cowboys were country singer Ray Price's band. Here they perfrom an instrumental of Bob Willis' "Silver Lake Blues"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eZHf3J0SNTc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eZHf3J0SNTc
X MINUS ONE: NIGHTMARE
From July 21, 1955, here's a half hour show based on Stephen Vincent Benet's poem "The Revolt of the Machines," also known as "Nightmare Number Three.""
X Minus One was a science fiction anthology series that ran from April 1955 to the beginning of January 1958 on NBC radio. The show began as a revival of the network's 1950-1 series Dimension X. The first fifteen episodes (which included this one, the eleventh) were rewrites of shows that appeared on the first series. The remaining shows were written by NBC staffers and were based on published science fiction stories by such writers as Ray Bradbury, Murray Leinster, William Tenn, Robert A. Heinlein, Nelson S. Bond, Isaac Asimov, H. Beam Piper, James E. Gunn, Clifford D. Simak, L. Sprague de Camp, Fredric Brown, Fritz Leiber,and Philip K. Dick. Many of the episodes of 1955 were based on (and promoted as) stories published in John W. Campbell's Astounding Science Fiction; from 1956, the stories were taken from Galaxy Science Fiction.
"Nightmare" was adapted by George Lefferts and starred John Gibson, Joyce Gordon, Louis van Rooten, Joe Julian, and Santos Ortega. Fred Collins was the announcer.
Can machines unite to revolt against their human masters? Listen, and see.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-XVpW1nioM
X Minus One was a science fiction anthology series that ran from April 1955 to the beginning of January 1958 on NBC radio. The show began as a revival of the network's 1950-1 series Dimension X. The first fifteen episodes (which included this one, the eleventh) were rewrites of shows that appeared on the first series. The remaining shows were written by NBC staffers and were based on published science fiction stories by such writers as Ray Bradbury, Murray Leinster, William Tenn, Robert A. Heinlein, Nelson S. Bond, Isaac Asimov, H. Beam Piper, James E. Gunn, Clifford D. Simak, L. Sprague de Camp, Fredric Brown, Fritz Leiber,and Philip K. Dick. Many of the episodes of 1955 were based on (and promoted as) stories published in John W. Campbell's Astounding Science Fiction; from 1956, the stories were taken from Galaxy Science Fiction.
"Nightmare" was adapted by George Lefferts and starred John Gibson, Joyce Gordon, Louis van Rooten, Joe Julian, and Santos Ortega. Fred Collins was the announcer.
Can machines unite to revolt against their human masters? Listen, and see.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-XVpW1nioM
Wednesday, November 18, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: WHO KNOWS WHERE THE TIME GOES
Fairport Convention with Sandy Denny.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n2xODjbfYw8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n2xODjbfYw8
BAD JOKE WEDNESDAY
I'm such a romantic. I just bought my wife a refrigerator. I can't wait to see her face light up when she opens it.
Tuesday, November 17, 2015
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, DWIGHT V. SWAIN!
Pulpster and writing instructor Dwight V. Swain (1915-1992) would have reached his century mark today. For the pulps he wrote SF, western, mystery, and adventure stories. His books on writing were standard texts for years. Swain was inducted into the Oklahoma Writers Fall of Fame in 2013.
The link takes you to Swain's 1942 story "Henry Horn's X-Ray Eye Glasses"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c8BOCXv8duA
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: THEME SONG FROM THE TIME TUNNEL
Here a very brief trip back to 1966 with music written by a young John Williams.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c8BOCXv8duA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c8BOCXv8duA
OVERLOOKED FILM: TEENAGERS FROM OUTER SPACE (1959)
From IMDb: "A young alien (David Love) falls for a pretty teenage Earth girl (Dawn Anderson) and they team up to try to stop the plans of his invading cohorts, who intend to use Earth as a food-breeding ground for giant lobsters from their planet. The invaders, who arrive in a flying saucer, carry deadly ray guns that turn Earth-people into skeletons."
Do you really need to know more than that?
David Love, who has the lead in this cinematic mish-mash, has only one other credit on IMDb -- a short released five years earlier. He does, however, have a credit as a production assistant on Teenagers from Outer Space under the name C. R. Kaltenthaler. This teenage alien was 25 when the film was released.
Dawn Anderson (also known as Dawn Bender) strained her acting chops playing the teenage ingenue; she also was 25 when the film was released. This was also her last film role. Of her seven other film appearances (starting when she was two), five were uncredited while a sixth was edited out.
The writer/producer/director/composer/editor/cinematographer/special effects wizard/miscellaneous crew member of this turkey was Tom Graeff, who was modest enough to cast himself as Betty's (Dawn Anderson) boy friend. He probably did not want everyone to think this flick was a one-man rodeo so he cast himself under the name "Tom Lockyear." This was the last (and in some cases, only) film where he served as either director, producer, composer, actor, cinematographer, special effects maven, or miscellaneous crewman. He did edit one other movie, 1965's execrable The Wizard of Mars. To cheap his way out while producing Teenagers from Outer Space, he cons his way into shooting at an elderly lady's home (rather than paying for studio time) by pretending to be a UCLA student shooting a student film. Despite playing a teenager, Graeff was 30 when the film was released.
Playing Thor, one of the invading aliens, was Bryan Grant, one of the film's "production assistants" -- code word for investor -- as "Bryan G. Peterson." When the film (duh) bombed, he sued Graeff for damages. Other "production assistants" in the cast were Graeff, Love (as "C. R. Kalenthaler"), Ursula Hanson, who played the uncredited Hilda and in real life was Grant's wife, as "Ursula Pearson," and Gene Sterling who had a cameo role as "The Leader."
The film was distributed by Warner Brothers, who needed a cheapo to pair with another of their films for a drive-in double header. Evidently Teenagers from Outer Space the cheapest movie that Warner Brothers ever released. Surprised? You shouldn't be.
So, sit back and revel in the cheese that is Teenagers from Outer Space.
https://archive.org/details/teenagers_from_outerspace
Do you really need to know more than that?
David Love, who has the lead in this cinematic mish-mash, has only one other credit on IMDb -- a short released five years earlier. He does, however, have a credit as a production assistant on Teenagers from Outer Space under the name C. R. Kaltenthaler. This teenage alien was 25 when the film was released.
Dawn Anderson (also known as Dawn Bender) strained her acting chops playing the teenage ingenue; she also was 25 when the film was released. This was also her last film role. Of her seven other film appearances (starting when she was two), five were uncredited while a sixth was edited out.
The writer/producer/director/composer/editor/cinematographer/special effects wizard/miscellaneous crew member of this turkey was Tom Graeff, who was modest enough to cast himself as Betty's (Dawn Anderson) boy friend. He probably did not want everyone to think this flick was a one-man rodeo so he cast himself under the name "Tom Lockyear." This was the last (and in some cases, only) film where he served as either director, producer, composer, actor, cinematographer, special effects maven, or miscellaneous crewman. He did edit one other movie, 1965's execrable The Wizard of Mars. To cheap his way out while producing Teenagers from Outer Space, he cons his way into shooting at an elderly lady's home (rather than paying for studio time) by pretending to be a UCLA student shooting a student film. Despite playing a teenager, Graeff was 30 when the film was released.
Playing Thor, one of the invading aliens, was Bryan Grant, one of the film's "production assistants" -- code word for investor -- as "Bryan G. Peterson." When the film (duh) bombed, he sued Graeff for damages. Other "production assistants" in the cast were Graeff, Love (as "C. R. Kalenthaler"), Ursula Hanson, who played the uncredited Hilda and in real life was Grant's wife, as "Ursula Pearson," and Gene Sterling who had a cameo role as "The Leader."
The film was distributed by Warner Brothers, who needed a cheapo to pair with another of their films for a drive-in double header. Evidently Teenagers from Outer Space the cheapest movie that Warner Brothers ever released. Surprised? You shouldn't be.
So, sit back and revel in the cheese that is Teenagers from Outer Space.
https://archive.org/details/teenagers_from_outerspace
Monday, November 16, 2015
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: THE JOINT'S REALLY JUMPIN'
From 1962, Jimmy Evans.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g5ixq5UYHqg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g5ixq5UYHqg
INCOMING
- Burt Arthur, Gunsmoke in Nevada. Western. "Johnny Canavan was two hundred pounds of fighting man --one hundred pounds in each fist."
- "Spencer Dean" (Prentice Winchell), Murder After a Fashion. Mystery featuring department store detective Don Cadee. Cadee is asked to provide pirate-proof protection for an upcoming display of French gowns. Interesting premise but in real life something very hard to do. (A neightbor of Kitty's when she was young used to go to the Paris fashions shows and draw the designs on napkins to be smuggled out to a knock-off dress company.) Winchell was a prolific writer for the radio. Besides the Dean pseudonym, he also wrote as Stewart Sterling, Jay de Bekker, and Dexter St. Clair. For the pulps he wrote some of the Black Bat stories, many of the Dan Fowler stories, and (under the house name Grant Stockbridge some of The Spider novels. Winchell was also on of the primary writers for The Shadow radio show.
- Hal Dresner, The Man Who Wrote Dirty Books. Comic novel. Dresner, who has written for television and the movies was once part of a hardy gang of young writers -- along with Lawrence Block, Darion Zimmer Bradley, and others -- who wrote soft-core porn novels for William Hamling's Nightstand Books This book came from that experience. ( Both Block and Westlake wrote similar books.) For an interesting look at Greenleaf and Hamlin's publishing empire, see Todd Mason's blog post for November 13th at Sweet Freedom (at socialistjazz.blogspot.com).
- Steve Frazee, The Outcasts. Television tie-in novel based on the 1968-9 western series starring Don Murray and Otis young. An ex-Confederate officer and a former slave who fought for the Union team up as bounty hunters.
- Donald Hamilton, The Poisoners. A Matt Helm espionage novel. Need I say more?
- L. P. Holmes, Rustler's Moon. Western. Only Hugh Yeager "could stop the bloodbath that was about to engulf the town and the vast Double A rangeland." Holmes also wrote as Matt Stuart.
- Ray Hogan, A Bullet for Mr. Texas. A Shawn Starbuck western. 'Starbuck came to Hagerman's ranch, 'Hash Knife,' following the trail of his lost brother, Ben, but he stayed to become a hired bullet catcher for the tyrant." Hogan wrote at least two dozen Shawn Starbuck novels.
- Hans Holzer, Window Into the Past: Exploring History Through ESP. Another book of total bushwah. I can't help myself; I'm addicted to this sort of junk.
- Velda Johnston, Deveron Hall/ "Whit Masterson" (Robert Wade), Hunter of the Blood/ "M. K. Wren" (Martha Kaye Renfroe), Oh, Bury Me Not. A Detective Book Club omnibus. Johnston was a popular writer of romantic suspense with some three dozen novels (some as by "Veronica Jason") to her credit. Masterton was one of the two major joint pseudomyns (the other being "Wade Miller") of Wade and Robert Miller; Wade continued writing under both pseudonyms after Miller's death. The Wren is the third mystery about Conan Flagg, a former intelligence agent and current bookstore owner in Oregon.
- Harold Q. Masur, The Last Gamble. A Scott Jordan mystery. Jordan was a popular character from 1947 through the Sixties and beyond. Masur also ghost-wrote a mystery novel for opera singer Helen Traubel and was one of the anonymous editors of several Alfred Hitchcock anthologies in the 1970s.
- James McClure, The Blood of an Englishman. A Tromp Kramer and Micki Zondi mystery. Kramer is an Afrikaner police detective and Zondi is his Bantu police sergeant in this highly acclaimed series.
- Lewis B. Patten, Six Ways of Dying. Western. The Doniphan "outfit was engaged in a bloody range war, and the bitter hatred of one of the brothers erupted in all its fury against the rival bunch -- and against his own father." Patten published over 100 westerns, some as by "Lewis Ford" and others (in collaboration with Wayne Overholster) as by "Lee Leighton" and "Joseph Wayne."
- J. B. Priestley, The Old Dark House. The classic mystery and the basis of James Whale's 1932 comedy horror film starring Boris Karloff, Melvyn Douglas, Raymond Massey, Gloria Stuart, and Charles Laughton, The novvel was originally published in England under the title Benighted. The copy I picked up was in terrible condition -- waterstained, torn, and pure-dee ugly. Oh, well.
- Qui Xiaolong, When Red Is Black. Mystery, the third in the series featuring Inspector Chen Cao of the Shanai Police Bureau. Qui was in the United States in 1989 when the Tiananmen Square protests; he stayed in the US because he feared reprisal from the Chinese Communist party. His mysteries are also commentaries on Chinese society.
- Jake Saunders and Howard Waldrop, The Texas-Israeli War: 1999. SF post-apocalyptic novel.. This was Saunders' only novel and Waldrop's first published book. Anything by Waldrop is worth reading and this one is especially recommended for Texas-philes and for Israeli-philes.
- "Jonas Ward" (William R. Cox), Buchanan's Gamble. Western. The Buchanan series of western novels were created by William Ard under the "Jonas Ward" pen name. After Ard's death, Robert Silverberg completed the unfinished sixth manuscript in the series; Brian Garfield wrote the seventh Buchanan book; William R. Cox wrote the final sixteen books in the series. Buchanan's Gamble was Cox's third outing as "Jonas Ward.
Sunday, November 15, 2015
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, RAYMOND F. JONES
Raymond F. Jones, journeyman science fiction writer, would have been 100 years old today.
Jones was born in Salt Lake City on November 15, 1915. His first story, "Test of the Gods" appeared in the September 1941 issue of Astounding Science Fiction. Jones published another 21 stories that decade but really reached his stride during, publishing some three dozen stories and eight books. His first novel Renaissance (1951; also published as Man of Two Worlds) was an accomplished and highly readable parallel worlds story. The following year saw his fix-up novel This Island Earth, which was the basis of the popular 1954 movie. 1951 also brought the first of Jones' three novels for the Winston Adventures in Science Fiction series, Son of the Stars, followed by a sequel, Planet of Light, in 1963 and by standalone The Year When Stardust Fell in 1958.
The quality and vigor of his writing fell off during the 70s, although he did publish three paperback originals for Roger Elwood's short-lived Laser Books line. His last novel was 1978's Weeping May Tarry, an expansion of Lester del Rey's classic novella "For I Am a Jealous People;" although the novel was completely written by Jones it was published as by "Rayond F. Jones and Lester del Rey."
Jones never made it to the top tier of science fiction writers but his work remains well-plotted, thoughtful, and certainly worth looking up. He died in Sandy, Utah, in 1994 at age 89.
Here's a link to Jones' short story "The Colonists" from the June 1954 issue of IF Worlds of Science Fiction:
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/32687/32687-h/32687-h.htm
Jones was born in Salt Lake City on November 15, 1915. His first story, "Test of the Gods" appeared in the September 1941 issue of Astounding Science Fiction. Jones published another 21 stories that decade but really reached his stride during, publishing some three dozen stories and eight books. His first novel Renaissance (1951; also published as Man of Two Worlds) was an accomplished and highly readable parallel worlds story. The following year saw his fix-up novel This Island Earth, which was the basis of the popular 1954 movie. 1951 also brought the first of Jones' three novels for the Winston Adventures in Science Fiction series, Son of the Stars, followed by a sequel, Planet of Light, in 1963 and by standalone The Year When Stardust Fell in 1958.
The quality and vigor of his writing fell off during the 70s, although he did publish three paperback originals for Roger Elwood's short-lived Laser Books line. His last novel was 1978's Weeping May Tarry, an expansion of Lester del Rey's classic novella "For I Am a Jealous People;" although the novel was completely written by Jones it was published as by "Rayond F. Jones and Lester del Rey."
Jones never made it to the top tier of science fiction writers but his work remains well-plotted, thoughtful, and certainly worth looking up. He died in Sandy, Utah, in 1994 at age 89.
Here's a link to Jones' short story "The Colonists" from the June 1954 issue of IF Worlds of Science Fiction:
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/32687/32687-h/32687-h.htm
HYMN TIME
The fabulous Robert Honeysucker singing the Negro spiritual "Gwinter Sing All Along da Way."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uf0acLVGG7I
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uf0acLVGG7I
Friday, November 13, 2015
NO LONGER HOMELESS!
Yes, it's true. After nearly three months of sponging living off the kindness of strangers relatives, we now have our own home. Not that it's been easy.
We were close to buying a house a few weeks ago but a few things revealed by a home inspection deterred us. Then we were all set to put a bid in on a nice house that needed a lot of sweat equity, when the owners of the very first house we looked at phoned our agent, asking if we would buying it at a reduced price. We said yes and submitted the paperwork that day. They promised a fast turnaround. Evidently the owners were an equity group, most probably an amateur equity group because they really didn't know what they were doing and kept forgetting to send some of the proper paperwork. We were scheduled to close last Friday, but they didn't have their act together. We were rescheduled to close this past Monday, but ditto. Then they said they would close on Wednesday, forgetting it was a holiday. Thursday closing had to be put off because some of their paperwork was missing. This morning, shortly before noon, we got the phone call and everything was a go for 3:00 this afternoon.
So we bought a house. Interestingly, we didn't get any keys. The equity group didn't provide any but we're able to jimmy the back door to get in. And yes, we're changing all the locks to something secure, pronto.
It's a comfortable house, 10-years-old, in a good neighborhood, with a bit more room than we had in Southern Maryland. The yard is small and maintenance-free.
Now it's just a matter of moving our stuff in and figuring out what we have to buy, When we moved to Florida we assumed we would be going into an apartment so we shed an awful lot of stuff -- some of which we will now have to reacquire. On the bright side, Kitty likes to shop.
Our rambling days look to be over.
Let the good times roll!
We were close to buying a house a few weeks ago but a few things revealed by a home inspection deterred us. Then we were all set to put a bid in on a nice house that needed a lot of sweat equity, when the owners of the very first house we looked at phoned our agent, asking if we would buying it at a reduced price. We said yes and submitted the paperwork that day. They promised a fast turnaround. Evidently the owners were an equity group, most probably an amateur equity group because they really didn't know what they were doing and kept forgetting to send some of the proper paperwork. We were scheduled to close last Friday, but they didn't have their act together. We were rescheduled to close this past Monday, but ditto. Then they said they would close on Wednesday, forgetting it was a holiday. Thursday closing had to be put off because some of their paperwork was missing. This morning, shortly before noon, we got the phone call and everything was a go for 3:00 this afternoon.
So we bought a house. Interestingly, we didn't get any keys. The equity group didn't provide any but we're able to jimmy the back door to get in. And yes, we're changing all the locks to something secure, pronto.
It's a comfortable house, 10-years-old, in a good neighborhood, with a bit more room than we had in Southern Maryland. The yard is small and maintenance-free.
Now it's just a matter of moving our stuff in and figuring out what we have to buy, When we moved to Florida we assumed we would be going into an apartment so we shed an awful lot of stuff -- some of which we will now have to reacquire. On the bright side, Kitty likes to shop.
Our rambling days look to be over.
Let the good times roll!
MUSIC FROM THE PAST: IMAGINATION
Bob Eberly with the Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uxiLzmRom2U&list=PLUSRfoOcUe4a2stAtfXOLWRfg2ts1tf5M
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uxiLzmRom2U&list=PLUSRfoOcUe4a2stAtfXOLWRfg2ts1tf5M
FORGOTTEN BOOK: THE FROSTED DEATH
The Frosted Death by "Kenneth Robeson" (Paul Ernst) (1972)
Attempting to capitalize on the success of Doc Savage, publishers Street & Smith created the last of the major pulp heroes, Richard Benson -- The Avenger. Benson was a wealthy adenturer who made his millions through various exploits around the world. Deciding to retire from his active, globe-trotting life, Benson married and pursued a career as an industrial engineer. His plans came to a halt when his wife and young daughter were killed in an airplane crash. The shock of their deaths turned Benson's skin and hair white and paralyzed his face, Benson vowed vengeance on the criminals who caused the crash, and on all criminals everywhere. Fortunately, he had the resources to do so. Aided by his friends Fergus "Mac" MacMurdie, a chemist whose family had also been destroyed by criminals, and Algernon Heathcote "Smitty" Smith, a giant negro electronics expert who often assumes a Stepin Fetchit persona to confuse the underworld, Benson forms Justice, Inc. to help forfill his war on crime.
All twenty-four original Avenger novels were written by pulp writer Paul Ernst and appeared under the house name "Kenneth Robeson," allowing Street & Smith to bill them as having been written by the author of Doc Savage. Street & Smith hired Lester Dent (creator of Doc Savage) and Walter B. Gibson (creator of The Shadow) to help Ernst formulate the character. The Avenger magazine premiered on September 1, 1939 featuring the full-length novel "Justice, Inc." and ran for thirteen monthly issues (skipping August 1940) before becoming a bimonthly publication for the final eleven issues. (A half dozen short stories featuring The Avenger were then published from 1942 to 1944 in Stret & Smith's magazines Clues Detective and The Shadow; these were all written by Emile C. Tepperman.)
Thus ended the saga of The Avenger for nearly thirty years when Warner Paperback Library reprinted all of Ernst's magazine novels and hired writer and pulp expert Ron Goulart to continue the series for another twelve novels under the "Kenneth Robeson" pseudonym.
Ernst's Avenger never recieved the popularity Street & Smith had hoped for. He arrived during a glut of pulp heroes (Doc Savage, The Shadow, The Phantom Detectice, Operator #5, G-8, The Spider, and so on, including many heroes who failed to gel). As a Johnny Come Lately hero, despite well-worked plots and decent writing, The Avenger just failed to get traction. Efforts were made following the first twelve issues* to revamp the hero by eliminating Benson's frozen face. (One of the neatest things about the Avenger's paralyzed face was that, although immobile, it was extremely plastic, allowing him to mold his fave to look like anyone he wanted. Alas, this ability was also written out.) Too little, too late. As I noted above, Richard Benson was the last of the major pulp heroes.
The Frosted Death was the fifth book in the series, originally published in The Avenger January 1, 1940 issue. The "Death" was was a laboratory created white mold that clung to flesh and propagated wildly, quickly covering the victim's entire body. The mold would burrow into every pore of the victim, eventually causing a painful death by apphyxiation. conact with the skin meant certain doom -- there was no cure. Who would create such a terrible thing? The venal partner of a downtown chemical company, that's who. And why? To sell to a certain unnamed European country bent on conquest, that's why. Because the country is not named, for the sake of convenience let us call it "Schmazi Schmermany."
Naturally, the Frosted Death is accidently released in the city. And, just as naturally, The Avenger is on the case. And you know that Mac (being a chemical genius) would come up with a cure. But Mac and Smitty are kidnapped, along with the cure, by agents of Schmazi Schmermany and are taken to the desolate New England coast where a Scmazi Schmermany submarine awaits delivery of massive amounts of the Frosted Death. One of the neat things about the Frosted Death is, if introduced in the nasal cavity, it travels to the brain, rendering the victim a mindless zombie for the next few days before the mold kills them. Of course the Schmazi Schmermany baddies insert the mold up the unsuspecting noses of Mac and Smitty.
The Avenger, working alone, must finad and destroy the Frosted Death factory, destroy the submarine and all the Schmazis, rescue Mac and Smitty, put paid to the venal chemical company executive, and stop the Frosted Death in its tracks. Can he do it? You betcha.
As with stories of that time and ilk, there is some moral amibiguity that might disturb the modern reader. On the plus side, the overt racism often found in these tales is completely missing. All in all, a fast, enjoyable, pulpish read.
*Explaining the missing August 1940 issue: time was needed to revise manuscripts already written but not yet published,
Attempting to capitalize on the success of Doc Savage, publishers Street & Smith created the last of the major pulp heroes, Richard Benson -- The Avenger. Benson was a wealthy adenturer who made his millions through various exploits around the world. Deciding to retire from his active, globe-trotting life, Benson married and pursued a career as an industrial engineer. His plans came to a halt when his wife and young daughter were killed in an airplane crash. The shock of their deaths turned Benson's skin and hair white and paralyzed his face, Benson vowed vengeance on the criminals who caused the crash, and on all criminals everywhere. Fortunately, he had the resources to do so. Aided by his friends Fergus "Mac" MacMurdie, a chemist whose family had also been destroyed by criminals, and Algernon Heathcote "Smitty" Smith, a giant negro electronics expert who often assumes a Stepin Fetchit persona to confuse the underworld, Benson forms Justice, Inc. to help forfill his war on crime.
All twenty-four original Avenger novels were written by pulp writer Paul Ernst and appeared under the house name "Kenneth Robeson," allowing Street & Smith to bill them as having been written by the author of Doc Savage. Street & Smith hired Lester Dent (creator of Doc Savage) and Walter B. Gibson (creator of The Shadow) to help Ernst formulate the character. The Avenger magazine premiered on September 1, 1939 featuring the full-length novel "Justice, Inc." and ran for thirteen monthly issues (skipping August 1940) before becoming a bimonthly publication for the final eleven issues. (A half dozen short stories featuring The Avenger were then published from 1942 to 1944 in Stret & Smith's magazines Clues Detective and The Shadow; these were all written by Emile C. Tepperman.)
Thus ended the saga of The Avenger for nearly thirty years when Warner Paperback Library reprinted all of Ernst's magazine novels and hired writer and pulp expert Ron Goulart to continue the series for another twelve novels under the "Kenneth Robeson" pseudonym.
Ernst's Avenger never recieved the popularity Street & Smith had hoped for. He arrived during a glut of pulp heroes (Doc Savage, The Shadow, The Phantom Detectice, Operator #5, G-8, The Spider, and so on, including many heroes who failed to gel). As a Johnny Come Lately hero, despite well-worked plots and decent writing, The Avenger just failed to get traction. Efforts were made following the first twelve issues* to revamp the hero by eliminating Benson's frozen face. (One of the neatest things about the Avenger's paralyzed face was that, although immobile, it was extremely plastic, allowing him to mold his fave to look like anyone he wanted. Alas, this ability was also written out.) Too little, too late. As I noted above, Richard Benson was the last of the major pulp heroes.
The Frosted Death was the fifth book in the series, originally published in The Avenger January 1, 1940 issue. The "Death" was was a laboratory created white mold that clung to flesh and propagated wildly, quickly covering the victim's entire body. The mold would burrow into every pore of the victim, eventually causing a painful death by apphyxiation. conact with the skin meant certain doom -- there was no cure. Who would create such a terrible thing? The venal partner of a downtown chemical company, that's who. And why? To sell to a certain unnamed European country bent on conquest, that's why. Because the country is not named, for the sake of convenience let us call it "Schmazi Schmermany."
Naturally, the Frosted Death is accidently released in the city. And, just as naturally, The Avenger is on the case. And you know that Mac (being a chemical genius) would come up with a cure. But Mac and Smitty are kidnapped, along with the cure, by agents of Schmazi Schmermany and are taken to the desolate New England coast where a Scmazi Schmermany submarine awaits delivery of massive amounts of the Frosted Death. One of the neat things about the Frosted Death is, if introduced in the nasal cavity, it travels to the brain, rendering the victim a mindless zombie for the next few days before the mold kills them. Of course the Schmazi Schmermany baddies insert the mold up the unsuspecting noses of Mac and Smitty.
The Avenger, working alone, must finad and destroy the Frosted Death factory, destroy the submarine and all the Schmazis, rescue Mac and Smitty, put paid to the venal chemical company executive, and stop the Frosted Death in its tracks. Can he do it? You betcha.
As with stories of that time and ilk, there is some moral amibiguity that might disturb the modern reader. On the plus side, the overt racism often found in these tales is completely missing. All in all, a fast, enjoyable, pulpish read.
*Explaining the missing August 1940 issue: time was needed to revise manuscripts already written but not yet published,
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
THE GREEN FIELDS OF FRANCE
My go-to song for Veteran's Day, this time sung by The High Kings.
May your day be thoughtful and grateful in remembrance of those to whom we owe so much.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8e9-CABNGKM
May your day be thoughtful and grateful in remembrance of those to whom we owe so much.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8e9-CABNGKM
BAD JOKE WEDNESDAY
A teacher was talking to her class about flags. She had a book titled Flags of the World and she opened it up to show the class various flags. She turned the page to the American flag and asked the class if they knew which country had that flag. Susie raised her hand, stood up beside her desk, and said, "Our country."
"Very good, Susie," the teacher told her. "Now can you tell me the name of our country?"
Susie nodded vigorously and said, "Tis of thee."
"Very good, Susie," the teacher told her. "Now can you tell me the name of our country?"
Susie nodded vigorously and said, "Tis of thee."
Tuesday, November 10, 2015
ALLEN GATOR
Ron Condon and Josh White, Jr. perform Tom Paxton's children's song. I'm sure that rumors of this song wafting from Bill Crider's house in Alvin, Texas, at odd hours of the day and night are greatly exaggerated.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4zX9_Go6_bc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4zX9_Go6_bc
Monday, November 9, 2015
OVERLOOKED FILM: SUNSET MURDER CASE (1938)
Here's an interesting film starring Hattie Helen Gould Beck. Who's she? I hear you say. You may know her better as burlesque star Sally Rand, the woman who brought the fan dance to a red-blooded male public. A one-time circus performer, she did stage work and landed some film roles in the 1920s. In 1927 she joined Cecil B. DeMille's company where DeMille renamed her "Sally Rand." Her career was going well until the advent of sound when her pronounced lisp became a disadvantage. Switching gears, Sally carved out a notch fo herself as an exotic dancer. Her Lady Godiva routine at the 1933 Chicago World's Fair brought her a few indecent exposure charges (she was arrested four times in a single day!), as well as ever-lasting fame. A few years later she gifted the world with the bubble dance. One of her four husbands was Tod Robbins, the writer of The Unholy Three (filmed twice, once in 1925 and once in 1930, starring Lon Chaney in both films) and of the story "Spurs" (filmed as the classic movie Freaks). Her liteary influence has extended to both Robert A. Heinlein (who modeled several of his characters on her) and Max Allan Collins (whose character Nathan Heller romances her). Football coaches at the University of Delaware named a football play after her.
In Sunset Murder Case, the last of her 26 films, Sally plays a young woman who goes undecover as a stripper to find the killer of her policeman father. I think it's safe to say that the film was not noted for its mystery content (nor, I fear, for great acting). Still it's a fun flick that you may enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUQm4VwpFfUhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUQm4VwpFfU
In Sunset Murder Case, the last of her 26 films, Sally plays a young woman who goes undecover as a stripper to find the killer of her policeman father. I think it's safe to say that the film was not noted for its mystery content (nor, I fear, for great acting). Still it's a fun flick that you may enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUQm4VwpFfUhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUQm4VwpFfU
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