Small House of Everything

Small House of Everything

Thursday, April 9, 2026

FORGOTTEN BOOK: TYLER CROSS: ANGOLA

Tyler Cross:  Angola, written by Fabien Nury, with art  by Bruno and colors by Laurence Crook, 2019; originally published in French in 2014.

To supplement their line of cutting edge crime novels, Hard Case Crime began publishing a series of graphic novels and comic books in 2017, some original and some reprinted from foreign sources.  As with their novels, the Hard Case Crime graphic novels re amazingly varied and uniformly entertaining.  I've read 22 of the (by my count) 34 graphic novels thus far published and am hoping to read the reminder this year.

Tyler Cross :  Angola is a follow up to the earlier Tyler Cross: Black Rock, which Hard Case published the year before.  Tyler Cross is a 1950s criminal for hire who would fit right in to a Quentin Tarantino movie -- tough, ruthless, unforgiving.

When what appeared to be an easy job goes wrong, Cross is caught and sent to the Louisiana State P:ententiary in Angola, a maximum security hellhole surrounded by swamp and infested with cruel and psychotic guards and corrupt and venal officials.  To make matters worse, a price has been put on Tyler's head by the Sicilian mob, many of whose members are Tyler's fellow prisoners.  Tyler survives beatings, torture, and attempts on his life, eventually making a desperate bid for freedom, but escaped prisoners are invariably caught and killed.  Tyler has an additional purpose other than mere escape:  those who betrayed him and set him up for arrest must pay.  Any resemblance to Richard Stark's Parker not coincidental; the author acknowledges Parker an an importance influlence.

A violent, uncompromising graphic novel with effective, blocky artwork by "Bruno" (Bruno Thielleaux), which provides a pared-down cinematic feel to the story.

Nury is a popular French comic book artist and screenwriter, perhaps best known for his graphic novel The Death of Stalin.  At least one further adventure of Tyler Cross has been published in France, taking the anti-hero to Miami.  I'm hoping it will also be released in English  by Hard Case Cri/me. 

Recommended for those who like their comics dark and gritty.

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

BUCK ROGERS IN THE 25TH CENTURY (NOVEMBER 7, 1932)

 Buck Rogers, the creation of author Philp Francis Now, after which Rick Yager took over the writing dutieslan, made his debut in the August 1928 issue of Amazing Stories with a novella titled Armageddon 2419 A.D.   At that time, he was simply Anthony Rogers, a world War I veteran born in 1898.  While investigating an abandon=ed coal mine in Pennsylvania, Rogers was trapped by a cave-in and was exposed to radioactive gas, which placed him in a coma, waking 429 years later, to an America conquered by the Han (evoking both the Chinese and the Hun).  A sequel, The Airlords of Han, was published the following year in the March issue of the magazine.  The two stories were combined in 1962 to form the novel Armageddon 2419 A.D.,  by which time Anthony Rogers had long been known in popular culture as Buck Rogers.

Buck Rogers began his comic strip life on January 7, 1929, and continued until July 8, 1967.  It  is believed that newspaper syndicator John F. Dille gave the character his new first name to in= honor of then-popular cowboy star Buck Jones.  Nowlan scripted the strip through 1939. after which Rick Yager took over the writing duties; others writing the strip before it closed included Ray Russell and Fritz Leiber.  The artwork was originally handles by Dick Calkins and Russell Keaton, followed  by Rick Yager, and later, George Tuska.  The strip was revived from 1979 to 1983.  Over the years there have been ten different comic book titles about the character from various publishers.  In 1933 and 1935, Buck appeared in booklets from the Kellogg Cereal company, and in twelve Little big Books from 1933 to 1943.  Over the past 48 years, Buck Rogers has appeared in numerous novels, short stories and gaming tie-ins, as well as in video, role-playing, and board games.

A ten-minute Buck Rogers film was produced for the 1933 Chicago World's Fair, and was later shown in department stores to promote Buck Rogers merchandise.  A 12-part serial film featuring Buster Crabbe was released in 1939, later to be edited into three distinct feature films.  A half-hour television series appeared in 1950; three different actors played Buck during the run of the series (Eva Marie Saint was one of the two actresses to play Wilma Deering) -- only one episode of the series is believed to have survived.  Buck fared much better in the 1979-1981 NBC television series starring Gil Gerard (although an actors' strike halted filming during part of 1980).  The original pilot for the series was released as a theatrical film six months before the show itself premiered.

Skipping over the plethora of Buck Rogers toys produced (usually some form of ray gun, space gun, or water pistol, or cast-iron figures), we come to the the radio show.

Buck Rogers, the first ever science fiction radio series, aired Monday through Thursday as a 15-minute program on CBS Radio, beginning on November 7, 1932.  In 1936, it ran on a Monday, Wednesday, Friday schedule until May of the year.  Mutual Radio brought it back for a three-day-a-week schedule from April to July 1939, and then as a half-hour Saturday program from May to July 1940.  Finally, Mutual revived is as a 15-minute weekday program from September 1946 to March 1947.

The episode linked  below is the very first episode of the CBS radio program.  Here we learn of the origin of Buck Rogers and meet his companions Dr. Huer and Wilma Deering, as well as experience a whole bunch of pseudo-scientific gobbledegook.  We also get to meet Popsicle Pete, a shill for frozen= treats on a stick.  Buck Rogers was probably voiced by Matt Crowley, who was also a voice for Dick Tracy, Jungle Jim, Casey Crime Photographer, Batman, and Mark Trail.  Adele Ronson was most likely the voice of Wilma, and Edgar Stehli the voice of Dr. Huer.

Enjoy.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=luvboLC6y3U


SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: BY MOONLIGHT

"By Moonlight" by John Gregory Betancourt (first published in I, Vampire:  Interviews with the Undead, edited by Jean (Marie) Stine* & Forrest J. Ackerman, 1995; reprinted in The Horror Megapack:  25 Modern and Classic Horror Stories, edited by John Gregory Betancourt, 2011)

A gimmick story which, although an entertaining rest, careens off the trick and fails when lone examines the gimmick.  The gimmick also precludes a deeper examination of various plot points which would have otherwise been more interesting.

In brief, it is sometime in the mid-Nineties 6and Tucker Anderson has returned to the abando=n=ed family farm where he was raised.  His father, whom he has not spoken to for over fifty years, has died and Tucker has decided to pay one last visit to the place.  Tucker had left the farm in 1944 for the army.  While on a plane returning from the bombing of Dresden, he was shot down by German artillery. and was captured after parachuting to safety.  He and a number of other prisoners found themselves locked in a railroad car by his captors; one of the prisoners had an untreated broken arm which had become infected and would probably kill him.  Late at night, when all were asleep on the moldy hay in the railroad car, the injured man kicked out in his sleep and woke Tucker.  Tucker moved away to a dark corner of the car so the unconscious man would not kick him again.  Then the door to the car opened and a dark figure entered.  It went to the injured man and bent over him.  Tucker then saw the creature -- it could not be considered a man:  "He had eyes that glowed like a cat's, only red, and fangs like a snake.  Blood covered his face and hands,  As I watched, a long thin white tongue licked it from his lips and chin."  The creature looked at Tucker and Tucker felt himself go numb.  Then there was a lapping sound at his throat...

When Tucker regained consciousness, the railroad car was empty, the door opened, and allied bombers were striking the camp.  He ran for safety to the nearby woods.  There he stayed, catching small animals for food.  His reflexes were sharper, he was able to mesmerize the animals into some sort of trance, the blood tasted good and nourished him.  He was able to mesmerize local households, rendering the people unconscious, allowing him to steal soap, a razor, clean clothes, and money.  then came the day when the blood lust was too powerful and he killed a five-year-old boy, burying the corpse in the woods.  At first he was horrified by the deed; later, not as much.

Tucker spent five years in Germany before using his mesmerizing powers to return to America.  There, he called his mother on the telephone; she hung up after curing him for playing such a cruel joke as pretending to be her dead son.  He never saw or spoke to her again.  She died in 1979.

Tucker never understood why or how he became a vampire, and never met another vampire -- although he felt that a number of historical mysteries could be explained if a vampire were involved.  For a while, he gathered a coterie of followers around him but was never able to turn any of them into one such as himself.  Now at 60 (actually more like seventy-ish, according to the internal framework of the story, making his age a glaring error that should have been caught in editing) and looking like he was in his mid-thirties, Tucker is examining the slowly decaying ruin that was his childhood home.

Okay.  HERE COMES THE SPOILER!  

Tucker finds his father's false teeth.  The canines are unusually long and sharp.  He examines those teeth against his own in a dusty mirror, and they are exactly the same size and shape!  Tucker realizes that his father was a vampire.  It was not the vampire who% had bitten him during World War II that had turned him.  Tucker had been a vampire all along, inheriting the trait from his father.  The only difference being that Tucker's blood lust while hiding in the woods had awakened that part of him, while his father's blood lust had never been awakened.  In another life, perhaps, Tucker would not have turned.  He could have had a normal life, perhaps gotten married and have children, and have aged normally as his father had.


Okay.  Why the hell did his father have false teeth made with the long, sharp, serpent-like canines?  Dunno.

There's a lot to unpack here, and the more you look at the gotcha at the end of the story, the more questions you have.  Tucker's experiences in the war, surviving in Germany, and his life thereafter would have made great fodder for a far more ambitious story.  But, as it is, we are left with a 1950s-style comic book plot one could drive a truck through.

Still, an interesting story if you squint.


John Gregory Betancourt is a popular science fiction and fantasy writer who has published a number of novels and short stories in various media franchises.  He founded a literary agency with George Scithers and Darryl Schweitzer and the three relaunched Weird Tales magazine.  In 1989, he founded Wildside Press with his wife, Kim; they entered the POD (Print on Demand) market nine years later, greatly expanding their catalog with both original works and reprints of out-of-print and out-of-copyright works.  He is an active editor of anthologies.  His writing career has taken a backseat to his publishing and editing work, although one hopes he will eventually return to original fiction.  John Clute has stated that Betancourt's "skills are greater than his achieved work might lead one to assume," which "given his clear intelligence and ambition, could change at will."   

*Jean Stine on the cover jacket and the Library of Congress catalog; Jean Marie Stine on the title page and copyright notice

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

MANDRAKE THE MAGICIAN: 12-EPISODE SERIAL (1939)

Mandrake the Magician and his assistant Lothar battle the evil criminal the Wasp, who is trying to steal a newly-developed radium energy machine -- and we all know that bad things will happen if bad guys ever get ahold of radium energy machine!

Mandrake the Magician was a popular comic strip created by Lee Falk  (who would go on to create the comic strip The Phantom) in 1934 and would continue for 79 years, ending in 2013.  Some historians consider Mandrake to be the first comic strip superhero.  This 12-part serial was the only authorized Mandrake film ever produced (there was an unauthorized Turkish film in then 1960s); at least four other films were attempted but were unproduced.  A Mandrake radio show ran non the Mutual Broadcast Network for just over 14 months in the early 1940s, and a Mandrake television show mad it to the pilot stage but no further.  Mandrake had better luck in animated television, appearing as a character in at least three series.  A Mandrake musical play was produced in thee late Seventies.  The character has also been the target of numerous parodies.

Warren Hull, who has also played the Green Hornet and the pulp hero the Spider in films, stars as Mandrake the Magician.  Al Kikume, a Hawaiian-born actor who had a long carerr both playing native roles (Tarzan the Fearless, Jungle Girl, Perils of Nyoka) and as a stuntman, took on the role as Lothar, Mandrake's assistant.  Forbes Murray (whose lengthy career consisted of mainly uncredited roles) is the scientist who has invented the radium energy machine.  Eye candy in this production was provided by Doris Weston (The Singing Marine, Delinquent Parents, Chip of the Flying U) as Murray's daughter Betty.  The Claw was played by Edward Earle, who has an astonishing 452 acting credits on IMDb, including East Lynne,  Scattergood Baines, and The Harvey Girls; of course, thee Claw also had a secret identity, which was obvious from the get-go but was revealed as a "surprise" in thee last episode.

The episodes were directed by Norman Danning and Sam Nelson, and were scripted by Joseph F. Poland, Basil Dickey, and Ned Dandy.

Here's everything you could ask for in a 1930's serial -- thrills, danger, excitement, suspense, cliffhangers (eleven of 'em!), and some pretty stiff acting!  All twelve episodes are here.  Enjoy!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NCO0aAqSZpU&list=PLL3oll31FNtKednhdpIObwuQICV00qOX8


Monday, April 6, 2026

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, MERLE HAGGARD! (AND A NOD TO AN AVIATION PIONEER)

You really didn't think I'd let this day go by without mentioning it is the 136th birthday of Dutch engineer and aircraft designer Anthony Fokker, he of "Yeah, but these Fokkers were Messerschmitts!" fame, did you?

Anyway, on to Merle Haggard, born this day in 1937, and one of the most influential and most-loved country singers of our time.

Over a career that spanned five decades, Haggard had 38 number one hits on the country charts.  His signature song, "Okie from Muskogee," was considered by some to be an anthem for the "silent majority" of the time and helped usher a plethora of patriotic-themed country songs; Haggar later said (in 2003) that he had different views back in the 18=970 and that he was "dumb as a rock" when he wrote that sone.

Haggard had a difficult youth.  His father's death when Merle was nine deeply affected him.  By age thirteen he was caught stealing and writing bad checks; later he was caught shoplifting and sent to a juvenile detention center.  Then followed a series of escapes and captures.  He escaped from a detention center in Modesto but was arrested for truancy and petty larceny and was sent to another detention center.  After escaping from that one, he was sent to a high security facility for fifteen months, only to be arrested again for beating a boy during a burglary attempt.  At eighteen and newly married, he was caught robbing a roadhouse and sent to Bakersfield jail.  An attempted escape saw him transferred to San Quentin, where he learned his wife was pregnant with another man's child.  At San Quentin, he ran a gambling and brewing operation, was caught, and spent a week in solitary, where he met noted killer and author  Caryl Chessman, who was soon to be executed.  A jail house friend, had escaped, killed a policeman, and was recaptured and was also sentenced to die.  All of this made Haggard begin to reassess his life.  He earned a GED, worked steadily in a prison job, and joined a jail house country band.  Another pivotal moment came when Johnny Cash performed at the prison in 1960 and sang "Folsom Prison Blues."  Twelve years later, and now a country music star, California governor Ronald Ragan granted Haggard a full and unconditional pardon.

Haggard has received 20 awards from the Academy of  Country Music, six awards from the Country Music Association, and the 2006 BMI Icon award.  He was won four Grammys, including a lifetime Achievement Award, and was a Kennedy Center Honoree in 2010.  He has been inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, the Nashville songwriters Hall of Fame, and the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame.  Over his career, Haggard released 66 studio albums, 8 live albums, 26 compilation albums, 84 singles, and 13 music videos.


"Okie from Muskogee"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68cbjlLFl4U


"Pancho and Lefty" -- with Willie Nelson

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UoKvUYbGu7A


"Are the Good Times Really Over"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sIKUkcNeZfQ


"Sing Me Back Home"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W-ofzciulJU


"My Favorite Memory"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y-Ys0vTSsTo


"It's All Going to Pot" -- with Willie Nelson

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6c6eUeoa9Q


"Going Where the Lonely Go"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KZW8gRR32ts


"I Won't Give Up My Train"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uwnHDonqX6I


"Big City"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MVQ0eOMY7z4


"Workin' Man Blues"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EuaKBLENvfk


"The Fightin' Side of Me" -- withToby Keith

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2VJkypo8jcY


Sunday, April 5, 2026

EASTER SUNDAY HYMN TIME

Michael Eldridge.

For those who believe, have a happy and meaningful Easter.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uGNCIL4uIqY

Also, today is the International Day of Conscience, highlighting the vital role of conscience as a guiding force in achieving global peace.  Thus, many of us have two reasons today for reflection.


Friday, April 3, 2026

DAREDEVIL BATTLES HITLER #1 (JULY 1941)

I have been watching (and enjoying) Season Two of Marvel Television's Daredevil:  Born Again, so I thought I would take a look at the original Daredevil, who burst onto the comic book scene in 1940.  understand that this Daredevil has no relation to the Marvel Comics Daredevil, although this Daredevil --  now in the public domain -- in more recent appearances has changed his name to Reddevil or Doubledare or Death-Defying Devil, hoping to avoid lawsuits from Marvel.

Daredevil was created as a backup story for Silver Streak #6 (September 1940) by Jack Binder.  He was mute named Bart Hill, who as a child saw his father  murdered and himself branded by a hot iron, which- left a boomerang mark on his chest.  He grew up to become a "boomerang marksman," taking up a costume to exact vengeance on evil-doers.  By the following issue, both his name, costume, and backstory had been revamped by Jack Cole, the comic book editor who would go to create Plastic Man.  Daredevil was now Bill Hart and all mention  of muteness was dropped; for five issues, Daredevil would be pitted against Silver Streak's main villain, the Claw; this storyline cemented Daredevil's popularity, and he continued to appear monthly in Silver Streak through issue #17 (December 1941).  Before exiting Silver Streak, the character began his own title, Daredevil Battles Hitler (the official title; it was not intended as a one-off because the cover clearly listed #1; the title was most likely intended to increase sales -- although America has not entered the war, Hitler was the villain de jour; earlier that year in Comic Book Land, Captain America had given Das Fuhrer a well=needed punch in the jaw.)  Issue #2 officially changed the title of the comic book to Daredevil ComicsDaredevil Comics continued until issue #134 (September 1956), although the character himself was phased out after issue #69, in favor of the supporting characters the Little Wise Guys (Curly, Jocko, Peewee, and Scarecrow) who first appeared with issue #13 (October 1942) -- a fifth Little Wise Guy, Meatball, was literally killed off in issue #15.  Daredevil did make it back to his own title for two brief appearances, in issues 79 and 80 (October & November 1950).

So let's get it on putting Adolf in his place, okay?  The story is divided into seven "chapters," all written by Charles Biro and drawn by Biro, Jack Cole, and Harry Anderson.  The saga brings in many of the comic book heroes from Silver Streak.  In the first chapter, Hitler is planning to invade England.  Winston Churchill asks Daredevil and Silver Streak to keep watch on a mysterious cottage in the Downs.  A rip-snorting naval battle ensues.  We meet Whiz, the Silver Streak's falcon, as well as such baddies as Hitler, Goebbels. Goring, Himmler, Lord Hee Haw. Grand Admiral Raeder, Field Marshal Brauchitsch, Mussolini, and a Nazi fortune teller.

Then, Hitler seeks the Claw's help to aid him and the Japanese to attack Singapore and destroy the British. Daredevil goes undercover to foil the plot.

In Chapter Three, Hitler tries to conquer Africa from within, thereby cutting Britain from her colonial empire.  Daredevil and white hunter and soldier of fortune Lance Hale react.

Dickie Dean, Boy Inventor, has come up with a fool-proof decoding machine, but Nazi agents have stolen it.  Daredevil, Dickie, and Dickie's friend Zip Todd must stop the machine from reaching Berlin.

The penultimate chapter has Daredevil, Cloud Curtis, and the RAF fighting off a Nazi blitzkrieg, ending with an air battle between Cloud Curtis and Reichsmarshall Hermann Goring.

In the final chapter, Grand Admiral Raeder is order to patrol British waters and sink every ship in sight  Daredevil and the Pirate Prince swing into action.  The Pirate Prince is just that -- an old-fashioned sword-wielding pirate with an old sailing ship; the sword comes in handy for "pantsing" Raeder most unceremoniously.

An interesting issue.  but, alas, Daredevil never got to bop Hitler on the jaw as Captain America had done.  **sigh**

Enjoy.

https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=35416