From 1951, Clara Ward.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7TRiikf8Cvg
America's 250th anniversary is coming up and there are many ways -- both appropriate and non-appropriate -- one can celebrate. You could take a trip to the Reflecting Pool and count the dead ducks, but that's not appropriate at all, in addition to being very sad. Or, could read this comic book featuring "The World's Greatest Hero,": Uncle Sam! Uncle Sam was a superhero created by the great Will Eisner; he made his debut in Quality Comics' National Comics #1 (July 1940), and continued to 1944. Uncle Sam was the spirit of a slain patriotic soldier from the American Revolutionary War; and would appear whenever the country needed him -- and the country needed him in the early Forties. His sidekick is Buddy Smith. Uncle Sam's mystical powers included superhuman strength, speed, invulnerability, some ESP, and the ability to change his size and also to transport himself and others to "the Heartland" His powers were dependent on America's patriotism; if America loses its sense of patriotism, then...poof!
The character came under the aegis of DC comics in the 1950s and has been used sporadically in different guises and with different backstories.
"The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse" (Death, Pestilence, War, and Famine) "are once more loosed upon the land!!! The thunder of their hoofbeats is the roar of the cannon --- their mad laughter is the roar of falling bombs!! Who can challenge their triumph? Who -- but Uncle Sam! The spirit of a people who will never be conquered!!" Heeding the call, Uncle Sam and Buddy head out in their private plain to Lua Island kin the South Pacific, where a small company of marines have been holding out against a terrible force. Uncle Sam uses his skills and ingenuity to defeat a Japanese invasion and send whatever enemies he and buddy have not killed back to Japan. The Four Horsemen are in retreat from Uncle Sam!
"Murder!" Uncle Sam and Buddy pit themselves aginst the fiendish "Dart Killer." No one knows who he is or why he kills. "Uncle Sam gives warning...clues will be many and suspects will be numerous...but think...before you name the villain!"
Now let's take a brief break from Uncle Sam's adventures for "Heroic Exploits of the War: Attack on Dieppe," a true war story. For six pages, British, Canadian, and American troops give what for to the Nazis. Yay, us!
"Pottsy McGraw and Cloutin' Clammy" are two bootlegging thieves who have stolen almost all the rubber tires in the city and are expecting a jackpot price. Of course tires are not just tiers; they are a vital part of the country's war products. As such, Uncle Sam is determined to stop the bootleggers. Cloutin' Clammy is a strong as a gorilla and he soon makes mince meat of a barrage of cops and guards trying to stop the pair. Uncle Sam knocks him out with one punch, b ut as he's doing so, Pottsy McGraw is aiming a machine gun at him. But wait! Buddy leaps onto Pottsy's back to spoil his aim, but a bullet hits Buddy instead. Uncle Sam picks up Buddy's body and races him to a hospital, leaving the two villains to get away with a large supply of tires. With Buddy recovering, Uncle Sam is back on the chase. Pottsy and Cloutin' Clammy are selling the tires to a low-down, dirty Nazi scum hen Uncle Sam comes in with fists a-blazing. Uncle Sam knocks out seven (by my count) Nazis, as well as Cloutin' Clammy, while Buddy (who left his hospital bed to get in on the action) clonks Pottsy of the head. Pottsy realizes that he was a foo to fight against Uncle Sam -- no one can beat him; Pottsy decides to join the army when he gets out.
"Iron" is a brief text story in which Nazis, as usual, get the short end of the stick.
"The Secret of the Wax Museum" Dastardly villains are out to kill and maim our troops during war games. Japanese spies and agents have infiltrated the war games and are using our weapons against our troops. Who is the Japanese mastermind behind this plot? And why does Chiang Chan, special war observer for the Chinese government, look so suspicious?
A gung-ho, patriotic issue with some interesting artwork by Al Gabriele, who manages to make a caricature out of all the villains.
So celebrate our 250th with this comic book (and, perhaps, a healthy dose of Reflecting Pool memes).
https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=102129&comicpage=&b=i
Truckers by Terry Pratchett (first published in 1989; included in the 1993 omnibus The Bromeliad)
This is one of those young adult novels that could, and should be, enjoyed by everyone.
Nomes are a race of tiny four-inch tall creatures who resemble humans. They are short-lived -- about ten years, but don't tell them that; for nomes, their lifespans seem perfectly normal.
Masklin is a young nome who lives in the Outside where life can be dangerous. There, no one ever heard of a nome dying of old age; nomes either wandered off on hunting trips and were never seen again, or, they were seen as they were eaten by predators -- usually foxes. The rigors of life on the outside are taking a toll on Maskin's tribe. In fact, the only young people remaining in the tribe are Masklin and the female Grimma; the few remaining members are elderly, including old Torrit (the ineffectual leader merely because he was, at ten, the oldest, and Granny Morkle, a tough old bird who is nearly as old as Torrit, and who reminds me of Abner's Mammy Yokum. The rest of the elderly are even more quarrelsome and demanding than these two. Masklin is the only hunter in the group and his usual prey are rats, which are torn apart and eaten raw once Masklin is able to drag the large bodies home.
Things cannot go on are they are, so Masklin decides to move the entire tribe to someplace -- any place safer -- where food may be more abundant. Humans are the big and rather dumb people who also inhabit this world, although whatever they do makes little sense to the nomes. Masklin manages to get his entire tribe loaded into the back of a delivery truck, destination unknown. It's a frightening journey for the tiny nomes, and it ends at the garage of a large department store. The nomes have no idea what a department store is, or how they will survive there. They are surprised by the appearance of strange nome, Angalo, and his pet rat on a leash.
It seems there are nomes living in the department store, under the floorboard and in hidden areas...quite a lot of nomes...nomes who know of nothing other than the store, Arnold Bros. (est. 1905). To these nomes the Outside is just a terrible myth. The nomes at Arnold Bros. (est. 1905) are divided kinto many quarrelsome tribes, depending on where they are located. Tribes include the Ironmongri, the Corsetri, Modes, the Millineri, the Haberdasheri, the Young Fashions, the Del Icatesson, the Stationari, and others -- all with their particular talents and odd beliefs. The Stationari include a few nomes who are able to read (badly) and can interpret the signs throughout the store (badly). The store itself was created and ruled by the god-like Arnold Bros. (est. 1905), whom no one have ever seen but know that he exists because it is his store. Life is pretty regular at the store. There are definite season, such as Christmas Fayre, January Sales, Back to School Week, Spring into Spring Fashions, Summer Bargains, and so on. the store nomes know these are seasons blessed by Arnold Bros. (est. 1905)because there are signs. the religion of these nomes includes the acknowledgment of the blessed Bargains Galore and the evil (and totally scary) Prices Slashed!. Lately there have been confusing signs that the nomes cannot understand: Closure Sale, and Everything Must Go.
Old Torrit has a precious possession, the Thing -- a black rectangle that seems to do nothing that has been handed down from leader to leader over the centuries. At one time, the Thing had helped the nomes and advised them but now it is silent. Torri, whenever he needed to dispense some advice, would look at the blank Thing and make up whatever felt best to tell the tribe. but now the blank thing was beginning to light up and started speaking. The Thing was the Flight Recording and Navigational Computer of a starship.
It seems the nomes were the survivors of a racr that once conquered the stars, or at least 94,563 that have been explored by nomes. Some fifteen thousand years ago, the starship sent an exploratory ship out which crashed on Earth. the surviving nomes gathered and began teaching human about such things as metallurgy and agriculture. while they themselves slowly slipped into barbarism and ignorance. The Thing began to be low on its power reserve and shut itself down until it could recharge. The proximity of the store and its electrical grid allowed it to do so. the thing was also able to access the stores computers and had some devasting news. the store was due to be demolished kin twenty-six days to make way for luxury apartments.
The store nomes refused to believe this. The store was their universe. Their forever universe. Surely Arnold Bros. (est.1905) in his benevolence would not allow the universe to be destroyed. Besides, there was nothing outside of the store except the fabled and surely mythical Outside.
It's up to Masklin to rally the thousands of store nomes and lead them to safety. But how? And where? The answer includes a wild ride in a stolen delivery truck, driven by dozens of tiny nomes who do not know what they are doing, using sticks, strings, and semaphors...and the store itself is not destroyed by Arnold Bros. (est. 1905) but by the nomes themselves who accidently blow it up, not with a loud Bang but with a much quieter whoosh! There is even a wild chase by a police car
Rest assured things work out, kind of. They have to, because there were two sequels, Diggers (1989) and Wings (1990). I'll get to them when I have a chance.
Truckers is a funny and sly satirical take on the way we think and react to the things around us when perception may not be our best ally. I recommend the book most heartily.
Pratchett (1948-2015), of course, was the author of the popular Discworld series of fantasy novels. For any who enjoy the skewed logic of that series, Truckers is a must.
I'm off to have cataract surgery this morning. As many of you know I am not looking forward to it because I am extremely phobic about my eyes. Anyway, this seems like a good time to post an episode of SOUNDS OF DARKNESS (also known as THE BLIND DETECTIVE), a South African radio show about blind FBI agent Lee Masters. After Masters, a top agent for the Bureau, loses his sight in a gun battle, he returns to work where the FBI has assigned junior agent Jerry Bridges to be his eyes. He has a loyal secretary in Samantha Darlington (call her "Sam," not "Darling"). Where the bad guys view his blindness as a weakness, Masters turns it into a strength.
The show aired on South Africa's Springbok Radio from 1967 through 1974. The lead actor, Tony Jay, had no previous acting experience when he moved from London to South Arica in 1966; Jay had been George Lucas's original choice to portray Obi-Wan Kenobi during the planning stages for Star Wars -- a role which eventually went to Alec Guinness. Ken White played Jerry Bridges, while Elaine Lee filled the role as Samantha Darlington. Although this program was produced and recorded in South Africa. the setting was America and the actors had Yankee accents.
"Traitor Beware" was the first episode of Sounds of Darkness, and "the stage is set for a series known for its atmosphere and suspense."
Enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mPRqm2UnMnM
"Sex Murder in Cameron" by Michael Fessier (from Manhunt, February 1953)
"Nice Bunch of Guys" by Michael Fessier (from Manhunt, May 1953)
"The Faceless Man" by Michael Fessier (from Manhunt, June 1953)
These three short stories -- the only ones by him to appear in Manhunt -- were added to/ the Stark House/Staccato Press edition of the Author's short novel Fully Dressed and in His Right Mind. After I had read that odd and compelling novel, I put off reading these stories for a few weeks because I feared the impact they might have on the book I had just finished; I found Fully Dressed to be both compelling and sui generis, and felt the additional stories might impact the effect the novel had on me. I think i made the right choice.
Manhunt was a hardboiled crime fiction magazine launched in late 1952 and lasted for 114 issues until May 1967. In it's heyday, it was considered a rightful heir to the legendary pulp magazine Black Mask. Manhunt was a joint venture between publisher Archer St. John and literary agent Scott Meredith, who served as editor under the pseudonym of John McCloud through the January 1956 issue. Meredith used the magazine to publish authors in his client stable, but the magazine was not strictly a closed shop -- occasionally another agent would submit a story that would be accepted, and the magazine would also print stories from known crime writers who were not clients of Meredith. I don't know if Fessier was a Meredith client, but the fact that his three stories were published in the space of five months indicates to me that he probably was a client, at least for that period in 1953.
"Sex Murder in Cameron" is the story of handsome Cass Buford, the richest, most powerful, and eligible man in a small mid-western town, and ugly duckling Linda Wells, a dull, poor girl whom Cass married, to the amazement of the entire community. Then Linda split Cass's head with an axe. Confessing to the murder without giving any explanation, she was tried, convicted, and hung. Linda's autopsy revealed a surprise twist to the story, which may or may not explain her motive. Unfortunately, the surprise ending did not truly resolve the questions raised. The story, flawed as it is, is a brilliant character sketch that keeps the reader turning the pages.
"A Nice Bunch of Guys" refers to the local loafers who hand out in from of a pool hall and endlessly rib the mentally defective newsboy Marty. Their jibes lead Marty to commit a crime, but they could not be to blame because of what a weirdo like Marty might do. Besides, they are a nice bunch of guys, just regular fellows. An interesting tale of the results of blind and ignorant cruelty.
"The Faceless Man" also shows what dangers ignorance can reveal. Orry Quinn, the worthless son of the worthless Pete Quinn, is fired for good reason from his job as a farm hand for Henry Rankin. About a week later, Rankin hires Claude Warren, a distant relative who had served several months in prison. Orry was a local boy and Claude was an outsider. Orry began to turn the town against Claude, claiming that he was a criminal and was most likely dangerous. Claude had made the mistake of accepting a ride from some people who had stolen a car and, when they were arrested, Claude was also arrested as an accomplice. Pretty Linda Hannaford, who had a dangerous habit of thinking for herself, soon found herself in love with Claude and wanted to marry him -- something her parents did not approve of. Onr day, Henry Rankin is found dead in a pool of blood at his farm house. Both Clause and Linda are missing, as is Henry's car. Orry began inciting the townspeople against Claude, and when the police found the pair, Claude had money on him that could not be accounted for with his wages. A viscous deputy beat Claude before bringing his to jail, and Orry is urging the people to take justice into their own hands and lynch Claude. Standing between Claude and he mob is Sheriff Ben Hodges, a man who career was build on "go along to get along." An interesting tale of the power of ignorance and the madness of crowds, tempered with a plea for humanity. How Ben Hodges resolves the situation makes for powerful reading, and -- for Ben -- the situation might never be resolved.
Al three stories are well-written and appear to be just slightly out of the boundaries of a typical Manhunt tale. The more I read of Fessier's work, the more I like.
All of the 1953 issues of Manhunt are available to be read online. While you are there, check out some of the other stories; the early issues of the magazine are amazing.
Addison "Jack" Randall (1906-1945) was a singing cowboy in a number of his early western, but soon transitioned into a typical cowboy hero. His older brother was Robert Livingston, one of the original Three Mesquiteers who had also played the Lone Ranger and Zorro. Randall appeared in thirty-five films over a nine-year career. In the early Forties, he changed his stage name to Alan Byron, hoping to boost his career; it did not work. He was married to actress Barbara Bennett, sister of Constance Bennett and Joan Bennett. He died after a fall from a horse while filming The Royal Mounted Rides Again; exactly what happened remains unclear: some claim he fell while trying to recover a hat he had dropped, others state that he had had a heart attack before falling.
In Oklahoma Terror, a crooked land dealer has discovered the gift that just keeps on giving: after selling a piece of property, he has his henchmen drive off the new owners, allowing him to sell the property again. As the movie opens, they have just driven off the fourth owners of a ranch. Well, this sort of shenanigans just will not hold, and rancher Jack Ridgley (Randall) and his buddy, "Fuzzy" Glass (Al "Fuzzy" St. John), are determined to put an end to the criminous activities.
The featured eye candy in this flick is Virginia Carroll, who appeared in a long string of B-westerns with such actors as Tex Ritter, Roy Rogers, Gene Autry, Johnny Mack Brown, Bill Elliott, and Whip Wilson; Carroll was married to Dick Tracy actor Ralph Byrd from 1936 until his death in 1957. Also featured in the film are Davison Clark (most of whose 152 IMDb film credits were in uncredited roles) as Cartwright, the grasping land dealer; Don Rowan (Flash Gordan Conquers the Universe, Toigh Kid. Brother Orchid); Glenn Strange (although he was in hundreds of westerns, he may best be remembered for playing the Frankenstein monster in three films from Universal -- House of Frankenstein, House of Dracula, and Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein); Tristram Coffin (King of the Rocket Men, Creature with the Atomic Brain, The Corpse Vanishes); and Rusty as Rusty the Wonder Horse (in thirteen Jack Randall westerns). Filling out the bill in named roles are Warren McCollum, Ralph Peters, and Nolan Willis.
Directed by Spencer Gordon Bennett (The Adventures of Sir Galahad, Captain Video: Master of the Stratosphere, Blackhawk: Fearless Champion of Freedom). Written by George Waggner as "Joseph West" (The Fighting Kentuckian, Phantom of Chinatown, Father Steps Out), from an original story by the film's producer, Lindsley Parsons (Headin' for the Rio Grande, Tex Rides with the Boy Scouts. The Utah Kid).
So, holster your six-shooter, partner, and saddle up to meet The Oklahoma Terror.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G6ME76Dhglw
Openers:
Clovis cracked an almond, nibbled it, then ate a raisin. He turned a yellow-irised, b;ck pupiled eye on his companion, August Von Lerner. His voice was bitter.
"I," he said, "am weary of all this. I desire to go away from it all."
"Ach," said August, "so many times this has been coming up of late."
He sighed in sorrow and gazed up out the cool veranda to the beautiful Brazilian coastline, watched the waves break upon the shore. "Such a lovely spot," he thought.
"Why are you not happy, my little one?" he asked.
"As you know," said Clovis, "I resent being referred to as little one. Aside from that, what is happiness? Is it spending the hundred or so years of one's life in unceasing changeless ness, with the only hope of variety being death?"
August Von Lerner shuddered.
"Do not mention death," he pleaded. It is far in the future for you. For me, it is a mere handful pof tomorrows."
-- Clovis, by Michael Fessier, 1948
A few weeks ago, I wrote about Fessier's first novel, Fully Dressed and in His Right Mind, an indescribable and inexplicable phantasmagoria that lingers long after one has read it. Clovis -- his second and last novel -- is a horse of a different color. Or, should I say, parrot.
For Clovis is a parrot, a most unique parrot, the result of centuries of cross-breeding by the Von Lerner family to develop a super-intelligent bird. Clovis is a multi-lingual philosopher and pendant, the only one of its kind; and August Von Lerner is the last remaining member of his family line, and -- to Clovis's mind -- a slow thinking one. Clovis desires for some purpose that would put his massive intellect to use; he is not getting it from August's narrow world. The books Clovis reads are beginning to bore him and August is so easily beaten at chess...
Clovis wants to go into the world, perhaps to the jungles of Brazil where he can meet and influence those of his own kind, using his talents to raise psittacids to new heights and glories. And so he ventures off, leaving August behind. But Clovis soon realizes that parrots do not understand any of the human languages he speaks, and the knowledge of parrot language had been bred out of his ancestors several generations ago. But Clovis perseveres, meeting a willing female parrot he calls Red-Head, who is more interested in mating than anything else, but Clovis has more noble pursuits in mind. Clovis fails in his efforts to bring civilization to parrot-kind and barely manages to escape with his life. This follows a pattern that follows Clovis throughout the book -- despite his best efforts, he fails because, despite his extreme intelligence, he really does not understand how people of animals work.
In rapid order, he is captured by a naked Brazilian Indian, whose wife wants to make a stew of him, is rescued by an unscrupulous fortune hunter who wants to put him on display and threatens to burn his feet if he resists (Clovis if deathly afraid of fire), finds himself on a freighter full of caged animals bound for America, and ends up in a pet shop where the most unsuitable people wish to buy him.
Eventually he is purchased by the ditzy Miss Caress Grobney and taken to her home, where she lives with her equally ditzy sister Lulu and Lulu's greedy and amoral husband, Sylvian Prent. Also in the household is the niece, Honeybird, who holds the keys to a the family immense fortune, and the surly butler Beamish. The other four members of the household are plotting to kill Hloneybird because they was all that "beautiful" money. clovis trie to stop them and is aided by Thad Campo, the fortune hunter who had captured Clovis in Brazil and then had lost him; Campo had followed Clovis to America, determined to get him back and place him on display.
Honeybird is a beautiful virgin and, although told by doctors that she is both frigid and sterile, wants nothing more than to have sex, especially with Campo. Soon, Clovis, honeybird and Campo are on the run from the four would-be murderers. They learn the harsh realities of attempting to profit from a leaned lecture on evolution by a talking parrot, the mundane facts of life of the film business, and the follies of a religious cult before everything is resolved, Clovis discovers his true purpose, and Honeybird learns she is a nymphomaniac.
This book had me smiling on every page, from the pedantry of Clovis to the human folly of everyone he met. It is a short book, merely 149 pages, with not a waster word. It is both satirical and farcical, but never really whimsical. The best word I could come up with to describe the novel is 'sly." A true wonder of a read. As I was happily turning the pages I kept thinking of how much fun Fessier must have had writing it.
Incoming: I'm fairly sure I already have some of these lurking in the bowels of Mount TBR; if so, my loss will be the Salvation Army's gain.
The Kiss
Before you kissed me only winds of heaven
Had kissed me, and the tenderness of rain --
Now you have come, how can I care for kisses
Like those again?
I sought the sea, she sent her winds to meet me,
They surged about me singing of the south --
I turned my head away to keep still holy
Your kiss upon my mouth.
And swift sweet rains of shining April weather
Found not my lips where living kisses are;
I bowed my head lest they put out my glory
As rain puts out a star.
I am my love's and he is mine forever,
Sealed with a seal and safe forevermore --
Think you that I could let a beggar enter
Where a king stood before?
-- Sara Teasdale