Monday, September 10, 2012

Injury update

This morning I had an appointment with my orthopedic surgeon and my collar bone injury is healing fine. Not fully healed yet. The doctor said I am at what he had expected at 6 weeks. Looking at the X-rays I could see how the breakage had healed thus far. I go back in another 6 weeks. I also start physical therapy next week.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Burden Of Guilt by Carter Brown

Every bedroom door opens for Al Wheeler.
But behind one waits a woman who likes her sex mixed with murder!

Robert McGinnis Cover
 Death By The Dollar
It started with a naked corpse of a call girl by a pool. It looked like the usual vicious mixture of sex and murder until the trail of blood led Al Wheeler into the gold-plated world of corporate executives and crooked labor unions.

Horwitz Photo Cover
Wheeler knew that where there was big money, every man's life had a price tag, his own included. And every woman's invitation to bed might be an invitation to murder!

Signet Photo Cover
 Printing History
Written by Alan G Yates (1923-1985)

Horwitz Publications
Horwitz Group Books
Numbered Series #152 (1971)
ISBN 7255 0076

New American Library
Signet Books
P4219 (April 1970)
Y7885 (January 1978)

Trivia
Al Wheeler's sidekick through most of his adventures was a Sergeant Polnik. Polnik is killed in this title.

Friday, September 7, 2012

The Moving Finger by Milton Bass

Benny's Blues
You're Benny Freedman, and you have a few little problems. You have the gruesome death of your beautiful you wife to handle, You have her six million dollar legacy in your hands to spend. And now you have to crack a case involving a murdered used car mogul with a missing finger, a gorgeous widow who believes that sex is the best medicine for mourning, and a religious cult that worships money and makes a sacrament of slaughter..........


Benny Freedman
Half Jewish, half Irish, Benny Freedman is not everyman's image of a cop. A poetry reading martial arts disciple with a great appreciation for beautiful language and beautiful women. Benny has a special gift for finding and fighting trouble in California's fast lane. It's not easy, but being hard is another one of those things Benny does very well........

Printing History
Written by Milton Bass

New American Library
Signet Books
ISBN 451-14110
February 1986

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Captives of Corruption by Reuben Paul

Captives of Corruption


Professor Kiedmuth Booker had disappeared by assuming another identity. He had had to escape from the consequences of his own work on viruses, which the Nazi regime wanted to develop into a vile and horrifying weapon to be used against civilian populations. As the only man capable of completing the work, Professor Booker had refused to go down in history as mankind's betrayer. By a quirk of fate, Booker, in his new identity, had been caught up with others and thrown into a concentration camp. Had the Nazis discovered that they actually had Booker in their own hands, the only solution to him would have been death. But out of love for his beautiful daughter, Freda, he had not only to survive the camp, he had to escape from it. Soon, Kiedmuth, Freda, and her lover, Dr Kurt Jager, were plotting an escape from Germany. An escape that could only be carried out by the deaths of all the workers at the laboratory.

Printing History
Written by Reuben Paul

Calvert Publishing Company
Sydney Australia
No date.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Crime Fiction Alphabet: Letter P

Another week gone by and another letter in the Crime Fiction Alphabet meme sponsored over at Kerrie's blog at Mysteries in Paradise. The rules are simple. Our posts must be related to either the first letter of a book's title, the first letter of an author's first name, or the first letter of the author's surname, or even maybe a crime fiction "topic". So this week my contribution will be................Perry Mason and Phillip Marlowe. This week I could not decide what to post. But over the long weekend I watched a lot of Perry Mason made for TV movies and today I watched Dick Powell as Phillip Marlowe in Murder, My Sweet from 1944.So I decided to do a double entry of two of the memorable characters in crime fiction.

P is for Phillip and Perry

Philip Marlowe is a fictional character created by Raymond Chandler in a series of novels from 1939 to the author’s death in 1959. Marlowe first appeared under that name in The Big Sleep published in 1939. Chandler's early short stories, published in pulp magazines like Black Mask and Dime Detective, featured similar characters with names like "Carmady" and "John Dalmas". Some of those short stories were later combined and expanded into novels featuring Marlowe. Philip Marlowe's character is foremost within the genre of hardboiled crime fiction that originated in the 1920s in which Dashiell Hammett's The Continental Op and Sam Spade first appeared. Chandler's treatment of the detective novel exhibits an effort to develop the form. His first full length book, The Big Sleep, was published when Chandler was 51, his last, Playback at 70. Seven novels were produced in the last two decades of his life, with an eighth being posthumously completed by Robert B. Parker and published in 1989.

The Novels
The Big Sleep (1939)....
Farewell, My Lovely (1940).
The High Window (1942)...
The Lady in the Lake (1943)...
The Little Sister (1949)...
The Long Goodbye (1953)...
Playback (1958)...
Poodle Springs (1959/1989 (completed by Robert B. Parker)



 Perry Mason is a fictional character, a defense attorney, authored by Erle Stanley Gardner. Perry Mason was featured in more than 80 novels and short stories, most of which had a plot involving his client's murder trial. Typically, Mason was able to establish his client's innocence by implicating another character, who then confessed. Gardner had over 135 million copies of his books in print in America alone in the year of his death in 1969, made him one of the bestselling authors of all time. The character of Perry Mason was portrayed each weekday on a long-running radio series, followed by well-known depictions on film and television, including Television’s most successful and longest-running lawyer series from 1957 to 1966 starring Raymond Burr.

The Novels
The Case of the Velvet Claws (1933)
The Case of the Sulky Girl (1933)
The Case of the Curious Bride (1934)
The Case of the Howling Dog (1934)
The Case of the Lucky Legs (1934)
The Case of the Caretaker's Cat (1935)
The Case of the Counterfeit Eye (1935)
The Case of the Sleepwalker's Niece (1936)
The Case of the Stuttering Bishop (1936)
The Case of the Dangerous Dowager (1937)
The Case of the Lame Canary (1937)
The Case of the Shoplifter's Shoe (1938)
The Case of the Substitute Face (1938)
The Case of the Perjured Parrot (1939)
The Case of the Rolling Bones (1939)
The Case of the Baited Hook (1940)
The Case of the Silent Partner (1940)
The Case of the Empty Tin (1941)
The Case of the Haunted Husband (1941)
The Case of the Careless Kitten (1942)
The Case of the Drowning Duck (1942)
The Case of the Buried Clock (1943)
The Case of the Drowsy Mosquito (1943)
The Case of the Black-Eyed Blonde (1944)
The Case of the Crooked Candle (1944)
The Case of the Golddigger's Purse (1945)
The Case of the Half-Wakened Wife (1945)
The Case of the Borrowed Brunette (1946)
The Case of the Fan-Dancer's Horse (1947)
The Case of the Lazy Lover (1947)
The Case of the Lonely Heiress (1948)
The Case of the Vagabond Virgin (1948)
The Case of the Cautious Coquette (1949)
The Case of the Dubious Bridegroom (1949)
The Case of the Negligent Nymph (1950)
The Case of the One-Eyed Witness (1950)
The Case of the Angry Mourner (1951)
The Case of the Fiery Fingers (1951)
The Case of the Grinning Gorilla (1952)
The Case of the Moth-Eaten Mink (1952)
The Case of the Green-Eyed Sister (1953)
The Case of the Hesitant Hostess (1953)
The Case of the Fugitive Nurse (1954)
The Case of the Restless Redhead (1954)
The Case of the Runaway Corpse (1954)
The Case of the Glamorous Ghost (1955)..
The Case of the Nervous Accomplice (1955)
The Case of the Sun Bather's Diary (1955)..
The Case of the Demure Defendant (1956; AKA The Case of the Missing Poison)
The Case of the Gilded Lily (1956)
The Case of the Terrified Typist (1956)
The Case of the Daring Decoy (1957)
The Case of the Lucky Loser (1957)
The Case of the Screaming Woman (1957)
The Case of the Calendar Girl (1958)
The Case of the Footloose Doll (1958)
The Case of the Long-Legged Models (1958; AKA The Case of the Dead Man's Daughters
The Case of the Deadly Toy (1959; AKA The Case of the Greedy Grandpa)
The Case of the Mythical Monkeys (1959)
The Case of the Singing Skirt (1959)
The Case of the Waylaid Wolf (1959)
The Case of the Duplicate Daughter (1960)
The Case of the Shapely Shadow (1960)
The Case of the Bigamous Spouse (1961)
The Case of the Spurious Spinster (1961)
The Case of the Blonde Bonanza (1962)
The Case of the Ice-Cold Hands (1962)
The Case of the Reluctant Model (1962)
The Case of the Amorous Aunt (1963)
The Case of the Mischievous Doll (1963)
The Case of the Step-Daughter's Secret (1963)
The Case of the Daring Divorcee (1964)
The Case of the Horrified Heirs (1964)
The Case of the Phantom Fortune (1964)
The Case of the Beautiful Beggar (1965)
The Case of the Troubled Trustee (1965)
The Case of the Worried Waitress (1966)
The Case of the Queenly Contestant (1967)
The Case of the Careless Cupid (1968)
The Case of the Fabulous Fake (1969)...
The Case of the Crimson Kiss (1970)
The Case of the Crying Swallow (1971)
The Case of the Fenced-In Woman (1972)
The Case of the Irate Witness (1972)
The Case of the Postponed Murder (1973)
 




Monday, September 3, 2012

Slaughter In Satin by Carter Brown

With a gun in her hand she was.......


Printing History
  Transport Publishing Company Pty. Ltd

Novelette Series
as A Genuine "Lovely" Mystery
  1954

Horwitz Publications, Inc
for and on behalf of  Transport Publishing Company Pty. Ltd
First Collectors' Series #14
w/ Pagan Perilous and Moonshine Momma
July 1955

Bernard Blackburn Cover
Second Collectors' Series Volume 1 #9
w/Fraulein Is Feline and Moonshine Momma
1958

Sunday, September 2, 2012

The Blue Ice Affair by Ron Felber

A coveted diamond leads Agent N3 into a jungle trap.
And an entire army ready for war.

George Gross Cover

Killmaster #197
Diamonds may be forever, but certain of these precious jewels may lead to a global crisis. Especially when Soviet backed troops plan to invade Namibia and seize the great boron diamond mine, the key to laser weaponry. With a handful of mercenaries and the aid of a beautiful South African geologist, Nick Carter must beat the odds of the Angolan jungle and bring the world back from the brink of destruction.

Printing History
Written by Ron Felber

Berkley Publishing Group
Charter Books
Published by arrangement with The Conde Nast Publications, Inc.
ISBN 441 06861
February 1985

Thursday, August 30, 2012

100 Years Ago Today



100 Years Ago Today August 30th, 2012


Nancy Grace Augusta Wake was born on August 30th, 1912 in Wellington New Zealand. She served as a British agent during the later part of World War II. She became a leading figure in the maquis groups of the French Resistance and was one of the Allies' most decorated servicewomen of the war. In the 1930s she worked in Paris and later for Hearst newspapers as a European correspondent. She witnessed the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi movement, and "saw roving Nazi gangs randomly beating Jewish men and women in the streets" of Vienna. After the fall of France in 1940, she became a courier for the French Resistance and later joined an escape network. In reference to her ability to elude capture, the Gestapo called her the White Mouse. She would go to Britain and join the Special Operations Executive (SOE). Immediately after the war, Nancy was awarded the George Medal, the United States Medal of Freedom, the Médaille de la Résistance and thrice the Croix de Guerre. She learned that the Gestapo had tortured her husband to death in 1943 for refusing to disclose her whereabouts. After the war, she worked for the Intelligence Department at the British Air Ministry attached to embassies of Paris and Prague. She died on Sunday evening August 7th 2011 at the age of 98.

Monday, August 27, 2012

Crime Fiction Alphabet: Letter O

We are rambling along in the Crime Fiction Alphabet meme, this week the Letter O is featured. Kerrie over at Mysteries in Paradise is keeping us in line.



"O" Is for Outlaw is the fifteenth novel in Sue Grafton's "Alphabet" series of mystery novels which features  Kinsey Millhone, a private eye based in Santa Teresa, California. The novel’s plot has its roots in the Vietnam War, and features information about Kinsey’s previously unnamed first husband, Mickey, and their brief marriage 14 years before, although there is no interaction between them in the present because Mickey is in a coma throughout the novel's action.


 Once Mickey Magruder was a cop with a wild streak. And Kinsey Millhone was a younger cop who adored and married him. Then Mickey was implicated in a fatal beating, and Kinsey walked out. Now, fourteen years later, she comes face-to-face with those tragic years and Mickey's harrowing downward spiral after he lost the job he loved--and the marriage he loved a little less.


 

For Mickey lies dying in an L.A. hospital. Trying to find out how Mickey got there, Kinsey uncovers evidence that he was innocent of the beating charge. But as she searches through the lives that swirled around Mickey's lives gone wrong and lives gone well, Kinsey must also search the blind spots of her own life, including one that hides a killer.

Printing History
Written by Sue Grafton

Henry Holt and Co.
1st edition (October 12, 1999)

Ballantine Books
January 2001

Sunday, August 26, 2012

The Hammer of Thor (Revised) by Carter Brown

She was out to get action.
She stripped for it.
And nearly stripped Al Wheeler of everything.
Including his life.

Horwitz Edition
Robert McGinnis Cover

Gateway to Valhalla
The right music (a crashing thunderstorm)...the right lighting (in forks through the black sky)....And who could blame Al Wheeler for chasing a gold and white nymph name Eve into her tempestuous world of Valkyrie splendor? So what if he got a bullet in his leg? So what if he is stumbling in his rain sodden clothes? Give up? Impossible. Not when he is after an earth like type goddess who is stripped for action. No even when she nearly strips Al of everything, including his life....


Printing History

Horwtiz Publications
Numbered Series #133 (1967)
 Printed in Hong Kong by Continental Printing Co Ltd 

New American Library
Signet Books
D2794 (October 1965)
Q6496 (March 1975)

Read the original post from September 2011
Hammer of Thor
 
Trivia
The fly sleeve of the Horwitz Edition states a 2nd Edition but is in actuality is a first edition.