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Forgotten Books: LITTLE CAESAR by W.R. Burnett (1929)

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I've had a dozen or so W.R. Burnett books kicking around for thirty-odd years, but never got around to reading one. Well, thanks to Mr. David Laurence Wilson, I finally did. And whaddaya know? It was mighty dang good. Much obliged, David.

(And it wasn't until I'd written that paragraph and decided to take a gander at a Burnett bibliography that I realized I did read one of his books, called Saint Johnson, just a few years ago, and blabbed about it right here in Forgotten Books. But I hadn't read that one because Burnett wrote it, but because it was loosely based on Wyatt Earp. And it wasn't one of those I had kicking around the house, because I had to seek it out via InterLibrary Loan. Anyway, you can see what I thought of it HERE.)

First edition (wish I had one!)

Burnett is inescapably linked to Hollywood. Along with Little Caesar, many of his other novels were made into films, including such classics as High Sierra, Dark Hazard, Dark Command, The Asphalt Jungle, and four versions of the aforementioned Saint Johnson (as "Law and Order" and "Wild West Days"). He also wrote screenplays for films like "This Gun for Hire," and "The Great Escape," and both story and screenplay for "Segeants 3." Did some TV writing, too, for "77 Sunset Strip,""The Untouchables,""The Virginian," and "Bonanza," among others. Busy guy. All this, while publishing at least 37 novels over the amazing span of 52 years - 1929 to 1981. 

Little Caesar was Burnett's first published novel, and he got off to a hell of a start. It's the tersely-told tale of a punk kid Italian from Youngstown, Ohio whose ability with and willingness to use a gun takes him almost to the heights of the Chicago underworld. Known only as "Rico" through most of the book, we eventually learn his given name is Cesare Bandello, hence the title of the book. It's no-frills prose from start to finish, more spare than either Hammett or Hemingway, and was likely a major inspiration for Paul Cain's Fast One. It's a hard, fast read, and well worth your attention.


In an Introduction written for a later edition, Burnett told how he had gone to Chicago, walked the streets and taken notes until the right gimmick (his word) came to him:

The novel should be a picture of the world as seen through the eyes of a gangster. All conventional feelings, desires, and hopes should be rightly excluded. Further, the book should be written in a style that suited the subject matter -- that is, in the illiterate jargon of the Chicago gangster. I threw overboard what had been known up to then as "literature," I declared war on adjectives. I jettisoned "description." I tried to tell the story entirely through narration and dialogue, letting the action speak for itself. I also jettisoned "psychology" -- and I tried hard to suppress myself and all of my opinions. 

Well, if those were his goals, he certainly succeeded. The novel was innovative, and very well done, and, as Burnett says, it "made" him. Still, the book was not written in a vacuum, and I have to wonder how much he owed to Black Mask. Hammett and others had been moving in that direction since 1922. Hammett alone had made about forty appearances, and his hardest-boiled opus, Red Harvest, published in hardcover in 1929 (the same year as Little Caesar) had been serialized in Black Mask in 1927 and '28. Maybe Burnett read the mag and maybe he didn't, but he could hardly have been unaware of it. 

Next up for me, Burnett-wise: A viewing of the film version of Little Caesar, then another of those books that have been waiting so long. Probably Dark Hazard.

YouTube Theater: Darren McGavin as MIKE HAMMER in "Mere Maid"

Western Round-up: John Wayne as "Singing Sandy"

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Bust out the popcorn, folks, because by special request of rootin' tootin' Cap'n Bob Napier, we are proud to present the one and only adventure of John Wayne as "Singing Sandy." The Cap'n is sure to be joining in, so if you cock an ear toward Tacoma, WA, you'll likely hear him crooning.


 



Can't get enough of the Duke's lip-syncing? Here's a collection of his other attempts.



Pulp Gallery: DUSTY AYRES and his BATTLE BIRDS 7,8,9 (1935)

E.C.Gallery: INTERNATIONAL COMICS (1947)

Poster Gallery: LITTLE CAESAR (1931)

Back Cover adventures of POPEYE (1943-44)

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These strips appeared on the back covers of Popeye issues of Dell's Four Color comics. Two of the pages are signed BZ (with a bee), the work of Bela Zaboly, who handled most of the daily and Sunday strips between the death of Popeye creator Elzie Segar in 1938 and the advent of Bud Sagendorf twenty years later. Zaboly's bee was likely inspired by the signature of Segar, which included a smoking cigar. 


Forgotten Stories: CHARLIE CHAN in "The Land of the Leopard Men" (1948)

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What? You've never heard of "The Land of the Leopard Men"? Then you must have missed Charlie Chan #1, published by Prize comics back in 1948. I did, too, until I saw it on comicbookplus, the amazing public domain comics website (where Mike Britt sent me). It was uploaded there by a user called "freddyfly". The cover above is by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, and the artwork below by Carmine Infantino. Check out that blonde on pages 2 and 3. Carmine was spending a lot of time looking at Milt Caniff strips. 













YouTube Theater: Robert Mitchum in FAREWELL, MY LOVELY (1975)

Hear it here: ROY ROGERS and DALE EVANS - 16 Great Songs of The Old West (1958)

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I'm pretty sure that most, if not all, of the songs on this album first appeared on Golden Records singles. In their next incarnation, all eight singles were collected in a cool boxed set called "Song Wagon." Then came the LPs. I've seen four different versions of the album. The cover art and contents (I think) are all the same, but the titles are slightly different. Where "A Child's Introduction to The West" falls in that progression is a mystery to me. In any case, I've posted the whole thing on YouTube in two parts (Side 1 & Side 2), and I think it's pretty dang listenable. Hope you agree.






MANHUNT! Comics (1947)

Poster Gallery: THE IRON MASK (1929)

Mort Künstler Sweat Mag Art

Forgotten Books: THE DESPERADO by Clifton Adams (1950)

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Fourteen years ago I joined the Old West APA OWLHOOT (more on that anon), and started hearing about Clifton Adams. My fellow ‘hoots always touted him as a hardboiled western writer. Jeez, I’d think, that’s my meat. I need to read this guy. Then I’d forget - until the next mailing arrived with more praise for Adams - and then I’d forget again.


Well, Mr. Greg Shephard, the mad genius who is Stark House Press, solved that problem by sending me a review copy of his soon-to-be-published double dose of Adams, The Desperado and A Noose for the Desperado. So I read half of it. And whaddaya know? All those owlhoots were right.



Clifton Adams, I have since learned, wrote 50 novels and 125 short stories between 1947 and his death in 1971. The Desperado (1950) was his first novel, and it was a great start.


The hero/narrator of this one is a nineteen-year-old kid named Talbert Cameron, nicknamed “Tall.” Tall has the misfortune to be living in post-Civil War Texas, where carpetbaggers and southern collaborators are lording it over the true sons of the Lone Star State. After arousing the ire of the collaborators, he’s laying low on the family farm when another young rebel kicks the hornet’s nest, and a posse comes hunting them both.



Tall Cameron is now a desperado. The rest of the outer story involves plenty of shooting, killing, and miscellaneous owlhooting, complete with Indian fighting, cattle driving and an old-fashioned gunfight. But the inner story is about how that new life changes him without his realizing it.


The chief agent of that change is a sort of super-owlhoot called Pappy Garrett. Like Tall, Pappy is on the run through no (or little) fault of his own, but he’s been doing so long he is extremely damn good at it. With Pappy as a mentor, Tall becomes mighty good himself, but still harbors hope of returning to his farm and his girlfriend.



Adams’ prose is tough and tight, and the attitude, as advertised, is hardboiled.  I like it, and I’m looking forward to Tall’s further adventures in A Noose for the Desperado.


The book got the low-budget Hollywood treatment in 1954, starring Wayne Morris. I haven’t seen it, but it’s pretty obvious the star of the screen story is Pappy Garrett (now called Sam) and Tall Cameron (renamed Tom), portrayed by Jimmy Lyndon, is a not-much-younger but much blander sidekick.



Now, as to OWLHOOT: Founded in 2003 by the notorious Cap'n Bob Napier, it’s a quarterly APA (Amateur Press Association) featuring wide-ranging discussions of all things West: Books, movies, TV, pulps, history, OTR, comics, music and whatever else that occurs to us. And it's done the old fashioned way - in print. This is how people blogged before blogs existed. Each member prepares his or her zine (yeah, we had a her once), prints copies and mails them to the Cap’n, who assembles the issue and mails it back. The current roster includes the following dangerous characters: Fred Blosser, Bill Crider, Dale Goble, Jim Griffin, Richard Moore, Thom Walls, George Kelley, A.P. McQuiddy, the aforementioned Bob Napier (all gents to ride the river with), and me. We’re open to new members. If you're interested in joining this wild and woolly crew, shoot me an email (delewis1@hotmail.com) and I’ll provide details.





Hear it here: DAVY CROCKETT IN CONGRESS by the Plymouth Players (1956)

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Since Disney couldn't slap a copyright on old Davy (except for ©Walt Disney's Official Davy Crockett), Davymania marketing was a free-for-all back in the '50s. One of the outfits joining in was Plymouth Records, producing three albums to complement the first three episodes of the series. For reasons of my own convenience, I'm presenting them in reverse order. Last month I featured Plymouth's DAVY CROCKETT AT THE ALAMO, and next month I'll post DAVY CROCKETT, INDIAN FIGHTER. 

This time, we find Davy breaking into song in the halls of Congress (Gee, who wouldn't?) as he patches up the crack in the Liberty Bell. The album jacket credits "Scotty MacGregor with the Plymouth Players," so I can only guess that's Scotty singing the TV theme and the rest of the songs.


For the rest of the story, you'll want to check out this great book, which I reviewed HERE, with comments by Allen J. Wiener HERE, a never-before-published letter by old Davy HERE, and more news and reviews HERE.


And while you're at it, you might as well listen to DAVY CROCKETT AT THE ALAMO and a sampling of Cowboy Slim's flip-side yodeling songs HERE 


Your Last-Minute One-Stop Source for HALLOWEEN MASKS

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The Fox So Cunning and Free

EASY-PEASY INSTRUCTIONS:
1. Select mask of your choice
2. Copy file to disk
3. Insert image in Word document
4. Size to fit your face
5. Print
6. Paste to lightweight cardboard (like a cereal box)
7. Cut out mask
8. Cut out eye holes
9. Poke little holes through back of each side near ears
10. Find a rubber band and snip it
11. Insert one end of rubber band through back of each ear hole
12. Tie knot at each end of rubber band
13. Trick-or-Treat

Bridezilla

The Hornet

Mr. Nimoy

Smashed Hulk

P&O

Tricky Dick

Art Scott

The 6 Million Dollar Mask

Damn Dirty Ape

Barney

Frank

Yo, Rinty

The Man With the Gun of the Man Called Paladin

Chucky

The Merry Man

The original Flash

The Boss

The Tramp

Uncle Ben Cartwright

Wolf Dude

The Donald

Supes

Chewy

Vlad and friend

John

Fred

The Sarge

The Cap'n

The Boze

W.C.

Cousin Eerie

The King

The other King

The Walrus

The Beetle

Heartless

Uncle Creepy

The Return of Uncle Creepy

"Read my lips."

Frank Buck

Armin Shimerman

George

Eric Estrada

Pruneface Boche

The Fink

The Dick

The Pop

Jaws I

Jaws II

The Scarlet Speedster

Darth's Daughter

Black Lagooner

Richard Starkey

Eddie Albert

Selina Kyle

Kevin Costner

The Ronald

The Mouse of Tomorrow

Mr. Greenjeans

"Fool!"

Fool

Sandwich

Robert Blake

Boris

Darth Jr.

Mr. Fantastic's uncle

The Monk

Huckleberry I

Huckleberry II

Hoss

Indy

Lon

Not Lon

The Pride of Dogpatch

The Big Red Cheese

Mr. Peanut

Another fine mess

The Jolly Green Vegetarian

The Jolly Green Goober

Mickey Rat

Daddy

Wile E.

The Doctor

Godzy

Ilya

Kemosabe

David Niven

Simon Templar in disguise

Lawdog

Spawn of Metropolis

You're gonna need an ocean of calamine lotion

Bonzo's Bedbuddy

Chicken Colonel

E. Nygma

Your consicence

EC's Old Witch

 Faithful Native American Companion

Yours Truly

Lord of the Jungle

Bat Man

Jerry (not Lee) Lewis

The Duke of Hazard

Wolfman on acid

Aquaguy

Jackie K/O

Fred Gwynne

Chris Lee

Starchie

The Divine Miss Boop

The Hulk

The Shiek of Araby

The Shiek of Massachusettes

Nikita the K

Wolfraham Lincolnl

Woody

Blue Kat

Blue Freeze

Blue Wieniehead

King of the Wild Frontier

King of Skull Island

The Greatest

Brother Bret

Vitametavegamin Girl

Squirrel and Moose

Strange Doctor

The Crypt Keeper

Sinbad

Buck

Son of E.T.

Hey Hey, I'm a Monkee

HALLOWEEN GUITARS (Prepare to Be Scared!)

Gouged Eyes and Chawed Ears: The Rough and Tumble World of Breckenridge Elkins

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Have you read A Gent from Bear Creek and the rest of the Breckenridge Elkins saga? If not, you oughta! I like everything Howard wrote (except maybe the detective stories), but this series is my favorite.

This is a paper read by Jeffrey Shanks at the 2011 Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association Conference.

RAYMOND CHANDLER British Dust Jackets (Part 1)

Forgotten Books: TAI-PAN by James Clavell (1966)

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I've long considered Tai-Pan (along with Shogun) one of the two best books I've ever read. (My favorite book is Red Harvest, of course, but that doesn't make it the best). On this return trip, I read it with my ears, and its lustre remains undiminished. 

Tai-Pan one takes place in 1841, as the British take possession of the island of Hong Kong. (They've just concluded a small war, in which they sailed upriver to Peiking and forced the Manchu emperor to sign it over.) Our hero is Dirk Struan, head of a sea-going trading company whose main business is opium smuggling. (According the novel, the opium trade is what keeps the British government afloat. China had gained a stranglehold on the British economy by demanding nothing but bullion in payment for tea, but once traders started smuggling in opium from India, and demanding bullion in return, the trade balance swung in Britain's favor.) 

"Tai-Pan" is a term taken to mean "supreme leader," and Struan is not only Tai-Pan of his own company, but THE Tai-Pan of the China traders, because his is the supreme trading company. The Chinese have therefore taken to calling it the Noble House. (In the novel Noble House, a sequel taking place 120 years later, we learn that to the Chinese, "Tai-Pan" is a title given to the overseer of a whorehouse, and they are much amused by western barbarians using thinking it's a term of honor.) 

We're often in Struan's point of view, but a great deal of the book (I'm guessing at least three-quarters) is in the point of view of others. Many others. Some are Europeans, some Chinese, some Eurasians. All are richly developed characters, and all have their own secrets and motivations, and intricate roles in the plot.

The plot itself is masterful. There's always a big, compelling story question forcing you to read on, and by the time that question is resolved (to your great satisfaction), another equally powerful story question has you by the throat. It's just one hell of a great book.

I'm now on my second run through Noble House (also in audiobook form). It involves descendants of the characters in Tai-Pan, who still cast their giant shadows over Hong Kong. While I'm enjoying the plot and vast cast of this one, too, it's a lot longer than Tai-Pan (the Noble House audiobook runs 54 hours, versus 35 for Tai-Pan), and feels bloated. There are many digressions that seem unnecessary, and some scenes are as long as novelettes. Though I'm only a quarter of the way through, my feeling is that would be better at half the length. I'll let you know. 

Tai-Pan was made into a movie in 1986. Never seen it. I'd say it's about time.

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