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Overlooked Radio: Jonathan Latimer's LADY IN THE MORGUE

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Peter Lorre introduces this episode of Mystery Playhouse from May 15, 1945. I'd rather see the 1938 movie, but this rado version is a whole lot better than nothing.

P.S. I yapped about the book HERE.
 

More Overlooked Stuff at Sweet Freedom.

Knights of the Metropolitan Museum (Part 4)

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It's been a while since we paid a visit to NYC's Metropolitan Museum. Here'a another of their four mounted knights with matching horse armor. Our previous knights, plus jolly old King Henry VIII, are HERE



Altus Gallery: Jungle Adventure with KINGI BWANA

Forgotten Books: WHERE THERE'S A WILL by Rex Stout (photo edition)

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 Ye Olde Cap'n Bob Napier and I got an email from noted Wolfean "Tough Jim" Gaston the other day, saying this:

As you both are well aware, in the Nero Wolfe novel WHERE THERE'S A WILL, there are 6 infamous photographs in the first edition and the G&D edition through which Wolfe solves the mystery. Infamous because while the book takes place in the summer, the photos were taken during the winter. Up until today I thought these were the only editions where the photographs appeared. But according to some guy I read on the internet, the photos also appeared in Avon's edition #103, between pages 162 and 163. I don't own a copy - in fact, I'm not sure I've even seen one - so I can't give an objective confirmation. But I have no reason to doubt it. Are either of you aware of this information? Or own the book?

Well. Bob may have been aware of this, but I wasn't. When I read the book (about three sisters contesting the will of their murdered brother) it was a later paperback edition. But somewhere along the way I acquired a copy of Avon 103, so I took a look. And - Lo and Behold - there they were, about the size of postage stamps. Were they taken in the winter? You wouldn't know it from these. Were they bigger in the hardcover editions? Does it matter that they were left out of later paperbacks?  Does winter or summer really matter? I don't know, but they're mildly interesting, I suppose.



GGA Comic Gallery: FIREHAIR, White Queen of the Fighting Sioux (1951-52)

Most Embarassing Minor League Baseball Caps (Part 3 - Dogs)

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El Paso Chihuahuas

Jackson Generals

Batavia Muckdogs


Lone Star Pit Bulls

Peoria Chiefs

El Paso Chihuahuas (again)

Yikes. The Strike Outs just keep on comin'. Watch for Part 4, if you dare.

Black Dog Gallery: The TALBOT MUNDY Library

Overlooked Films: YOJIMBO

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My favorite samurai movie! Watch the whole thing HERE.







Belarksi Gallery: THE PHANTOM DETECTIVE

Moments in Paperback History: LanceCon '85

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Awhile back we looked in on Lance Casebeer's 1982 paperback party - aka LanceCon - (HERE) courtesy of cameraslinger Art Scott. Sadly, Art failed to attend in '83 & '84, so we have no photos, and you'll have to imagine what went on. I was there but my memory is dim, so I'll have to imagine it too. Here's a taste of '85:

Bill Trojan and DAPA-EM's Ellen Nehr.

Much ado about a paperback or two.

Cap'n Bob Napier, trencherman extraordinaire.

Paul Palmer (left) and Bob Stewart (right) enrapt by the auction.

Lance, Bill Blackbeard and a Dell ten-center.

Portland rock'n'roll legend Brian "Tough Jim" Trainer.

Lance with the usual gang of suspects.

Me with my finger up my nose. My T-shirt touts 
the short-lived USFL football team, the Portland Breakers.

Bruce Taylor, Bogie and friend.

Forgotten Books: KILLER IN THE RAIN by Raymond Chandler

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Here's an interesting trip down the mean street called Chandler Lane. Mr. C didn't want these stories reprinted, because he chopped them up and pieced them back together to form three of his first four novels. If you haven't read those books in awhile, this is a great chance to see where they came from.

Killer in the Rain made it's first appearance in 1964, five years after Chandler's death. You won't find Philip Marlowe here, but you'll meet two of his main prototypes. Here's a look at what lies within:


 This story from January 1935 featured an unnamed narrator, with characters who later appeared in John Dalmas tales. It later became a piece of the first Marlowe novel, The Big Sleep.


The detective here is Ted Carmady, who later appeared in "Goldfish" and the next two stories. This one was canibalized for Farewell, My Lovely,


Another Ted Carmady adventure, that found its way into The Big Sleep.


This issue featured "Try the Girl," the final Camady story, and part of Farewell, My Lovely.


"Mandarin's Jade," in the Nov. 1937 issue of Dime, introduced John Dalmas, who later appeared in the non-cannibalized stories "Red Wind" and "Trouble is My Business." It became another piece of Farewell.


The Dalmas story "Bay City Blues," from 1938, was used in The Lady in the Lake


Another Dalmas story, from Jan. 1939, gave the novel its title. 


Still another Dalmas tale, "No Crime in the Mountains," from Sept. 1941, formed a piece of Lady

Poster Gallery: Cowboy Heroes of the '30s

Most Embarassing Minor League Baseball Caps (Part 4 - The Birds ahd the Bees (and other bugs))

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Myrtle Beach Pelicans

Greensboro Grasshoppers

Great Lakes Loons

Savannah Sand Gnats

Akron Rubber Ducks

Salt Lake Bees

Reading Fightin' Phils

Sorry, we're not finished yet.

Comic Gallery: MR. DISTRICT ATTORNEY (1948)

Overlooked Films: G-MAN BLB Flip-It Movie

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When I posted some Tarzan Big Little Books a while back, one of which boasted the Flip-It Movie feature, one of our readers - yeah, you guessed it, it was Cap'n Bob Napier - suggested I scan one of the movies. Well, I ain't going to. It's too much work, and I don't own that Tarzan book, anyway. But I found a website where someone filmed one for thrill-seekers like the Cap'n. This Flip-It tale involves our hero G-Man, two saboteurs and a trash can.

For some reason this little film won't play on the Google Chrome browser, but it works (sort of) after a short delay, on Explorer. It stalled on me a couple of times, and I had to hit the "play" arrow again, but it eventually showed the whole thing (sort of). Whoop-eee. What excitement.

Click HERE for the show.  Or, if needed, paste the URL into your Explorer browser:
http://www.biglittlebooks.com/flipit.html

Pulp Gallery: AMAZING STORIES 34, 35 & 36 (1929)

Altus Gallery: PULP COMPANIONS

FFB: Five Books Reviewed by DASHIELL HAMMETT

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My thanks once again to Misters Herron and Zobeck for unlocking the secret (HERE) of locating Mr. Hammett's columns in The New York Evening Post. This one is from the issue of May 10, 1930.

THE MAN OF A HUNDRED FACES. By Gaston Leroux. Macaulay. $2.
THE YORKSHIRE MOORLAND MURDER. By J.S. Fletcher. Knopf. $2.
LADIES' MAN. By Rupert Hughes. Harpers. $2.
THE CASE OF THE MARSDEN RUBIES. By Leonard R. Gribble. Crime Club. $2.
THE FORGOTTEN CLUE. By H. Ashton-Wolfe. Houghton Mifflin. $3.

“THE MAN OF A HUNDRED FACES" deals with the adventures that befell Albert Rose, a young Parisian lawyer. Engaged to defend Charles Durin, a valet, who has stolen his master's stickpin, Rose finds himself entangled in the affairs of notorious Mr. Flow, whose sobriquet is the book's title. By trickery and blackmail and finally by his infatuation for beautiful Lady Helen Skarlett Rose, the perfect congenital dupe, is involved in burglaries, murders, chases all over France and parts of Scotland, wins and loses millions at Deauville, is hidden aboard a yacht by three amorous ladies, has to swim ashore when he fails to respond to some of their advances and—except for some dull pages of Scottish folklore toward the last— gives the reader with a taste for light French melodrama in the Arsene Lupin manner as pleasant an hour or two as he is likely to find elsewhere. Not exactly believable in any of its parts, and not meant to be, "The Man of a Hundred Faces" has suaver motivation—and a plot which, for all its intricacy, requires less credulity—than most. 

 IN “THE YORKSHIRE MOORLAND MURDER" the week-dead body of Dr. Charles Essenheim, wealthy American collector of old books, is found at the foot of Harlesden Scar in Yorkshire. His nephew and his secretary, with the help of Inspector Kimberley of Scotland Yard, learn that on the day of his death Dr. Essenheim had bought two books worth more than thirteen thousand pounds. The books are gone. Methodically, piecing together information obtained here and there, the three men slowly arrive at a solution that comes as a surprise chiefly because one of the people at whom most suspicion points is actually guilty. This is not as good as some of Mr. Fletcher's previous stories, but there is nothing in it to disappoint his more faithful followers.

“LADIES' MAN” is a mystery story by virtue of the advertisement on its jacket and the transference of twenty-four pages from their chronological place in the book to the front; otherwise it is the story of the life and loves and murder of James Darricott, a sort of Don Juan of Park Avenue, who is supported by one woman, wooed by her daughter, and loved by a beautiful maid newly home from slaying lions in Africa. It is the stuff movies are made of, with gorgeous pageants, wild doings in night clubs, lovely gowns that need three or four pages for their purchasing and donning and neither subtlety nor consistency of characterization to hamper its adaptation to the screen. It is written in Mr. Hughes's unfortunate later style, hysterically at the top of his voice

“THE CASE OF THE MARSDEN RUBIES" is a muddled story devoid of excitement and suspense, with a mystery that the police could have solved in a day or two simply by grabbing most of the suspects and hanging on to them. A couple of weeks after the disappearance of the Marsden rubies, valued at £120, Sir Dudley Marsden is found dead in an alley, murdered. His face has been burned away by acid. That is a nice set-up and there are additional satisfactorily gruesome materials—a one-eyed Chinese (though his dialect seems partly Italian), recurring pictures of a hawk pecking at an eyeless skull and so on—but it all degenerates into a lot of hooey about the Russians, false mustaches, reversible coats, monotonous police-detail, a fight with a submarine, various runnings around in circles and the saving of dear, old England from the Reds once more. You can afford to skip this one.

“THE FORGOTTEN CLUE" is, for all its author's apparent knowledge of the subject, largely Sunday-supplement stuff. Its sub-title is "Stories of the Parisian Surete, With an Account of Its Methods," but when Mr. Ashton-Wolfe gets out of the laboratory, where his chief interest lies, he has an annoying habit of backing away from the details with a cautious reference to the difficulty of describing "the methods by which the police hunt down a criminal" without "giving information, by which they may profit, to the legions of the underworld.'' The result seems to prove that the difficulty is in Mr. Ashton-Wolfe’s case insurmountable. He also has a habit of indulging in careless generalities that are not quite worthy of a one-time assistant to Bertillon. "The greatest enemy of true justice is circumstantial evidence." Pure black hair "is found only in Spain and the East.""As the ear is the hallmark of the hereditary criminal, so the mouth reveals the professional crook to the trained observer.""Women never try their hand at forgery." Tch! Tch! Tch! 

Recommended: "The Man of a Hundred Faces."

[The following is in answer to a letter received by the Literary Review from Mr. E. L. Smith of D. Appleton & Company, objecting to a review of "Marked Cancelled" which appeared in this column April 26.] (and on this blogHERE.)

Mr. E. L. Smith
D. Appleton & Co.
New York City.

Dear Mr. Smith.
     All right. I'm perfectly willing to take your word for it that "Marked 'Cancelled'" was published on the fourth of the month and that Miss Lincoln did find the stamp. I still think it was swell publicity, and, honestly, there is an out-dated stamp among the story's clue. You'll find it on page fifty.
                                              Sincerely,
                                              DASHIELL HAMMETT.

SHADOW COMICS 55, 56 & 57 (1945)

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The Shadow Knows what his earlier covers looked like. Do you? See 'em HERE.

Most Embarassing Minor League Baseball Caps (Part 5 - Reptiles)

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Everett AquaSox

Beloit Snappers

Daytona Tortugas

Daytona Tortugas (again)


Wisconsin Timber Rattlers

Part 1 is HERE. Stay tuned. Worser ones to come.
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