Nov 152012
 
Wealthy and Wanton


Her money had brought beautiful Serena Marshland jewels, fast cars, and a luxury estate. but it also involves her in a web of violence and blackmail.....from which seemed to be no escape!

Even for ace investigator Vic Malloy this case was moving too fast!

After sneaking out of an apartment block with a naked girl over his shoulder, Vic had to speed to the rescue of another damsel in distress.

It was then that he found himself mixed up in a mysterious murder...with none of the clues making sense.

Printing History
Written by René Lodge Brabazon Raymond (1906-1985)

Robert Hale Ltd, London
1963

Horwitz Publications Inc.
Pocket Book Series (First Series)
PB133 (1963)
 Posted by at 2:53 am
Aug 042012
 
A man will do almost anything when a rich and highly attractive woman offers him fifty thousand dollars just to make a telephone call. But when that telephone call is part of a fake kidnap plan to extract five hundred thousand dollars from one of the richest men in the world, only a sucker would gamble on the deal paying off in his favor.


Harry Barber was a sucker. After spending three and a half years in jail wrongly accused of manslaughter, Harry found his reputation had made it impossible to get work as a reporter. So with no job and no money he is the perfect target of a brilliant plan to make him the obvious suspect when a rich and beautiful young girl is savagely murdered.............

Printing History
Written by René Lodge Brabazon Raymond
copyright 1960
 
Robert Hale Ltd 
1961
 
Transworld Publishers Ltd
Corgi Books
ISBN 552 09466
1974
 Posted by at 11:11 pm
Jul 232012
 
The Crime Fiction Alphabet meme is rolling along and we are up to the Letter "J". Kerrie over at Mysteries in Paradise is keeping us all in line. My contribution for this week is the author:

James Hadley Chase (1906 to1985)

Mr Chase was born René Lodge Brabazon Raymond in London England on December 24th, 1906, he would move to France in 1956 and eventually resided in Switzerland. Chase died on February 6th 1985. He is one of the best known thriller writers of all time. 


The rise of the gangster culture during the Great Depression of the United States provided a big demand for gangster stories. Chase read James Cain’s The Postman Always Rings Twice and read about Ma Barker, using an American slang dictionary and maps of the U.S underworld, he then wrote his first No Orchids for Miss Blandish in his spare time.  All of his novels were so fast-paced that the reader was compelled to turn the pages in a nonstop effort to reach the end of the book. The final page often produced a totally unexpected plot twist variably Early books did contain some violence that matched the era in which they were written, though this was considerably toned down as plots centered more on circumstantial situations to create the high degree of tension that was the hallmark of his writing. Sex was never explicit and, though often hinted at, seldom happened. In several of his stories, the protagonist tries to get rich by committing a crime, either by insurance fraud or a theft. But the scheme invariably fails and leads to a murder in which the hero realizes that he never had a chance to keep out of trouble. Women are often beautiful, clever, and treacherous. They kill unhesitatingly if they have to cover a criminal act.  His plots typically centered around dysfunctional families, and the final denouement echoes the title. Chase's best market was France. In France more than thirty books were made into movies, and all of his ninety titles were published by Gallimard in their Série noire series. He was also very popular in other European markets, as well as Africa and Asia. However, his books failed to take hold in the American market partially due to the fact that the descriptive details did not seem convincing to American readers. This, together with their misogynist attitude, turned off the female market.

Various Covers



 




 




The Titles
Year
published
TitleCentral character(s)
1939No Orchids for Miss Blandish
also The Villain and the Virgin
Dave Fenner
Slim Grisson
1941The Dead Stay DumbChet Sladen
1941Twelve Chinks and a Woman
also Twelve Chinamen and a Woman
also The Doll's Bad News
Dave Fenner
Glorie Leadler
1941Miss Callaghan Comes to GriefJay Ellinger
Raven
1942Get a Load of This (short story collection)
1944Miss Shumway Waves a WandRoss Millan
Myra Shumway
1945EveClive Thurston
Eve
1946I'll Get You for ThisChester Cain
1947Last Page (play)
1948The Flesh of the OrchidCarol Blandish
The Sullivan Brothers
1949You Never Know with WomenFloyd Jackson
1949You're Lonely When You're DeadVic Malloy
Paula Bensinger
Jack Kerman
1950Figure It Out for Yourself
also The Marijuana Mob
Vic Malloy
Paula Bensinger
Jack Kerman
1950Lay Her Among the LilliesVic Malloy
Paula Bensinger
Jack Kerman
1951Strictly for CashJohnny Farrar
1952The Fast BuckVerne Baird
Rico
1952The Double ShuffleSteve Harmas
1953I'll Bury My DeadNick English
1953This Way for a ShroudPaul Conard
Vito Ferrari
1954Tiger By the TailKen Holland
1954Safer DeadChet Sladen
1955You've Got It ComingHarry Griffin
1956There's Always a Price TagSteve Harmas, Glyn Nash
1957The Guilty Are AfraidLew Brandon
1958Not Safe to Be Free
also The Case Of The Strangled Starlet
Jay Delaney
1959Shock TreatmentSteve Harmas, Terry Regan
1959The World in My PocketMorgan
1960What's Better Than MoneyJefferson Halliday
1960Come Easy - Go EasyChet Carson
1961A Lotus for Miss QuonSteve Jaffe
1961Just Another SuckerHarry Barber, John Renick
1962I Would Rather Stay PoorDave Calvin
1962A Coffin from Hong KongNelson Ryan
1963One Bright Summer Morning
1963Tell It to the BirdsSteve Harmas, John Anson
1964The Soft CentreFrank Terrell
Valiere Burnette
1965This Is for RealMark Girland
1965The Way the Cookie CrumblesFrank Terrell
1966You Have Yourself a DealMark Girland
1966Padillo's PlayMcCorkle
Padillo
1966CadeVal Cade
1967Have This One on MeMark Girland
1967Well Now - My PrettyFrank Terrell
1968An Ear to the GroundSteve Harmas, Al Barney
1968Believed ViolentFrank Terrell, Jay Delaney
1969The Whiff of MoneyMark Girland
1969The Vulture Is a Patient BirdMax Kahlenberg
1970Like a Hole in the HeadJay Benson
1970There's a Hippie on the HighwayFrank Terrell, Harry Mitchell
1971Want to Stay Alive?Poke Toholo
1971An Ace Up My SleeveHelga Rolfe
1972Just a Matter of TimeChris Patterson
Sheila Oldhill
Miss Morely-Johnson
1972You're Dead Without MoneyAl Barney
1973Have a Change of SceneLarry Carr
1973Knock, Knock! Who's There?Johnny Bianda
1974So What Happens To Me?Jack Crane
1974Goldfish Have No Hiding PlaceSteve Manson
1975Believe This - You'll Believe AnythingClay Burden
1975The Joker in the PackHelga Rolfe
1976Do Me a Favour, Drop DeadKeith Devery
1977My Laugh Comes LastLarry Lucas
1977I Hold the Four AcesHelga Rolfe
1978Consider Yourself DeadMike Frost
1979You Must Be KiddingKen Holland
Paradise City Police Force
1979A Can of WormsBart Anderson
1980You Can Say That AgainJerry Stevens
1980Try This One for SizeParadise City Police Force
1981Hand Me a Fig LeafDirk Wallace
1982Have a Nice Night
1982We'll Share a Double FuneralPerry Weston
Chet Logan
1983Not My ThingErnie Kling
1984Hit Them Where It HurtsDirk Wallace
.
Thanks for visiting.
 Posted by at 6:10 pm
Jul 062012
 
Not Safe to Be Free
    or  The Case Of The Strangled Starlet



Murder isn't a very sociable way of getting your kicks, but then Jay Delaney was never a very sociable sort of guy. He was young, rich, attractive, and bored. He needed excitement, and he meant to get it. For months he had waited, patiently controlling the insane urge which nagged at his mind. And then he saw her, at a film festival in the south of France. The blonde starlet who was to provide him with the biggest thrill of his life. The girl he intended to murder.

Printing History
Written by René Lodge Brabazon Raymond

Robert Hale Ltd 
1958

Transworld Publishers Ltd
Corgi Books
ISBN 552 09694
1974

Printed by
Arcata Graphics
Buffalo, New York
 Posted by at 3:19 pm
Jul 042012
 
Leo Maxwell, an ex-boxer, is being transported via train to Phoenix where he will be tried for manslaughter.  Two cops, Jerry Long and Chuck Conley, are in charge of his safety.  En route they learn that Maxwell managed to win over $20,000 on a long shot bet at a horse racetrack.  Even before the train leaves the station an attempt is made on Maxwell's life.  Sgt. Long handles the three goons with the usual pulp fiction style fistfight.  Turns out they are members of a Sicilian syndicate.  Long and Conley try to get Maxwell to confess the racetrack winnings were a gang related con game. Maxwell refuses to cooperate. Everyone on board seems to know that Long and Conley are cops.  Maxwell in handcuffs seems to be the give away.  As the train continues its journey from New Orleans through several Texas towns onto Arizona more attempts are made on Maxwells' life.

Like the best of the paperback originals that specialize in crime we get the usual ingredients for a quick read. Fistfights and action galore. Lots of James Hadley Chase style ersatz American dialog meaning it's littered with wiseacre period slang that no real person ever used. A myriad of suspicious characters make trouble for the two cops.

Among those characters are:

Homer Finch -- a salesman on his way to a cosmetic convention.  He spends much of his telling stupid jokes and playing pranks with novelty gag items.

Thomas Carpenter -- older gent way too interested in the police business and a bit too interested in other passengers like...

Gloria Starr -- burlesque stripper, con woman who gets Carpenter to pay for her meal in the dining car when she "forgets" her purse

Carol Wallace -- claims to be Maxwell's girlfriend. Attempts to bribe Long with sexual favors in order to free Maxwell. 

Long sends orders to headquarters to run criminal background checks on all these passengers and a few more. He suspects that one or more may be involved in a plot to either free Maxwell and get him off the train or to kill him before the train arrives in Phoenix.  It turns out he's right, but just who is involved is rather hard to figure out. And there are indeed a few surprises before this action tale comes to its violent finale with plenty of fists and bullets flying.
 Posted by at 3:51 pm
May 062012
 
The Wary Transgressor



He met her when he was down and out, guiding tourists around the sights of Milan. She was rich, beautiful and self-assured. He was a down at heel drifter on the run from the police. So when she suggested having lunch with him, David could not believe his luck. But it was not really luck that had arranged their meeting. It was just a small part of the plan. Laura's plan, in which David stood to inherit over six thousand lire. All he had to do was help commit a murder.....

Printing History
written by Rene Brabazon Raymond (1906-1985)

Jarrolds Publishing (1952)
Panther Books (1963)
Corgi Books (1975)
ISBN 552 09876
 Posted by at 2:29 am

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