Saturday, October 21, 2017
Double Wide -- Leo W. Banks

Stark recognizes the hand, which had once been attached to his catcher, Rolando Molina, who was being treated for a cocaine problem the last time Stark saw him. Naturally Stark searches for the body or the living, but now short-handed, Molina. He's drawn into a complex plot that involves drug running and also a unique substance that I won't explain because you should let it come as a surprise. It was sure a surprise to me, and that's all I'll say about it.
Stark's not an experienced detective, but he's read a lot of detective fiction, so that's his guide as to how to do things. He gets into plenty of trouble, and along the way he meets an attractive TV reporter, Roxanna Santa Cruz, who helps out. He even gets to pitch again.
Brash Books is bringing back a lot of great older novels, but it's also publishing new ones, including Double Wide, which is a slam-bang, fast-moving treat. Look for it in November. I suspect we haven't read the last of Whip Stark.
Simon Schama: By the Book -
Simon Schama: By the Book: The author of the two-volume “Belonging: The Story of the Jews 1492-1900” didn’t finish reading Elena Ferrante’s “Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay”: “I left.”
Friday, October 20, 2017
Julian May, R. I. P.
Julian May - Wikipedia: Julian Clare May (July 10, 1931 - October 17, 2017) was an American science fiction, fantasy, horror, science and children's writer who also uses several literary pseudonyms, best known for her Saga of Pliocene Exile (Saga of the Exiles in the United Kingdom) and Galactic Milieu Series books.
New Blog on the Block
Western Musings: A second look at a waning genre.
This new blog will be featuring reviews of forgotten western novels and short stories in an attempt to call attention to worthy works from the past. Check it out.
This new blog will be featuring reviews of forgotten western novels and short stories in an attempt to call attention to worthy works from the past. Check it out.
First It Was the Thin Mints Melee
Scranton man charged with choking woman over iPad passcode: SCRANTON — A city man faces charges after police said he choked a woman Wednesday because she changed the passcode on her iPad.
FFB: A Twofer from Stark House: The Body Looks Familiar & The Late Mrs. Five -- Richard Wormser

I won't go so far as to say that the plot of The Body Looks Familiar is unique, but I'll bet you haven't read anything like it in years, if ever. And it raises the question in my mind about whether a book can be noir and not noir at the same time. That question isn't answered in the intro, by the way. You'll have to read the book and decide for yourself. The book was a Dell First Edition, although it originally appeared in condensed form in Cosmopolitan.
The Late Mrs. Five was a Gold Medal novel, and it's a nice little man-on-the-run story, set apart from many others of its type by it's setting, a very small town where there aren't many places for a man on the run to run or to hide. There are some mighty big coincidences in this one, but that just made the book more fun for me.
Stark House is doing a fine job of bringing forgotten writers back into print. This one will be available in January, but you can preorder it now so you won't forget.
Thursday, October 19, 2017
Danielle Darrieux, R. I. P.
NY Daily News: Danielle Darrieux, a prolific French actress whose movie and theater career spanned eight decades, has died. She was 100.
One of France's best-loved actresses, Darrieux appeared in dozens of plays and more than 100 films during her long career.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Yet Another List I'm Not On
30 Essential Mystery Authors: Think all mystery books are the same? Think again. Thrillers, suspense, crime novels, detective fiction - whatever you call them, mystery books make for some of the most exciting literature out there. The mystery genre has been around for over two centuries, with pioneers like Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Wilkie Collins, Edgar Allan Poe and G.K. Chesterton leading the way. From real-life spies (John le Carr, Ian Fleming, and Graham Greene) to politicians and journalists, mystery authors come from all walks of life and so do their protagonists. From elderly spinster Miss Marple and hard-drinking P.I. Phillip Marlowe, to dashing spy James Bond and medical examiner Dr. Kay Scarpetta, the mystery genre spans far and wide. Whether it's Victorian era crime you're after, or contemporary psychological thrillers are your thing, enjoy our list of essential mystery authors.
For nearly a half century gators have called this Alvin bank home
Houston Chronicle: The First Bank of Alvin has been home to alligators for nearly half a century. In 1969, a rice farmer donated three 6-inch gator hatchlings to the bank, to live in its goldfish pond, according to an Associated Press story, published in 1983. The trio - J. Paul Gator, Mitzi Gator and William Teller Gator - soon grew to be about 7 feet long, and became a major attraction for locals. The goldfish didn't last long.
Great article, excellent video. This is, of course, where I've been banking since moving to Alvin in 1983.
Great article, excellent video. This is, of course, where I've been banking since moving to Alvin in 1983.
Wednesday, October 18, 2017
“Bayou City Breakdown” (by Susan Perry Benson)
“Bayou City Breakdown” (by Susan Perry Benson) | SOMETHING IS GOING TO HAPPEN: Susan Perry Benson debuted in EQMM’s Department of First Stories in July 2013. A native Houstonian and a frequent contributor to the Houston Chronicle and Texas Magazine, she had already moved to North Carolina by the time she turned her pen to fiction, but she continues to have close ties to Houston. In this post she shares some thoughts about Hurricane Harvey, which made landfall near Houston on August 25, 2017. EQMM salutes all of those who have weathered this season’s hurricanes and are bravely rebuilding their cities and towns. And we thank Susan for letting us see the catastrophe from the perspective of someone to whom it is deeply personal. The author’s next story for EQMM will appear in our March/April 2018 issue.—Janet Hutchings
Bonus FFB on Wednesday: The Emperor and the Maula -- Robert Silverberg

I enjoyed the novella. Although it was written about 1992, it reminded me very much of the kind of SF I liked to read much longer ago than that. It's an old story in a new form, the story of Scheherazade and the thousand nights and a night as space opera. Laylah Walis is the teller of the tales, and she's telling them to the emperor of the Ansaar. Her purpose is to stay alive from night to night, but also to tell him about her world of Earth, conquered by the Ansaar, and about the things that happened there after the conquest. And also to tell him about her travels through parts of the Ansaar empire. The story's old-fashioned in the best sense, with a real sense of wonder (and bushels of adverbs), along with Silverberg's usual storytelling panache. Since Silverberg isn't writing fiction anymore, it's a real gift to have something new from him. Check it out.
Tuesday, October 17, 2017
I Miss the Old Days
20 Beautiful Color Photos of Julie Andrews in the 1950s and 1960s: Singer and actress Julie Andrews was born Julia Elizabeth Wells on October 1, 1935, in Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England. Andrews has endured as a popular star of stage and screen for many decades. She came from a musical family; her mother was a pianist and her stepfather, from whom she took her surname, was a singer.
I'm Back
Bouchercon was great. I missed seeing some people I wanted to see, but I got to visit with a lot of friends. My panels were all well received, and in fact turned out even better than I could have hoped. My daughter, Angela, was there, and she took good care of me. We visited the CN Tower, the railroad museum, and Casa Loma. Photos to follow. Maybe.
Overlooked Movies: Blood from the Mummy's Tomb

Many years after the entombment, Prof Fuchs (Andrew Keir) leads an expedition that discovers Tera. While he's in the tomb, his wife back in England dies in childbirth, and the child dies, too. But she revives when Fuchs speaks the name Tera. She grows up to look just like Tera, and she's also played by Valerie Leon. She has a red scar on her wrist. And Fuchs just happens to have smuggled Tera's body and sarcophagus into his basement. Don't ask how. On his daughter's birthday, he gives her a ruby ring taken from Tera's severed hand. You can probably guess the rest, as the new Tera is gradually taken over by the old one, who uses the new one to get revenge on the members of the expedition and to take and artifact from each one. The artifacts will allow her full return to live when all are gathered.
There's an evil member of the expedition who's trying to facilitate Tera's return, and there's the new Tera's boyfriend who's trying to help her fight the takeover. Lots of people die, and the ending of the movie is either satisfactory or not, depending on how you like ambiguity.
Blood from the Mummy's Tomb isn't great, and it's pretty slow, but it's passable Halloween entertainment.
Monday, October 16, 2017
Richard Wilbur, R. I. P.
The New York Times: Richard Wilbur, whose meticulous, urbane poems earned him two Pulitzer Prizes and selection as the national poet laureate, died on Saturday in Belmont, Mass. He was 96.
Hat tips to Barry Ergang and Jeff Meyerson.
Hat tips to Barry Ergang and Jeff Meyerson.
Roy Dotrice, R. I. P.
The New York Times: Roy Dotrice, a British stage, film and television actor who began performing as a prisoner of war in Germany and worked in Britain and America for six decades, notably in one-man shows portraying Abe Lincoln, the diarist John Aubrey and other historical figures, died on Monday at his home in London. He was 94.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
America's Unsung Wartime Codebreaker
Elizebeth Friedman, America's Unsung Wartime Codebreaker: An American pioneer in the field of cryptology—the study of writing and solving secret codes—William Friedman is known for his distinguished career as an expert codebreaker with the U.S. Army during World Wars I and II. But although Friedman is one of the biggest names in cryptanalysis—he coined the word itself—historians often skip over the fact that his wife, Elizebeth, was every bit as skilled a codebreaker. Her accomplishments have been (sometimes deliberately) kept from the spotlight.
Sunday, October 15, 2017
PaperBack

Harry Whittington (James W. Lampp)*, Love Cult, Lancer, 1962
*Harry Whittington wrote a lot of books, but he didn't write this one. Here's the whole confusing story.
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