Showing posts with label pulp fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pulp fiction. Show all posts

10.01.2013

The Deep End
Murder — and a Girl Who Played Around

Frederic Brown. The Deep End. Bantam 1215. 1st Bantam Printing 1954. The cover art is by Charles Binger.


More on Brown, lifted verbatim from mamazong: Born in 1906, Fredric Brown was an American science fiction and mystery writer. In early life he attended the University of Cincinnati and Hanover College, Indiana, before working as a newspaperman and magazine writer in the Midwest. His first foray into the mystery genre was The Fabulous Clipjoint (1947), which won the Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for outstanding first mystery novel. As an author he wrote more than thirty novels and over three hundred short stories, and is noted for a bold use of narrative experimentation, as exemplified in The Lenient Beast (1956). Many of his books employ the threat of the supernatural or occult before concluding with a logical explanation, and he is renowned for both original plots and ingenious endings. In the 1950s he moved to Tucson and wrote for television and film, continuing to submit many short stories that regularly appeared in mystery anthologies. A cultured man and omnivorous reader, Brown had a lifelong interest in the flute, chess, poker, and the works of Lewis Carroll. He died in 1972.

Three by Bruno Fischer

left: The Silent Dust. Signet 892. 1st Printing, 1951. center: The Girl Between. Gold Medal 1054. 1st Printing, 1960. right: Second-hand Nude. Gold Medal 928. 1st Printing, 1959.

Creepy and gorgeous cover by Warren King.

Red lips, blond, bare back girl. A review of the book here.

Another Gold Medal edition. Is this by James Meese?


9.30.2013

A phone, a camera —
Two by Elizabeth Daly.

Deadly Nightshade. Bantam 78. 1947. Map endpapers!
Murder Listens In. Bantam 713. 1949. Cover by Harry Schaare.







What is it about brides and bottles? Or: why didn't she publish under her own name?
Anthony Gilbert was actually the pen name of Lucy Beatrice Malleson, who was an English crime writer. Malleson also wrote fiction using the pen name Anne Meredith,.









Set of 2 mysteries by Anthony Gilbert. (Lucy Beatrice Malleson)

The Innocent Bottle. Bantam 851. 1950.  (I love this one!)

Murder Cheats the Bride. Bantam 138. 1948. Cover art by Casimer Norwaish using model Helen Tynan. His first cover for Bantam.

9.27.2013

yet even more pulp fiction. 2 beauties.

front cover

back cover

front cover

back cover
Samm Sinclair Baker. One Touch of Blood. Graphic Mystery. 1955.
William Ard. You Can't Stop Me. Popular Library 526. 1952.
pulp fiction in all its deadly glory (set of 8)










The eight:
Michael Avallone. Dead Game. Perma Books 3012. 1955.
George Bagby. Dead on Arrival. Bantam 1197. 1954.
Glenn M. Barns Deadly Summer. Perma Books 3114. 1957.
Hal Braham. Call Me Deadly. Graphic Mystery 152. 1957.
Dorothy Eden. Death is  Red Rose. Ace Star. 1970. (reissue of a 1950s classic)
Ruth Fenisong. Deadlock. Dell 808. 1952.
Michael Gilbert. Death has Deep Roots. Dell 744. 1951.
Mike Roscoe. Death is a Round Black Ball. Signet 966. 1952.

and more pulp fiction: urban noir

front cover

back cover

front cover

back cover


Herbert Simmons. Corner Boy. Dell D245. 1958.
Jack Karney. Tough Town. Pyramid Books 31. 1952.
still yet more pulp fiction: Lolita noir by Gil Brewer






Gil Brewer. Sugar. Avon Original T355. 1959
"       "          Little Tramp. Crest Book 173. 1958.

Read about Brewer.
still more pulp fiction: Ace Double Novel






John Trinian. Scratch a Thief / Chester Warwick. My Pal, The Killer. Ace Double Novels F 107. 1961.
yet more pulp fiction: suckers and temptresses







Robert O. Saber, Sucker Bait. Graphic Mystery 99. 1955.
Robert B. Sinclair. The Eleventh House. Pocket Book 881. 1951. (cover by George Erickson)