KANE looked at her appreciatively. "I don't know whether anybody's ever told you, but you've got the swellest pair of legs I've ever seen" he said. Valetta looked at him sideways along her dark eyelashes. He thought she was very beautiful; her mouth delicate, sensitive, almost tremulous. He could look at her for hours on end. It was that sort of mouth...
Friday, May 19, 2017
Dark Duet by Peter Cheyney (Fontana, 1963)
Friday, May 12, 2017
The Chequer Board by Nevil Shute (Pan, 1968)
Found at a Lifeline Bookfair, bundled with some other books by the same author:
And that brings me to The Chequer Board, which deals with four men in wartime. Three are in trouble with the law--and the fourth is just in trouble. The book tells the story of how they got into trouble and what happened to them afterwards (spoiler alert--it ends happily for most of them!) Of the four stories I enjoyed the one about Dave Lesurier--the 'negro from America'--most, and the culture clash between a small Cornish village and the US Army base that has been planted upon it.
The Chequer Board was first pubished in Great Britain in 1947.
World War II was a major influence on Nevil Shute's writing--all his best known novels involve the war in one way or another. However, he wasn't a writer of straight combat stories. No, Shute's fiction is mostly about the civilians caught up in the war, and the human effects on the men who have to fight it.THE CHEQUER BOARD'One of them was a Negro from America,' Turner said. 'The last one to go out... Dave Lesurier, his name was... Then there was Duggie Brent - he was a corporal in the paratroops. And then there was the pilot of the aeroplane... Flying Officer Morgan. We was all in a mess one way or another, excepting him, and yet in some ways he was in a worse mess than the lot of us.'THE CHEQUER BOARDBrilliantly interweaving the chequered fates of four men brought together by one violent moment in war, this unforgettable story matches A TOWN LIKE ALICE with its heart-stirring romance, its rich humanity and compelling drama.
And that brings me to The Chequer Board, which deals with four men in wartime. Three are in trouble with the law--and the fourth is just in trouble. The book tells the story of how they got into trouble and what happened to them afterwards (spoiler alert--it ends happily for most of them!) Of the four stories I enjoyed the one about Dave Lesurier--the 'negro from America'--most, and the culture clash between a small Cornish village and the US Army base that has been planted upon it.
The Chequer Board was first pubished in Great Britain in 1947.
Tuesday, May 2, 2017
The Toff Takes Shares by John Creasey (Hodder, 1965)
A local bookshop obtained a lot of vintage paperbacks by John Creasey, and all in near-mint condition!
And no wonder the shares in this "large London store" are crashing! There are many and varied problems behind the scenes--including blackmail, embezzlement, kidnapping and murder. In addition to all this--the book being originally published in the post-War austerity year of 1948--the owner is up to his neck in the black market. How will the Toff manage to sort out the victims from the villains?An unexpected female passenger introduces the Toff to one of the most complicated and violent cases of his career. The shares of a large London store are crashing, and amidst gripping excitement the Toff turns stockbroker to find out why.
Friday, April 28, 2017
The Man in the Brown Suit by Agatha Christie (Pan, 1959)
Found in a charity shop on a shelf full of Christie paperbacks:
First published early in Agatha Christie's career in 1924, this book was written while she was still experimenting with different genres. It is a thriller rather than a classic whodunnit--and her heroine is an enterprising amateur caught in the middle of things rather than a professional detective. Readers of Christie's Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple series will find this a rather different kind of read!THE mysterious man in the brown suit is a link between a fatal accident at a London Underground station and the body of a strangled woman found at a Member of Parliament's lonely country house.
Enterprising Anne Beddingfeld, back by a newspaper magnate, follows clues leading to South Africa, and there finds herself plunged into a highly dangerous Secret Service adventure.
Thursday, April 20, 2017
Rogue Roman by Lance Horner (Pan, 1970)
Found on a dusty shelf in the Green Shed:
Why am I suddenly reminded of Biggus Dickus?
Soft-core sixties smut, with a plot revolving around a hero whose main attribute is... the size of his, um, main attribute:Imperial Rome--centre of the world--throbbing with the white heat of violence, bloodshed and uninhibited sexuality...Bought as an actor, kidnapped by pirates, sold as a gladiator, young Cleon's beauty and flagrant masculinity made every woman--harlots and Vestal Virgins alike--desire him.And passion drives Cleon to help destroy a Caesar who combined the vices of his predecessors with his own special perversions--the Emperor Nero.
Contux took a firmer grip on the cloth and yanked. There was a ripping sound and the hand came away with the front of Cleon's tunic clutched in the swollen fingers... "I take it back. He's more than a man - he's a true stallion. He was shouting the words and waving the cloth for all to see.
(Page 125)
Why am I suddenly reminded of Biggus Dickus?
Tuesday, April 18, 2017
The Red Planet by Charles Chilton (Pan, 1960)
Blast off! to new heights of adventure and excitement
with JET MORGAN and the crewmen of the spaceship DISCOVERY, made famous in Charles Chilton's thrill-packed BBC radio series.
In this book, Jet leads the first fleet of rocketships to reach across space from the Moon to the 'Red Planet', Mars. But right from the beginning the expedition was ill-omened. Uncanny happenings were to test their courage to breaking point, both on the long space flight and on the hostile planet itself.
"Jet Morgan"! Now there's a name that really belongs in a mid-century space opera. And what better adventure for a mid-century space hero than to battle nefarious aliens on Mars?Nerve-racking sequel to JOURNEY INTO SPACE
Jet made his debut on BBC radio in 1953. The Red Planet is a novelization of his second serial (also on radio) broadcast in 1954. Both serials were immensely popular in their day--pulling a bigger audience in their timeslots than television. They're available to download at Old Time Radio Download for anyone who's interested.
Monday, April 10, 2017
Fool the Toff by John Creasey (Hodder & Stoughton, 1954)
This blurb is taken from the half-title page, as the back cover is filled with an advertisement:Was "Love's Matrimonial Agency" a racket shop? Jane Abbott met her husband there and he vanished--her money with him. The Toff went to see Miss Love and found a most remarkable woman. Then there was Jeremiah Matt, an equally remarkable man. In fact the Toff met many new acquaintances and one of them made a fool of him. Others... died.
Every once in a while I stumble across one of these on a secondhand bookstall.
As for the Toff--as the title of this book says, he is indeed fooled! In the end, all the mysteries contained therein are solved by his "man", Jolly--which is not what you expect of a story with a crime-fighting gentleman hero!
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