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Tuesday, July 14, 2020

What I’ve been reading in the Western, pulp and action/adventure genres — and beyond…


I always appreciate it when someone posts a positive review of one of the books in the Men’s Adventure Library series I co-edit with my publishing partner Wyatt Doyle (head of the New Texture imprint) on Amazon or Goodreads. So, I try to post reviews of books I’ve read when I enjoyed them.

I typically only post reviews of books I liked. In my humble opinion, criticizing is easy. Creating one is hard. And, everyone has their own opinions and pet peeves about books. So, the reviews I post are all positive.

Below are some of the reviews I wrote and posted on Amazon and Goodreads this year.

The most recent is about the newest fanzine from paperback maven and fanzine publisher extraordinaire, Justin Marriott — the  HOT LEAD “MOST WANTED ALL REVIEW SPECIAL.”

I’m a huge fan of all of Justin’s previous fanzines, PAPERBACK FANATIC, MEN OF VIOLENCE, THE SLEAZY READER, PULP HORROR, MONSTER MANIACS and HOT LEAD.

I interviewed him for this blog a while back and I’ve posted some other previous posts here about his fanzines.

His HOT LEAD fanzine on vintage Western paperbacks and authors. It’s part of what seems to be a resurgence of interest in the Western genre.

Publishers like Wolfpack Publishing and Rough Edges Press have been publishing new Western novels by both up-and-coming writers and experienced pros, and reprinting out-of-print Westerns in new eBook and print editions.

There are also some notable new printed and digital guides to Western books, TV shows and movies. Among those, in addition to the HOT LEAD fanzines, is the 52 WEEKS * 52 WESTERNS series co-edited by Paul Bishop, and the extremely well-researched and entertaining “The Six-Gun Justice” podcast hosted by Paul and his fellow novelist and Western maven Richard Prosch.

I’ve been on a bit of a Western reading and watching binge myself in recent months, partly because of The Six-Gun Justice podcast, so quite a few of the books I’ve read and reviewed are in that genre.

The HOT LEAD “MOST WANTED ALL REVIEW SPECIAL is the latest. It’s the fourth issue in Justin Marriott’s HOT LEAD fanzine series.

I like the first three HOT LEADS a lot, but this one is especially great. It includes insightful reviews of more than 200 Western novels by over 20 vintage paperback and Western genre experts, grouped chronologically by era and nicely illustrated with over 100 cover scans. It also includes some outstanding special essays.

The first of those essays — “Top 10 Western Authors” by Paul Bishop — is so full of fascinating facts and so well written that it makes this issue of HOT LEAD worth buying by itself. And, as a LONESOME DOVE fan, I also especially enjoyed the essay on that series.

I also got a kick out of the Foreword by the legendary comics and action/adventure novelist, Chuck Dixon. Chuck has contributed to the recent resurgence of Western novels himself by writing SOLOMON'S MINE, the fifth entry in the "Avenging Angels" series published by Wolfpack, under the A.W. Hart house name. I haven’t read that one yet, but it’s in my Kindle queue and I expect I’ll like it. I am a huge fan of Chuck’s action/adventure novels, like his LEVON CADE and BAD TIMES series.

In the introduction to the HOT LEAD special, Justin Marriott says he didn’t start out thinking it would be some kind of definitive guide to Western novels. But as reviews came in from contributors he collaborated with, that’s essentially what it turned into. It’s an amazing overview of the best Western novels from the 1920s to recent decades and it covers every Western subgenre, including classics by Louis L’Amour, Harry Whittington and Max Brand, ultra-violent Westerns, science fiction Westerns, “Cow Punk” Westerns, and adult Westerns.

Like all of Marriott’s fanzines, this HOT LEAD special is highly entertaining, beautifully designed. I think it’s also an instant contender for one of the best reference books about Western novels ever put together — and it’s definitely the most up-to-date and wide-ranging.

Not long before I read that HOT LEAD issue, I finally got around to reading 52 WEEKS * 52 TV WESTERNS, co-edited by Paul Bishop, Scott Harris and Rob Word. I enjoyed the first two books in the series, 52 WEEKS * 52 WESTERN NOVELS and 52 WEEKS * 52 WESTERN MOVIES, and especially liked this latest one focusing on TV Westerns.

I was born in 1950 and grew up watching the classic Western series that were plentiful in the ‘50s and ‘60s, like CHEYENNE, MAVERICK, HAVE GUN-WILL TRAVEL, WANTED: DEAD OR ALIVE and many others. I also loved later Westerns, like THE WILD WILD WEST, THE ADVENTURES OF BRISCO COUNTY, JR, THE HIGH CHAPARRAL and DEADWOOD.

I suppose that’s why I particularly loved 52 WEEKS * 52 TV WESTERNS. The shows covered in this book include virtually all of my favorites and some I was unaware of. It brought back fond memories and provided fascinating facts I didn’t know about the shows and actors.

I also read and reviewed a Western novel not long ago: OUTLAW BLOOD, the eighth book in the “Wind River” series co-written by James Reasoner and his wife Livia J. Washburn. They are both top professional writers who’ve written novels in several genres and publish a great line of books by various authors via their Rough Edges Press imprint. Any book they write separately or together reflects decades of experience at telling well-crafted action/adventure stories.

OUTLAW BLOOD is no exception. It’s a fast-paced Western that literally starts with a bang, involves some very bad bad guys, and moves quickly to a satisfying conclusion. It has the flavor of a good, old-fashioned Western novel or TV show. If, like me, that’s the type of Western novel you like you’ll enjoy OUTLAW BLOOD and other books in the Wind River series.

Another review I posted on Amazon recent months is for a Western novel written by the legendary comics writer, novelist, editor, and Captain of the mighty Airship 27 “new pulp” publishing company, Ron Fortier.

That novel, THE WIND UP KID, is in what’s been called the “Western Steampunk” subgenre. I’m a big fan of Ron’s and I’m amazed by his range as a writer.

His comics and novels run the gamut from from superhero stories and science fiction to horror and adult action/adventure and young adult fantasy. He’s even written a moving play, titled WHERE LOVE TAKES YOU.

THE WIND UP KID pits the residents of a small town against a gang of truly vicious bad guys. Luckily for the townsfolk, Professor Phineas Proctor happens to have brought his traveling circus to town, and its big attraction is a golden, 7-foot tall robot sharpshooter. Proctor’s automaton joins with the village blacksmith, his son, and other town residents to fight the gang members. If you like good, pulpy, escapist entertainment, check it out. It’s a fun, quick read or listen. I listened to the Audible edition, which I’ve been doing more and more lately.

By the way, if you’re a fan of the realm of “new pulp,” which Ron and his partner Rob Davis helped pioneer and establish through their Airship 27 line, check out their book WHO’S WHO IN NEW PULP, which was just published in July 2020. It includes profiles of over 200 writers, artists, editors, and publishers currently involved in the realm of pulp fiction and pulp art.

One of them is Will Murray. When it comes to writing “new pulp” — generally meaning new stories about classic pulp magazine characters or stories about new characters who fit the classic pulp mode — Will Murray is one of the best and most prolific. As a longtime fan of Edgar Rice Burroughs since the 1960s, I had to check out Murray’s latest novel TARZAN: CONQUEROR OF MARS, and I’m glad I did. It’s a terrific, creative mashup involving two of Burroughs’ best-known characters: Tarzan and John Carter

Murray is a pulp expert in multiple ways. He’s a pulp fiction historian who has written extensively about and helped preserve the legacy of vintage pulp magazine writers like as Lester Dent, creator of Doc Savage, and many others. Among other things, Murray is literary executor for the Dent estate and has written fifteen modern Doc Savage novels under Dent's Kenneth Robeson pseudonym. In recent years, he has also written “new pulp” novels featuring other old pulp characters, including The Shadow, The Spider and Tarzan.

TARZAN: CONQUEROR OF MARS is the third Tarzan novel Murray has written for the Altus Press “Wild Adventures of Edgar Rice Burroughs” series. I have been amazed and pleased by how well Murray both maintains the iconic ERB style while also creating fresh storylines. Setting this novel on Mars was a genius idea, well executed.

Another action/adventure novel I recently enjoyed and reviewed recently was DRAGONFIRE!, written by one of the longtime pros in that arena: Stephen Mertz.

Under his own name and various pseudonyms, Mertz has penned many of the best men’s action/adventure novels ever written, ranging from the classic M.I.A. HUNTER series he created to some of the most popular books in the long-running Executioner/Mack Bolan series created by Don Pendleton (cover art for which is featured in the latest book I co-edited, ONE MAN ARMY: THE ACTION PAPERBACK ART OF GIL COHEN.)

More recently, Mertz launched a new MISSION IMPOSSIBLE-like series that features Jack Cody, a Former Navy SEAL U.S. who became a troubleshooter and operative for the U.S. government. For reasons explained in DRAGONFIRE! – the first novel in Mertz’s “Cody’s War” series – he has been nicknamed “Suicide Cody.”

In this initial outing, Cody is tasked with trying to stop the Chinese from employing a shockingly dangerous new experimental weapon they stole from a scientist against the US. There are few writers who can create a major new action/adventure hero and series that doesn’t just tread old ground. Mertz is one of those few. DRAGONFIRE! starts off with a mind-blowing bang and never lets up. It hooked me on the Cody series right off the bat.

Not everything I’ve been reading lately is in the realms of pulp or action/adventure. For example, one of my favorite recent reads was HOLLYWOOD'S HARD-LUCK LADIES by Hollywood historian Laura Wagner. I first became a fan of Wagner from reading her articles and book reviews in the magazine CLASSIC IMAGES. She is an excellent researcher and writer who has a special talent for biographies.

Those skills are very evident in her book HOLLYWOOD'S HARD-LUCK LADIES. The subtitle — 23 ACTRESSES WHO SUFFERED EARLY DEATHS, ACCIDENTS, MISSTEPS, ILLNESSES AND TRAGEDIES — is apt but it only hints at how moving the tragic stories of the 23 actresses Wagner picked seem when you read them. It doesn’t really matter if the actresses are before your time and you don’t know them. It doesn’t really matter if you haven’t seen the movies and TV shows they appeared in.

This is a book that portrays the essential humanity and pathos of mostly little-known actresses who were badly treated by men or the Hollywood studio system, or both — or who should have taken better care of themselves, or whose fate involved tragic accidents. Each biography is a fascinating, self-contained story. And, I love the way each one starts with a paragraph that foreshadows what’s to come. For example, here’s the first paragraph of the chapter on Suzan Ball, a gorgeous actress who had an affair with Anthony Quinn in 1953 while shooting the film EAST OF SUMATRA with him: “One of the most courageous stories in show business concerns Suzan Ball. A star in the making with leads at Universal, she seemed to have a bright future. She was 19 years old when an injury on a movie set put in motion events that would lead her to an untimely death at 21. The way she handled her illness was an inspiration and every turn for the worse was met with a positive outlook.”

Did lead paragraphs like that make me want to read more? You bet. And, Wagner’s bios of many of the actresses made me want to Google more about them and look for streaming or upcoming airings of the movies and TV shows they appeared in. So, for me, it’s a book that kept on giving after I read it.

Another books outside the pulp and action/adventure realm I recently read and loved is MILESSTYLE, by Michael Stradford. It’s unique book that provides fresh perspective on one of my favorite musicians, Miles Davis. It is, in part, about Miles’ creative choices of clothing. But the fashion style angle is a springboard that leads to other insights about Miles’ mind, music, and self-image.

Author Stradford has in-depth knowledge of music and musicians. He was a radio DJ, music director and program director for major stations in Toledo, Cincinnati, Detroit, St. Louis, Houston, and Los Angeles, then became Quincy Jones’ Vice President of A&R at Qwest Records.

The fact that Stradford is both well-qualified and well-connected is evident in his overview of Miles’ music and it’s important place in America’s music heritage, and in the impressive list of people he interviewed for the book. Stradford is an exceptionally good interviewer and the range of people he interviewed is amazing.

They include great jazz musicians who played with Miles, famous rock musicians who were inspired by him, his ex-wives and lovers, fashion experts who had a hand in or studied Miles’ ever evolving clothing, and academics and social observers who provide insightful commentary on Miles’ towering persona as a black celebrity whose life spanned decades worth of changes in racial attitudes in America. I really like the way Stradford interspersed his Q&A style interviews with well-written chapters about Miles personal life and the evolution of his clothing and music. It makes it far more lively and interesting reading than if he had incorporated it all together as running text, like a standard biography.

Of course, I should note that one of my top favorites books of the year so far is STICKING IT TO THE MAN: REVOLUTION AND COUNTERCULTURE IN PULP AND POPULAR FICTION, 1950 TO 1980, edited by Andrew Nette and Iain McIntrye. In addition to posting a glowing 5-star review of it on Amazon, I wrote an extensive post about it on this blog. You can check out that blog post by clicking this link. STICKING IT TO THE MAN is a fascinating deep dive into the realm of vintage novels about Hippies, Yippies, gays, and other social outcasts and rebels.

Whenever you read and enjoy a book, I urge you to write a review and post it Amazon or Goodreads or both. Reviews are especially helpful to writers and publishers of non-mainstream books. Giving them 4 or 5 stars and even just a sentence or two of praise will make their day and help ensure that more books by them will be published.

Comments? Corrections? You can email them to me, or
join the
Men’s Adventure Magazines & Books Facebook Group and post them there.

Friday, May 15, 2020

ONE MAN ARMY: THE ACTION PAPERBACK ART OF GIL COHEN — our latest book…


Artist Gil Cohen is one of the towering figures in several art realms.

In recent decades he has established himself as one of the world’s premier military aviation artists. His beautifully-rendered, historically accurate paintings of military planes and their crews and high end prints of them are popular with aficionados of that realm throughout the world.

Early on in his career as an artist, starting in the 1950s, Gil was one of the top cover and interior artists for men’s adventure magazines (MAMs).

Most of his MAM artwork was used for MAMs published by Martin Goodman’s Magazine Management company — the “Diamond logo” group that included ACTION FOR MEN, FOR MEN ONLY, MALE, MAN’S WORLD, MEN, STAG, and TRUE ACTION, among others.

I first met Gil via phone and email when I did an interview with him about his MAM artwork for this blog.

In that interview, we briefly touched on a third realm that Gil is known for: his paperback cover artwork. In that realm he is best known as the primary cover artist for the hugely popular novels based on Don Pendelton’s character Mack Bolan, The Executioner. He also did the initial artwork for the Mack Bolan spinoffs: the SuperBolan series, the Stony Man series, the Able Team series and the Phoenix Force series.

A couple of years ago, I did another interview with Gil about that paperback cover artwork. As a result of that conversation, I started thinking about doing a book featuring Gil’s original paintings for those books as part of the Men’s Adventure Library book series I co-edit with Wyatt Doyle, the multi-talented head of New Texture, which publishes our MAL books.

Wyatt loved the idea. Gil Cohen said “yes.” And, recently we released the book — ONE MAN ARMY: THE ACTION PAPERBACK ARTWORK OF GIL COHEN. Its title nods to both the ever-resourceful Mack Bolan as well as the astonishing productivity of Cohen himself in that era.

The paperback edition of ONE MAN ARMY (shown at right) showcases full color reproductions of nearly 100 of Gil’s original Executioner, SuperBolan, Stony Man, Able Team, and Phoenix Force cover paintings. The deluxe hardcover edition (at the top of this post) includes more than 100.

The book opens with a quote about Gil by Linda Pendleton. Linda is Don’s widow and a prolific author of novels and non-fiction books in her own right. She co-authored several books with Don before his death in 1995, including the first entry in the Executioner comics series, and wrote the definitive book THE EXECUTIONER, DON PENDLETON CREATES MACK BOLAN. She maintains the Official Don Pendleton Website which includes in-depth information about him, his Mack Bolan novels, and the many other types of books he wrote. Linda also frequently posts comments in the popular online hangout for Executioner fans, the Mack Bolan Facebook Group, created by Bolan superfan Ed Sunday. What Linda says about Gil in ONE MAN ARMY will ring true to any serious Mack Bolan fan:

“When I visualize Don Pendleton’s Mack Bolan, I see Bolan as Gil Cohen portrayed him on the covers of Don’s Executioner novels, and on numerous early Harlequin Executioners and spinoff series. Don loved Gil’s cover art, and I still receive comments from Executioner fans who mention how much they like Gil Cohen cover illustrations. Seventeen years of wonderful Mack Bolan cover illustrations by a very talented artist! I’m sure the scenes on the covers helped to sell books. Gil Cohen is very much a part of the Don Pendleton-Mack Bolan tradition of nearly half a century. The Executioner series would not be the same without Gil Cohen’s illustrations.” — Linda Pendleton

Linda’s insightful quote is followed by an extensive interview with Gil. In it, he talks about how he came to do cover art for the Executioner series and its descendants, his approach to the artwork, the models he used, anecdotes he remembers about specific paintings, his appearance with Don Pendleton at the 1985 Mack Bolan convention in San Francisco, and more.

As I write this post, ONE MAN ARMY is now listed for sale on Amazon in the US and worldwide, on Barnes & Noble, on the website of Stuart Ng Books, and on the Book Depository site, which offers free shipping worldwide. I also sell copies directly, signed on request, via my own listing on Amazon (as Robert Deis on the list of sellers) and my eBay listings.

Here’s a buying tip: because the book is new, Amazon doesn’t keep a lot of copies in stock yet and there are other shark-like sellers trying to sell the book on Amazon for more than the list price. Some don’t even keep the book on hand and have to order it from another source to fill an order, causing a delay in shipment. So, at this point, if you want a copy shipped quickly and at the best price, buy direct from me. I’ll also sign a copy on request and add an inscription of your choosing.

In this post, I’ll give you a preview of the book, along with some quotes from Gil Cohen’s interview. As you’ll see, the cover paintings vary in shape. Some were intended to fit the bottom half of a standard paperback front cover. Some were painted to fit the full front cover. Some are “wraparound” paintings that are horizontal in format. The right half of those wraparounds were printed on the front of the paperback covers; the left half on the back.

As a result, the margins around each painting vary in ONE MAN ARMY, as shown by the examples in this post. They are actual page scans (with the resolution reduced and a watermark added for online posting). In the book, each painting is presented without any caption, so they stand alone as works of art. There’s an appendix in the back that tells the name of the paperback the painting on each page was used for and the year it was published.

Below is a look at the first page of our interview with Gil, which shows the first cover he did for the series, CALIFORNIA HIT. Next to that are the pages showing his original paintings for WAR AGAINST THE MAFIA and DEATH SQUAD.

When Pinnacle Books licensed the rights to publish the Executioner series from Don Pendleton, the art department had cover paintings for the first ten books done by artist George Gross, a friend and mentor of Mort Kunstler (whose original men’s adventure magazine paintings are showcased in our book MORT KÜNSTLER: THE GODFATHER OF PULP FICTION ILLUSTRATORS).

The first editions of WAR AGAINST THE MAFIA and DEATH SQUAD were published in 1969 and were huge hits. Over the next three years, Pinnacle published eight more Executioner novels that originally had George Gross cover art. By late 1971, the original editions of the first ten Executioner novels had sold six million copies and Pinnacle turned to Gil Cohen for the cover of the next Mack Bolan novel Don Pendleton had written for the series. Gil recalls:

“The first Executioner book I did was No. 11: CALIFORNIA HIT (1972). I actually got the assignment—the commission—in December of ‘71. I delivered it in January ’72. Then Pinnacle asked me to take over doing the covers, and I was also asked to do cover paintings for new editions of the first ten in the series. So I did CALIFORNIA HIT, then I redid the first ten covers, starting with Executioner No. 1: WAR AGAINST THE MAFIA, which I delivered to Pinnacle in April of 1972. I posed myself as Mack Bolan for CALIFORNIA HIT. In fact, from No.13, WASHINGTON I.O.U. (1972) back, I largely used myself as the model for Mack Bolan and other male characters in the cover scenes. I posed for the reference photos, shot with a Polaroid camera. I could draw and turn myself into any kind of a character, and I did that a whole lot.”

Pinnacle published 38 Executioner novels between 1969 and 1980, using Gil Cohen as the cover artist. All but #16, SICILIAN SLAUGHTER (1973), were written by Don Pendleton. That one is so un-Pendleton-like that it remains a continuing source of controversy among Bolan fans. However, I do love the cover painting Gil did for it. It’s in the middle below, in between his paintings for #13, WASHINGTON I.O.U. (1972) and #24, CANADIAN CRISIS (1975) on the right.

During the years when Don Pendleton was writing the Executioner novels, Gil Cohen created some of his most classic Mack Bolan covers. Here are some more examples from that era in our book: #31, ARIZONA AMBUSH (1977), #32, TENNESSEE SMASH (1978) and #37, FRIDAYS FEAST (1979), which we picked for the cover of the deluxe hardcover edition of ONE MAN ARMY.

In 1980, Don Pendleton licensed the rights to the Executioner character to Harlequin’s Gold Eagle subsidiary, which is still publishing Mack Bolan novels under the Don Pendleton House name and is up to more than 450 books in the series. Harlequin tapped a number of talented writers to continue the series, such as Stephen Mertz, Michael Newton, and Dan Schmidt, and its fan base continued to grow. Harlequin’s art director wisely chose Gil Cohen to continue doing the cover art for the Bolan novels — and eventually for the Executioner spinoffs, the SuperBolan, Stony Man, Able Team, and Phoenix Force novel series.

Although many of Gil’s early Executioner covers are fan favorites and created the Mack Bolan image, his cover art during the Gold Eagle era just kept getting better and better. Below are three of my faves from the early ‘80s included in our book: #43, RETURN TO VIETNAM (1982), #46, BLOODSPORT and #56, ISLAND DEATHTRAP (1982).

One of the interesting anecdotes Gil tells in the book is about Executioner #60, SOLD FOR SLAUGHTER. The page with his original painting for that one is shown below, in between his originals for #59, CRUDE KILL (1983) — which we picked as the cover art for the paperback edition of ONE MAN ARMY — and #63, THE NEW WAR BOOK (1984).

Regarding SOLD FOR SLAUGHTER. Gil told us:

“Mack is holding a kind of special machine gun that looks like something that I made up, but it existed: a Hawk MM-1 MGL Automatic Grenade Launcher. It had a huge barrel, where you had an array of different bullets and missiles and stuff that could come out of the different chambers. Now you can’t just get that kind of weapon anywhere legally; even if you had a Class 3 license. I tried to get one for my reference photo and couldn’t. So, I figured, in order to get Mack—played by my brother-in-law Robby—to hold it properly, I’ve got to kind of make a mockup of that gun. So I did. I got tubes, I got a pistol grip from a model of a .45 handgun…it took a lot of work. But I did it, and I was really proud of it. I posed Robby holding it, and I thought it would impress the fans. Well, I brought those reference photos to the Mack Bolan Convention in San Francisco in 1985. Fans were looking at them, and one says, ‘What the hell is this? I expected you to have the real thing.’ They were disappointed! I was proud of the model I had done, but these guys were disappointed. They expected the real gun, and thought Robby had been holding the real deal for the painting.”

Harlequin kept Gil very busy through the 1980s producing cover art for Gold Eagle paperbacks. He recalls:

“After [Harlequin Art Director] Charles Kadin commissioned me to do the Executioner covers and spinoffs for Harlequin, Harlequin was without doubt my most important client for over ten years. They were giving me so much work, I hardly had the time to work for anybody else. I was doing one Mack Bolan every month. I was doing one Phoenix Force. And for several years, I was also doing one Able Team cover every month. That’s a hell of a lot of artwork! So, overwhelmingly, Harlequin was my main client from about 1981 until the early ’90s.”

Here are some pages from the book showing Gil’s original Executioner cover paintings from the mid-1980s that are favorites of mine and many other fans: #80, RUNNING HOT (1985), #91, THE TRIAL (1986) and #100, BLOOD TESTAMENT (1987).

In the early 1980s, Gil started doing the cover paintings for Mack Bolan specials and spinoffs. Some of his own favorites are those he did for the Stony Man and SuperBolan novels. He told us that the image of Bolan he created for Stony Man #1, STONY MAN DOCTRINE (1983), is what he considers to be “the quintessential Bolan...in black with all of his accoutrements.” The page with that image is shown below, along with the pages featuring Gil’s original cover paintings for two SuperBolan novels, #4, DIRTY WAR (1985) and #9, TROPIC HEAT (1987).

In the early 1980s, Harlequin’s Gold Eagle imprint launched two long-running Bolan spinoffs: the Able Team series, written by various authors under the House name Dick Stivers; and, the Phoenix Force series, credited under the House name Gar Wilson. Gil did the iconic early Able Team cover paintings that established the looks of the main characters in it, Carl Lyons, Rosario Blancanales, and Hermann Schwarz. Some of those shown in our book (and below) are Able Team #4, AMAZON SLAUGHTER (1983), #8, ARMY OF DEVILS (1983), and #12, DEATHBITES (1984).

In his cover paintings for the Phoenix Force spinoff series, Gil again created the iconic images of the characters. They initially included, former Israeli commando Yakov Katzenelenbogen, Canadian demolitions expert Gary Manning, Japanese martial artist Keio Ohara, former SAS member David McCarter, and anti-Castor Cuban rebel Rafael Encizo. Later in the series, Ohara was killed. He was replaced by African-American Vietnam veteran Calvin James. And, when Katz retired, former Delta Force member T.J. Hawkins was added to the team.

“Phoenix Force, I did for a much longer time [than Able Team],” Gil recalled. “There were 58 Phoenix Force covers, from 1982 to 1992...So if my memory is correct, the covers during those years are all mine.”

Gil also noted that many of the Phoenix Force covers were wraparound covers. Thus, his cover paintings were created so the front and back cover art was all part of the same scene. Gil said, with a bit of understatement: “A panoramic cover of that type simply took more time to paint. They would have to, because there’s more involved.”

Some of the awesomely cool wraparound Phoenix Force cover paintings by Gil that are featured in our book are Phoenix Force #4, TIGERS OF JUSTICE (1983), #20, TOOTH AND CLAW (1985), and #29, THE NIGHTMARE MERCHANTS (1987).

In the 1990s, Gil Cohen moved on from doing paperback covers and began another phase of career doing military aviation art, a phase that is still continuing. Many of the paintings from this phase of his career are showcased in the beautiful book GIL COHEN: AVIATION ARTIST.

“I started doing aviation art for galleries and commissions around 1990, and I take a lot more time with those,” Gil told us. “It can take me months to do an aviation painting. Of course, you can see the result; I think they’re even better. And I think I’m a better artist now, if I might say so, than I was when I was doing MAM and paperback artwork. But they were the training ground for all of it.”

Of course, I like and appreciate Gil’s military aviation paintings. I’ve even bought prints of some. But I am a particularly huge fan of the artwork he did for the covers of the Mack Bolan/Executioner novels and the other action/adventure series it spawned. Wyatt Doyle and I are proud to have been able to work with Gil to feature them in the book ONE MAN ARMY: THE ACTION PAPERBACK ARTWORK OF GIL COHEN.

Wyatt and I are also huge fans of the cover and interior paintings Gil did for men’s adventure magazines, during the first phase of his art career. I’m hoping a book featuring those will be one of the future art books in our Men’s Adventure Library series.

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or join the
Men’s Adventure Magazines & Books Facebook Group and post them there.

Related reading…

Monday, May 4, 2020

Darryle Purcell and his manly, pulpy Hollywood Cowboy Detectives…


I first ran across a mention of Darryle Purcell’s unique “Hollywood Cowboy Detectives” series in reviews posted by Ron Fortier, writer/editor and head of the pioneering Airship 27 “New Pulp” publishing company.

I’m a big admirer of Ron. So, I added one of the HCD books he reviewed, MYSTERY OF THE AMERICAN YETI, to my reading list.

By coincidence, not long after that, I got an email from Darryle. He’d been exploring my posts on this blog and noticed that the “About” page explains how my love of men’s adventure magazines came, in part, by way of my love for the 1970 LP WEASELS RIPPED MY FLESH by Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention.

Frank borrowed that album name from the title of the cover story of the September 1956 issue of MAN’S LIFE. But instead of using the classic man vs. weasels cover painting artist Wil Hulsey did for MAN’S LIFE, Zappa asked his friend, artist Neon Park, to create the album’s cover art. That cover, showing a man shaving with a weasel-shaped razor, became iconic in itself. (My publishing partner Wyatt Doyle and I borrowed the MAN’S LIFE story title and Hulsey’s cover art for our first anthology of men’s adventure magazine stories, and included the killer weasels story in it.)

In his initial email to me, Darryle said: “I worked with Neon Park, whose real name was Marty Muller, at Filmation Associates animation studio in Reseda, California. Marty was a very unique, fun individual and a master of cartooning and fine art. All of his album covers, billboards, posters and full-color illustrations were brilliant examples of his one-of-a-kind sense of humor.”

Reading that made me even more interested in getting to know more about Darryle, his career and the books he writes and illustrates. Here’s an overview of what I learned by doing some Googling and exchanging emails with him.

Darryle Purcell grew up on a small ranch in northern California. As a kid and teen, he loved pulp magazine characters like Doc Savage and “B-Western” films starring cowboy stars like Hoot Gibson, Ken Maynard and Hopalong Cassidy.

In 1965, Darryle joined the Army and served as an infantry paratrooper in Vietnam. At the end of his term of service, he went to college as an art-illustration major. During that time, he began doing political cartoons for the college paper and made a few animated films. That led to a job at Filmation working on Saturday morning cartoons, then to work as an illustrator of comic books, young-reader books for educational publishing firms and drawing editorial cartoons and motorcycle and rock ’n ’roll illustrations for weeklies around Los Angeles.

In the 1980s, Darryle began working for daily newspapers as an editorial artist, cartoonist and designer. Eventually, he became assistant managing editor at a southern California publication. In 1993, he moved to Arizona, where he worked as managing editor of the Mohave Valley Daily News and as public information director for Mohave County.

In 2013, Darryle “retired” – sort of. He really just started a new phase of his career by writing and illustrating novels. Since then, he has written 10 novels in his “Hollywood Cowboy Detectives” series and three in his “Man of the Mist” series, as well as many short stories featuring those characters.

I asked Darryle to give me a rundown on those series and here’s what he told me...

“My first Hollywood Cowboy Detectives novel, MYSTERY AT MOVIE RANCH, was released in 2014. It’s comprised of 12 cliffhanger chapters set in the San Fernando Valley area of southern California during the filming of the 1934 Mascot Pictures serial, MYSTERY MOUNTAIN, starring Ken Maynard. Sean “Curly” Woods, former Los Angeles Examiner crime beat reporter and current studio flack, is my main fictional character who appears in all HCD publications. In MOVIE RANCH, Woods is joined by Maynard and Western movie star and World Champion Rodeo Cowboy Hoot Gibson. They engage in a series of deadly encounters with an army of anti-American terrorists ruled by a sinister mastermind known only as the Viper.”

That first HCD novel set the template for those that followed. I’d say that they are, in a sense, “New Pulp” novels. But instead of featuring new takes on classic pulp magazine heroes, they are fictional adventures featuring real actors who starred in Western movies in the ‘30s and ‘40s and other historical figures from that era. In each HCD novel, the “Hollywood Cowboy Detectives” and their friends are pitted against various villains and monsters.

Darryle is a fan of hard-core action/adventure novels like Don Pendleton’s Mack Bolan/Executioner series and his novels do include some violence. But they are a milder type of entertainment, more akin to old pulp mags and the Captain Hazzard “New Pulp” novels written by Ron Fortier. Like me, Darryle is a fan of all of those genres. (By the way, the original cover paintings artist Gil Cohen did for the Mack Bolan novels are showcased in our new book ONE MAN ARMY: THE ACTION PAPERBACK ART OF GIL COHEN.)

“After returning from Vietnam, I found Don Pendleton’s Executioner series to be amazingly therapeutic,” Darryle told me. “Action-oriented, escapist literature brings us solace in that the good guys usually win, even if Mack Bolan has to kill a couple of hundred bad guys before we close the book. But I believe humor has a place in keeping heroes humble. Therefore, the characters that reside within the Hollywood Cowboy Detectives and Man of the Mist books are saddled with very human, feet of clay. My target audience is a bit like me — a mixed bag. War veterans. People who remember and/or appreciate Saturday matinees adventures. I do filter in a lot of humor in my adventures. As I learned back in Vietnam, if you can’t laugh at some crazy shit, life will eat you up. My HCD protagonists are Code-of-the-West action guys who end up dispensing hard justice to the bad guys. I would like young readers to enjoy my books. But my guess is that many of the folks who read the Hollywood Cowboy Detectives are older guys who have an interest in the history and culture of the 30s and 40s.”

In Darryle’s second HCD novel, MYSTERY OF THE ARIZONA DRAGON, Curly Woods is sent to a dude ranch to investigate threats to the cast and crew of a Charlie Chan movie being filmed there. Hoot Gibson, Chan stars Warner Oland and Keye Luke join him as he attempts to track down the bad guys behind of a variety of deadly incidents.

In MYSTERY OF THE MATINEE MURDERS, the third HCD novel, Woods, Gibson and Ray “Crash” Corrigan are joined by Orson Welles and a radio-theater group on a studio-funded road trip to entertain children in hospitals and at Saturday matinee presentations. A mysterious assassin hounds the entertainers, leaving a trail of victims killed with cobra venom.

The fourth novel with Curly and the gang, MYSTERY OF THE ALIEN BANSHEE, brings early Western film star William S. Hart into a sci-fi western adventure.

Another classic Westerns actor, Tom Mix, joins Gibson and Woods in MYSTERY OF THE HOWLING ANGELS, the fifth HCD novel. With bounties on their heads, the Hollywood Cowboy Detectives are one step in front of murderous agents of the Congressional Shadow Caucus, an organization of federally elected officials who support an alliance with Nazi Germany.

The sixth HCD novel, MYSTERY OF THE HORNED MONSTER, Curly and Hoot try to find out who is torching sets at Monogram Studios. The sabotage increases as the Hollywood Cowboy Detectives discover that someone may be trying to kill famous monster movie stars Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi. They fight their way through flying torpedoes, suicide bombers, students controlled by mind-altering drugs, brown-suited seemingly mute thugs, and weapons that fire liquid electricity only to be trapped and outnumbered in the underground lair of the Horned Monster.

In MYSTERY OF THE HAUNTED LION (the 7th HCD novel) the famous film stars Clark Gable and his wife Carole Lombard join the HCD team in a battle against a supernatural power that may unleash a Hell on Earth.

MYSTERY OF THE HARDBOILED HOOTER (novel 8), sends Hoot, Curly and a posse of adventurous friends on a trail of vengeance, to track and kill the murderers of Tom Mix.

I’m a fan of cryptozoological monster lore — as shown by our collection of men’s adventure magazine stories about Bigfoot and other legendary creatures, the CRYPTOZOOLOGY ANTHOLOGY. So I particularly enjoyed the ninth HCD novel, MYSTERY OF THE AMERICAN YETI. In that one, Darryle cooks up a plot in which Curly, William S. Hart and Hoot Gibson make friends with a Sasquatch family and join with them to fight Nazis, Communists, evil scientists, and giant metal creatures. It is, pun intended, a real hoot.

The 10th and latest full-length novel the HCD series is MYSTERY OF THE COWBOY SUMMIT. In it, the Hollywood Cowboy Detectives fight for their lives against piranhas, crocodiles, poison dart carrying indigenous natives, political terrorists, and an infestation of gigantic ungodly monsters that prey on horses, cattle and humans.

Those thumbnail descriptions should give you a sense of how wildly imaginative the HCD series is.

Darryle’s “Man of the Mist” novels — TRAIL OF THE BAT BEASTS, CAVE OF THE BLOOD DEMONS and CAULDRON OF THE HOLLYWOOD HEAD HUNTERS — are equally wild, adventure yarns. They feature a pulp-style hero named Ralph Thorn, a master of mind control, and his beautiful blonde assistant Moxie Malone. Darryle has also written short stories based on the characters in the Hollywood Cowboy Detectives and Man of the Mist series. Some are included in his novels, some are standalone Kindle offerings.

Darryle’s novels and stories are, obviously and intentionally, escapist literature. I like such escapist stuff. And, I like his quirky, cartoony cover art and interior illustrations. In the case of Darryle’s HCD series, I’m also impressed by the fact that he did a lot of homework about real Hollywood movies and stars and real historical events in writing them.

“All of the Hollywood Cowboy Detectives adventures take place, so far, between 1934 and 1941, and deal with real issues, international situations, politics, crime and quite a few famous and infamous people from that era,” he explained. “I do a lot of research on what was being filmed, where, and by which studio within a specific time frame. I then carve a window in the time period where certain people could have gathered together to deal with an adventure. The most fun I have is during the preparation for these books when I am reading up on the wonderful people who worked so hard on the B-Western films and serials. The early movie cowboys were all real rodeo champs and the stunts were all performed exactly as they are seen on film. Also during those years, governing agencies around the world were experimenting with unique weaponry, some of which I’ve used in these adventures. The sci-fi and supernatural elements are based on traditional beliefs and are a big part of the cliffhanger storylines.”

If you enjoy pulpy entertainment, check out Darryle Purcell’s novels. At a time when many of us need a mental vacation from pandemic news and blues, they’re your tickets out.

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