Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Frank Castle: Lovely and Lethal

After Brian Evenson's weird and effective The Open Curtain I thought I'd be in the mood for something lighter, maybe something old, maybe something pulpy (or paperbacky). I have tons of old paperbacks in my shelves, but not enough to time for them. So I thought I'd read one.

I read two or three westerns by Frank Castle when I was doing my book on American westerns paperbackers called Kuudestilaukeavat ("Six Guns" in English) and liked them well enough to try one of his crime novels. I picked up Lovely and Lethal, a Gold Medal paperback from 1957, and started it - and pretty soon dropped it and moved on to something else.

Lovely and Lethal is a bit like a private eye novel, but the hero of the book, one Jeff Normand, is actually a lawyer moving to a small town and getting acquainted with both the high society and the low-life of the place pretty quickly. He meets a beautiful dame, whose sister had possibly killed herself, but in odd circumstances. Normand starts to unravel the mystery behind the sister's death.

Castle's prose style is flat and not very interesting, not even very hardboiled, though I remember his westerns were pretty tough. The characters in Lovely and Lethal are pretty much stock. There's too much talk, not enough action. So Lovely and Lethal proved a bit boring and thought I'd read something else instead. And the book has a boring cover. Where's Robert McGinnis when you need him? There are enough sultry babies in the book to warrant a nice GGA cover!

Here's my earlier post on Frank Castle and his later crime novel "Sowers of the Doom" that seems to have been published only in Finland, and here's Castle on Steve Lewis's MysteryFile blog. I'm beginning to think that the book published in Finland only was the last one on Castle's career, unless he moved on to markets where he used only pseudonyms, writing porn or some such, and the pseudonyms have never come to light.

I'm now reading Michael Marshall's The Straw Men and enjoying it more.

2 comments:

  1. After reading an interesting article:lynn-munroe-books.com/list63/Lassiter-Slade.htm
    ‎I've found that the mysterious Frank Pulliam Castle has wrote some of Lassiter novels under the collective house name of Jack Slade.
    #7 Tower 43-264 SIDEWINDER – Frank Castle 1968 (sic, actually 1969) BT 50520 1973
    #14 BT 50597 THE BADLANDERS – Frank Castle 1973 (as #10) BT 51315 nd 1978
    #16 BT 50646 HELL AT YUMA – Frank Castle 1974 (as #15)
    #17 BT 50681 RIDE INTO HELL – Frank Castle 1974 (as #16)
    #18 BT 50734 BLOOD RIVER – Frank Castle 1974 (as #17)

    Best,
    Tiziano Agnelli

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