Showing posts with label Glen Orbik. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Glen Orbik. Show all posts

Friday, November 17, 2023

The Starr Mysteries - Seduction Of The Innocent!


Seduction of the Innocent is the third book in the Jack and Maggie Starr mystery trilogy by Max Allan Collins. This book was published by Hard Case Crime in 2013. The series first two installments had been published in 2007 and 2008 by Berkley Prime Crime, a division of Penguin Books, but that publisher had decided against doing the third and at this time final volume. So, it's real pleasure to see this final book, perhaps the best of the three. The late Glen Orbik's cover is a real stunner, echoing the most memorable of vintage 50's comics covers.

(Dr.Frederic Wertham)

The story is set in 1954 and concerns itself with a notorious psychologist cum social crusader named "Dr. Werner Frederick" whose book Ravage the Lambs sets out to reveal the lascivious nature of comic books and create a public furor about same. Of course, the Starr Syndicate, headed by former stripper Maggie Starr and her stepson Jack Starr care a great deal about this effort as it will directly impact their business.

(Bill Gaines and Al Feldstein)

So, when E.F. (Educational Funnies) Comics honchos "Bob Price" and "Hal Feldman" seek to face down the critic, it becomes a real problem for comics when Price's testimony before a Congressional commission becomes a debacle. Price ends up embarrassed and threatens to kill Dr. Frederic.

(Al Williamson)

Also invested in countering Frederic is hot-headed artist "Will Allsion" who also threatens the pop psychologist on television. That becomes a particularly dicey problem when Frederic actually does end up dead under very mysterious circumstances.

(Charles Biro - the one with the monkey)

Maggie asks Jack to investigate, and he does. Among the many folks he interviews are Price and Feldman, but also editor of Levinson Comics "Charley Bardwell" who is a tough mug famous for his pranks and drinking as well as his pet monkey, which even gets into the comics he published. 

(Bob Wood)

Bardwell's partner "Pete Pine" is an even more notorious drunk, a man who becomes quite violent when he's had too much booze.

(Tarpe Mills)

Jack runs into a great deal of trouble when he finds Pine at the apartment of "Lyla Lamont", a darkly beautiful comic artist who has a wild reputation for enjoying life in all its many forms.

The chase around NYC in search of a killer is a snappy and finely paced affair. Because this story centered around a group of comics folks already close to the criminality in some instances, it seems to have a more noir atmosphere than the previous volumes, or maybe the lurid details are just naturally part of this at times most pungent tale. The action is rousing in this one, both of the amorous and pugilistic variety.


As always Terry Beatty supplies some beautiful illustrations for this story, his style very reminiscent of the great Johhny Craig, is especially apt in this volume.

This was a great send off for the series. It seems to me there are a goodly number of stories which could be yet told from the shadowy world of comics, but Collins said that this volume concluded his plans for Jack and Maggie.

If you can find them, I highly recommend these three books. They are filled with wonderful ambience and details from 1950's New York City. Any comics fan will find them fascinating, and any mystery fan will find them fulfilling.

Rip Off

Monday, September 29, 2014

Seduction Of The Innocent!


Seduction of the Innocent is the third book in the Jack and Maggie Starr mystery trilogy by Max Allan Collins. This book was published by Hard Case Crime in 2013. The series first two installments had been published in 2007 and 2008 by Berkley Prime Crime, a division of Penguin Books, but that publisher had decided against doing the third and at this time final volume. So  it's real pleasure to see this final book, perhaps the best of the three. The Glen Orbik cover is a real stunner, echoing the most memorable of vintage 50's comics covers.

Dr.Frederic Wertham
The story is set in 1954 and concerns itself with a notorious psychologist cum social crusader named "Dr.Werner Frederick" whose book Ravage the Lambs sets out to reveal the lascivious nature of comic books and create a public furor about same. Of course the Starr Syndicate, headed by former stripper Maggie Starr and her stepson Jack Starr care a great deal about this effort as it will directly impact their business.

Bill Gaines and Al Feldstein
So when  E.F. (Educational Funnies) Comics honchos "Bob Price" and "Hal Feldman" seek to face down the critic, it becomes a real problem for comics when Price's testimony before a Congressional commission becomes a debacle. Price ends up embarrassed and threatens to kill Dr.Frederic.

Al Williamson
Also invested in countering Frederic is hot-headed artist "Will Allsion" who also threatens the pop pyschologist on television. That becomes a particularly dicey problem when Frederic actually does end up dead under very mysterous circumstances.

Charles Biro (the one with the monkey)
Maggie asks Jack to investigate and he does. Among the many folks he interviews are Price and Feldman, but also editor of Levinson Comics "Charley Bardwell" who is a tough mug famous for his pranks and drinking as well as his pet monkey, which even gets into the comics he published. 

Bob Wood
Bardwell's partner "Pete Pine" is an even more notorious drunk, a man who becomes quite violent when he's had too much booze.

Tarpe Mills
Jack runs into a great deal of trouble when he finds Pine at the apartment of "Lyla Lamont", a darkly beautiful comic artist who has a wild reputation for enjoying life in all its many forms.

The chase around NYC in search of a killer is a snappy and finely paced affair. Because this story centered around a group of comics folks already close to the criminality in some instances, it seem to have a more noir atmosphere than the previous volumes, or maybe the lurid details are just naturally part of this at times most pungent tale. The action is rousing in this one, both of the amorous and  pugilistic variety.


 As always Terry Beatty supplies some beautiful illustrations for this story, his style very reminiscent of the great Johhny Craig, is especially apt in this volume.

This was a great send off for the series. It seems to me there are a goodly number of stories which could be yet told from the shadowy world of comics, but Collins said that this volume concluded his plans for Jack and Maggie.

If you can find them, I highly recommend these three books. They are filled with wonderful ambience and details from 1950's New York City. Any comics fan will find them fascinating and any mystery fan will find them fulfilling.

Rip Off

Monday, March 18, 2013

Comics Crimewave!


Hard Case Crime's Seduction of the Innocent by Max Allan Collins is the third of his Jack and Maggie Starr mysteries set in and around the world of comic strips and comic books, which as we learn can be a quite lurid one indeed, filled with mayhem on the page and off. 


Underneath this utterly compelling Glen Orbik cover, we find a story about one Dr.Werner Frederick, a crusader against  comic books who bears a striking similarity to a historical cultural figure of note. Boiling out of this hysterical melee there is  murder and Jack Starr is called upon to uncover the truth.


One of the clever things about how Collins puts these books together is that he gets his longtime creative partner Terry Beatty to illustrate them. Here we see an excellent example of Beatty's clean and effective and attractive style, evoking more than a whisper of Johnny Craig here.


Seduction of the Innocent is the third Jack Starr mystery. The first, titled A Killing in Comics  is concerned with a murder around the ownership of a most successful and oddly familiar superhero.


The second volume titled Strip for Murder concerns the murderous feud between two of the most successful and famous comic strip artists, a feud inspired by real people and strangely real events.


The fusion of pulp mystery fiction and comics is nothing new for the Collins and Beatty team. Early in the Hard Case Crime series run, they brought out Deadly Beloved, a novel developed from their own long-running comic book series Ms.Tree.


Collins has become one of the great pulp writers of his generation, and when teamed with Terry Beatty both seem to bring out the best in one another. There is a charm and wit which seems to exude from their work, making it irresistible fun. Seduction of the innocent indeed.

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