Saturday, December 19, 2009
Short Film: The Ugly File
It is a faithful adaptation, and really pretty good. The streaming quality isn't top-notch, but it will do.
Thursday, December 17, 2009
RIDERS OF THE SHADOWLANDS by H. A. DeRosso

I read another H. A. DeRosso collection edited by Bill Pronzini that I want to recommend. It is titled Riders of the Shadowlands; Five Star published it in 1999. It is similar to Under the Burning Sky in that it collects ten of DeRosso’s western-type stories—two were published by mystery magazines, although one of the stories is a strange kind of mystery—but the tales are less eclectic than the first collection, but no less entertaining, existential, or downright terrific.
The stories in this collection are also lightly edited—James Reasoner in a comment to my post about Under the Burning Sky said, “I compared a couple of the stories in the collection [Under the Burning Sky] to their original magazine appearances and found only a very few changes.” Pronzini also states that he only edited superfluous, and redundant words. I only mention the editing because of the recent Internet flare-up about the new Harlequin pulp editions that were edited for content—a situation that is far different than the editing in this volume.
My favorite stories included in this collection are both tales of the “shadowlands.” One is a short story and the other a novella. The novella is the title story, “Riders of the Shadowlands,” a fairly conventionally plotted rustler tale. Its ordinariness ends at the plot however. It is a violent story in a hellish setting with a hardboiled / noir attitude. It has more in common with the hardboiled crime written in the 1950s, but the western setting and attitudes are accurate and beautifully described in a hardbitten and stark prose. This story alone is worth the price of the book.
There is also a terrific mystery titled “Dark Purpose” that was originally published in Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine (April 1958) under the title “Kill the Killer.” It is a manhunt story set in the wilds of Northern Wisconsin. The wilderness is as much a character in this story as it is in DeRosso’s “shadowlands” tales. In fact it is as much a western as any of the stories included in the collection.
There are no duds in this collection. The stories were published between 1950 and 1962, and each one is an example of how talented and original DeRosso was as a writer. There were several times when I had to remind myself that the stories—particularly the “shadowlands” tales—were written and published in the 1950s. They are different from the era’s norm and it is probably due to that difference that they were not overly successful, but continue to live long past DeRosso’s death.
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Top Five Reads of 2009
This year’s list was more difficult to create than its predecessors because, simply, I read so many wonderfully entertaining novels. The year was a year of discovery. I discovered a dozen or so new authors, the bulk of them wrote during the paperback revolution in the 1950s and 60s and I also rediscovered a bevy of authors whom I had ignored for years. The most important from the latter group is Brian Garfield and Donald Hamilton, and from the former H. A. DeRosso, Merle Constiner and Robert Colby.
Here it is, in ascending order.
5. Line of Fire by Donald Hamilton. I read this title in March and I was awed by the power of both its linear storyline and tight, literate, prose. A perfect suspense novel.
4. Cage of Night by Ed Gorman. This is another early 2009 read; I read it in April. It is a story that doesn’t fit a category, exactly, but it lives somewhere between dark suspense, supernatural horror and crime. It is one of the finest horror novels I have ever read.
3. Under the Burning Sun by H. A. DeRosso. I read this one in December. This is a collection of stories written, for the most part, in the 1950s and 60s. The stories, particularly the “shadowlands” westerns are unforgettable. DeRosso was thirty or more years ahead of his time.
2. Fear in a Handful of Dust by Brian Garfield (originally published as by John Ives). I read this title in July. This modern western / suspense novel knocked me off my feet. It is literally perfect. A masterpiece of suspense.
1. Violent Saturday by W. L. Heath. I read it in May. There are only a few crime novels I would ever refer to as beautiful—defined as haunting, sharp, and meaningful—and this is one of them. It is a novel that everyone should read. Really, I mean everyone.
This list easily could have gone to ten of fifteen titles, but I sweated, worked, chaffed, and even cried a few times in my attempts to reduce it to the mandatory five. A few more titles that could have made the list but didn't are: Northfield by Johnny D. Boggs, North Star by Richard S. Wheeler, The Midnight Room and Ticket to Ride by Ed Gorman, Necessity by Brian Garfield, Binary by John Lange, and Slammer by Allan Guthrie.
All in all 2009 was a fine year for reading. I bet 2010 will be just as good.
Saturday, December 12, 2009
TICKET TO RIDE by Ed Gorman

The eighth, and reportedly last, Sam McCain novel opens in 1965 at a Vietnam peace rally in Black River Falls, Iowa. The rally is held in the local Presbyterian Church and after 90 minutes of the same arguments—being spoken by different people—McCain is ready to leave the rally for the comforts of a double feature at the drive-in. But then as the newest local superstar, a pretty boy named Harrison Doran, is speaking a man takes the stage and asks to rebut the protestor’s arguments.
The man is not only the father of a casualty of war, his son died in Da Nang, but he is also a prominent and wealthy resident of Black River Falls. His name is Lou Bennett, and it doesn’t take long for boos to start and the scene to turn ugly. There is an altercation between Doran and Bennett, and then later that night Bennett is found dead. Harrison Doran is the likeliest suspect. McCain doesn’t like Doran, but he is enlisted to defend him, and it is a position that makes Sam less than popular amongst the mostly conservative population.
Ticket to Ride is a real treat. It features all of the regulars; the town’s pornographer, writer of sleaze, and McCain buddy Kenny Thibodeau, Judge Esme Anne Whitney, Jamie Newton—McCain’s guileless, but less than competent secretary—and the obnoxious and usually wrong police chief Clifford (Cliffie) Sykes, Jr. Mr Gorman perfectly captures the essence of small town America and he does it with a subtleness that never succumbs to cliché or stereotype. His characters are living, breathing people, who are never clearly good or bad—he shows their humanity in brief and poignant moments of vulnerability, weakness, and strength.
The plot is smooth and sharp; the prose is understated, readable and powerful—
“I wanted to say something smart, but his honesty surprised me. He was admitting that all the scorn hurt him. He had no right to tell me this, because, at least for the moment here, I had to feel bad about making fun of him all the time. Cliffie was supposed to be a cartoon. It pissed me off that he’d forced me to see him as a human being.”
The amazing achievement of Ticket to Ride is that it is written with a humor and innocent cynicism that allows the story a power of both place and time, and also a social commentary that is relevant for the story's Vietnam-era setting, as well as that of modern America. It is simple a brilliantly rendered private eye novel that is a wonderful addition to the series and the genre.
Wednesday, December 09, 2009
"Dance of the Dead"
"Dance of the Dead" was written by Joe Ballarini, and directed by Gregg Bishop.
Warning: The trailer is rated R.
IMDb page.
Monday, December 07, 2009
UNDER THE BURNING SUN by H. A. DeRosso

I read an astonishingly good collection of stories by pulp writer H.A. DeRosso titled Under the Burning Sun. The collection contains twelve stories—two are novelettes. Ten of the stories are straight westerns, although generally far from traditional, and the other two are suspense with a western voice. It was compiled and edited by Bill Pronzini; in the introduction Pronzini writes that each of the stories, save one, was lightly edited “to eliminate superfluous and repetitive passages contained in the original magazine versions.”
This collection is essentially my first experience with DeRosso’s work and I was stunned by the power of his writing. It tended toward the unusual and bleak, the mythical and surreal, but it also vitalized the characters with a hard-bitten sadness and self-awareness that is rarely found in genre fiction. A major theme in the stories is one of hope, but it is hope that is never fulfilled. The characters—the protagonist—can see a better place and future, but can never quite get there.
The best story in the collection is a novelette titled “The Bounty Hunter.” It is what Bill Pronzini labels a “shadowlands” story—a surreal western that is more related to the bleak otherworlds of The Twilight Zone than a traditional western. It reminded me of Stephen King’s The Gunslinger. The story is relatively simple. It follows the track of a bounty hunter named Spurr who kills an outlaw who, he is told later, may be his own son. It is a mythical story—from the beautifully surreal landscape to the internal demons that drive Spurr to search for the truth.
The other stories range from the more traditional “Hold-up”—the story of the father of a failing rancher who is forced to choose between his self-identified morality and both his, and his son’s, future—to the rich rendering of the final months of the Chiricahuas’ fight to stay off the reservation in “The Last Sleep.”
Under the Burning Sun is more than a collection of western stories. It is a sample of how good the genre story can be. The violence—and there is some—is realistic and vivid. It is examined with a neutrality that allows the reader to see its affects on the characters and story. The “shadowlands” tales—“The Bounty Hunter” and “Those Bloody Bells of Hell!”—are brilliant. The prose is written in a surreal form that depicts the landscape as a hellish nightmare where only monsters can exist. It is best related to a high quality comic book; something like Jonah Hex.
Under the Burning Sun is one of the best books I have read this year. It read like a train steaming through the vast deserts of the Southwest; desolate, beautiful and deadly. Bill Pronzini relates DeRosso’s style to the Black Mask school of hardboiled in general, and Cornell Woolrich’s work in particular.
Do yourself a favor and find a copy. You won’t regret it.
UPDATE. Here is a link to a .pdf file of DeRosso's "Hide-away," which appeared in Triple Detective in 1954. It isn't on the par of the stories included in Under the Burning Sun, but it is enjoyable.
Wednesday, December 02, 2009
And the Winner is...
Also related to the contest, I received several terrific recommendations for pulp western writers. Including:
Donald Hamilton, Marvin H. Albert (aka Al Conroy), Harry Whittington, H.A. DeRosso--I just started a story collection and so far I am blown away by the bleak power of his writing--T.T. Flynn, Peter Dawson, Luke Short, Clifton Adams, and Jack Slade.
Thanks to everyone!



