| | | | | | | Davy Crockett's Almanack of Mystery, Adventure and The Wild West | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Remember Rex McBride? He debuted in Sabotage (1940) and returned in And Sudden Death (1940) and Decoy (1940), all previously featured as Forgotten Books.
This fourth volume of the series, from 1943, boasts the coolest title, lending itself to some of the coolest artwork. Why then, when Signet reprinted the book in 1950, did they retitle it Murder All Over? Beats me! (BTW, beware of the Handi-Books edition. It's abridged.)
Reading Cleve F. Adams is always a joy. My brain slides right into the familiar rhythm of his prose and the jaded attitudes of his heroes. In Up Jumped the Devil, Rex is in San Francisco on the trail of a fabulous string of diamonds known as the Adelphi necklace. It's gone missing, and the company that insured it for a hundred grand has hired Rex to get it back.
He's up against the fatcat owner, a Cesar Romero lookalike who's been sniffing around the owner's wife and adopted daughter, a dirty cop who hates his guts, an unscrupulous diamond dealer, a gambling den magnate and an assortment of small time hoods and grifters. And just to make things tougher, the FBI is using his as a stalking horse in their investigation of sabotaged war plants on the West Coast.
For this one, Adams employed the art of "cannibalization" made famous by his friend Raymond Chandler. The first third of the book began life as the novelette "Exodus" in the Jan. 13, 1940 issue of Detective Fiction Weekly. In the story, the detective is a McBride clone named Regan. Some of the supporting cast retained their names in the novel, while others were rechristened. And that same issue of the mag featured Part 5 of the 6-part Rex McBride serial published later that year as And Sudden Death. While "Exodus" later proved to be a fine title for a movie - and for a Bob Marley song - I consider "Up Jumped the Devil" a big improvement.
If you haven't read Adams, the first two pages of "Exodus" (below) will give you a good taste.
On this reading, the character of Rex McBride struck an extra chord, and I got the possibly crackpot notion that John Sandford, author of the Prey series, might have been a Cleve F. Adams fan. Like McBride, Sandford's hero Lucas Davenport is dark complexioned, a fancy dresser and a womanizer. Both like to spend money on themselves, both have quick, violent tempers, and both have contacts at all levels of society. How about it, Mr. S? Is Lucas is Rex's nephew?
(click to enlarge)
Crave more Adams? I posted scans the complete short story "Jigsaw" right HERE. For links to more Forgotten Books from the usual suspects, visit pattinase. | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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