Showing posts with label stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stories. Show all posts
Saturday, May 30, 2026
SleuthSayers: Re-Tell Me a Story
SleuthSayers: Re-Tell Me a Story: It seems that I get a lot of my ideas for SleuthSayers posts from what I see on my TV--and that's what happened with today's colum...
Monday, January 19, 2026
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Southern Mirror: Stories and Reflections on Life in the South by Brenda Gantt
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Southern Mirror: Stories and Reflections on L...: Brenda Gantt has made quite a name for herself on social media for her cooking videos. People just couldn’t get enough of her downhome...
Wednesday, January 07, 2026
SleuthSayers: The Waiting Game
SleuthSayers: The Waiting Game: We happy few who specialize in short stories obsess about the length of time our little masterpieces sit waiting for verdicts by editors. W...
Tuesday, August 19, 2025
SleuthSayers: Hot Streak by Michael Bracken
SleuthSayers: Hot Streak: Attempting to predict anything in publishing is a mug’s game, especially trying to predict how long it will take for a short story to find ...
Friday, April 04, 2025
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Marple: Twelve New Mysteries
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Marple: Twelve New Mysteries: Reviewed by Jeanne I am a long-time fan of Agatha Christie, especially of her stories featuring the elderly spinster Jane Marple. Wi...
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Monday, April 08, 2024
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: What You Are Looking For Is in the Library by Michiko Aoyama
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: What You Are Looking For Is in the Library by Mich...: Reviewed by Jeanne The Hatori Community House is a place where people can do many different things, such as attend a class on computer...
Tuesday, April 02, 2024
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Kamogawa Food Detectives by Hisashi Kashiwai
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Kamogawa Food Detectives by Hisashi Kashiwai: Reviewed by Jeanne Taste and smell are closely linked, so it’s only natural that certain tastes evoke memories just as smells do. Th...
Friday, November 03, 2023
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: 23 Tales: Appalachian Ghost Stories, Legends, and Other Mysteries
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: 23 Tales: Appalachian Ghost Stories, Legends, and...: Reviewed by Jeanne Edited by Terry Shaw and Brad Lifford, this fascinating collection of tales from Howling Hills Publishing takes on tr...
Wednesday, February 08, 2023
Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: Stories by Parnell Hall
Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: Stories by Parnell Hall: My husband is a fan of the Stanley Hastings series by Parnell Hall, and is also reading the Steve Winslow series, which Hall wrote under the...
Wednesday, November 03, 2021
Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: Stories by Agatha Christie
Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: Stories by Agatha Christie: A few nights ago I decided to read some short stories from a collection of Hercule Poirot stories. I read the first two in the book: "...
Monday, July 26, 2021
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Moonlight & Misadventures
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Moonlight & Misadventures: Welcome back to Kevin Tipple! For more reviews and news of interest to mystery fans and authors, check out Kevin's Corne r , the awa...
Tuesday, November 17, 2020
Criminal Minds: Pitch It by Frank Zafiro
Criminal Minds: Pitch It: Pitch (im)perfect – This week, you’re pitching the worst idea for a crime, mystery or thriller novel that you can think of – give us your sy...
Tuesday, May 08, 2018
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Slade House by David Mitchell
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Slade House by David Mitchell: Reviewed by Christy H. The small black door in the wall is hard to find. It’s only visible to certain people on a certain ...
Sunday, April 16, 2017
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Moral Disorder by Margaret Atwood
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Moral Disorder by Margaret Atwood: Reviewed by Ambrea In Moral Disorder , Margaret Atwood creates a series of interconnected stories that lead Nell through her...
Wednesday, July 08, 2015
Mark Troy and the Female Private Detective: Grace "Redsie" Culver (1934 -1937)
In recent weeks, Texas author
Mark Troy has considered Carrie
Cashin and Sarah
Watson for his series on the Female Private Detective. This time around Grace
"Redsie" Culver is his subject.
Grace "Redsie" Culver (1934
-1937)
Grace is
smart, competent, brave and independent, though perhaps shading into
recklessness at times. In the first story we learn that gangsters killed her
father, but they could not kill the "detective spirit" which was part
of the Culver blood. Whatever "detective spirit" is, it gets Redsie
into a lot of cases up to her neck, and at some point it gets a lot of guns
pointed at her. Sometimes she waxes philosophically about it.
"Grace
always had known that Death played tag with her profession. Her own father had
gone out that way, fighting, with his boots on. She might have been content to
follow him."
Content
she's not. It's the thrill of the chase that motivates her to leave her
newspaper job and join Big Tim's outfit.
"The
tracking of malefactors, the swift action of cornering them and the thrill
of bringing them in for justice, were as
much in her blood as is speed in that of a finely-bred race horse."
If the
Culver blood drags her into trouble, it also drags Big Tim and her colleague
Jerry Riker along with her. Sometimes one or both of them has to save her, but
only after she's solved the case. At other times, Grace does the saving of Tim
and Jerry.
The
stories are more medium-boiled than hard-boiled. There is plenty of action and
violence, but little of the cynicism one expects from a hard-boiled story.
Grace doesn't
always carry a gun, but everybody else seems to. When she finds herself in a
predicament, she has to resort to whatever weapons happen to be handy—paperweight,
kitchen knife, pan of hot grease, even a lipstick tube. More than likely,
however, she will get her hands on a gun as the action escalates, and she will
use it effectively.
Red
takes as good as she gets. She gets punched, kicked, knocked out and tied up
when she is not getting shot at. She leaps onto speeding cars or drives them,
herself, in wild chases.
Grace
has a fondness for double chocolate sodas and for the landlady from whom she
rents a room, Maggie Moody. Jerry Riker wishes for some fondness from her, but
she seems oblivious to Jerry's advances. To his credit, he never gives up
trying to get her out on a date.
"Jerry
saw an opening and dove into it. They came few and far between with a fast -action
girl like "Big Tim" Noonan's red-headed aider-and-abetter. But from
long habit, young Riker kept on trying." Just when it seems she might give
in, the phone rings with another case.
The
stories are competently written and still hold up well in spite of the years. Roswell
Brown was a pseudonym for Jean Francis Webb who contributed plenty of stories
in a variety of genres. He wrote gothic romance novels under a woman's name.
There is some speculation that Webb might be a woman, though the consensus
seems to be that he was male.
The
Grace Culver stories, as with most stories from that era, are hard to find.
However, six of them have been compiled into an ebook, Fox Red, by D.E.
Cunningham. It is available for purchase from the Barnes & Noble Nook Store
(ISBN: 1588737130)
Mark Troy ©2015
Mark Troy is the author of The
Splintered Paddle, The Rules,
Pilikia Is My Business and Game Face. His website is at http://marktroymysterywriter.com
Wednesday, June 03, 2015
Mark Troy and the Female Private Detective: Carrie Cashin (1937-1943)
Please welcome friend and author
Mark Troy to the blog. On the 1st and 3rd Wednesday each
month Mark will bring another perspective on mysteries here. Something that is
good for all of us as the mystery field is a wide one with a rich and deep
history. I am looking forward to these posts…
She finds the clues, tackles the bad guys, and delivers justice on her own.
Carrie Cashin, 1937 - 1943
The early
1970's saw a big change in hard-boiled private eye fiction when women PIs
entered the field.
Right?
Wrong!
Hard-boiled
Janes have walked the mean streets nearly as long as hard boiled Dicks and have
acquitted themselves just as well as their brothers. So it comes as a surprise when a commentator
such as John Semley, writing in the New
York Times, "The
Death Of The Private Eye" makes no mention of women except as femme
fatales and minxes. In his view, "The hard-boiled
gumshoes were men . . . "
So in upcoming posts we'll give the Janes their due. First up is
Carrie Cashin.
Carrie Cashin was the creation of Theodore Tinsley, a prolific author
of crime and western fiction. She appeared in forty-four stories from 1937 to
1943 in Crime Busters and Street and Smith's Mystery Magazine. Her
appearance on the cover of Crime Busters
was enough to spike sales of that issue and Street and Smith came very close to
giving her a magazine of her own.
Carrie
began as a department store detective, but then started her own agency, the
Cash and Carry Agency. She ran it on the sound principle of payment up front,
cash only. The agency's motto: "You pay, we deliver." Deliver, she
does. She is so successful, she can charge a whopping fee of a thousand dollars
for her services.
In the
best hard-boiled tradition, Carrie does not let little things, like the law,
get in the way of her mission. Breaking and entering, robbery and kidnapping
are all part of her skill set. Carrie is not one to enter a door when a window
will do. Her weapons are a small gun, which she carries in a thigh holster, and
a purse with a secret compartment.
In her
first story, "White Elephant," 1937, we find her on a ledge outside a
15th floor hotel room, ready to break in and recover (steal?) a stolen elephant
amulet. Recover it she does, but returning to her own room she finds her client
dead, killed with her nail file, and the police at the door. Out the window and
over the roof she goes, down into the subway where she dodges a train and makes
it back to her office.
Carrie's
stories are breathless adventures. She rushes here and there, encountering
bodies and leaving some herself. She's not all brawn and athleticism, however.
She solves the crimes with her brains and wins hearts with her "softly
rounded beauty."
Carrie
is aided in her exploits by a good-looking, but somewhat dense, "He
doesn't know a clue when he sees one," guy named Aleck "Handsome
Aleck" Burton. Aleck fronts for the agency because Carrie believes most
people are biased against female detectives. Shades of Remington Steele! When a
client comes in, Carrie takes the role of a secretary, taking notes and asking
the probing questions — for clarification, of course. Don't expect Handsome Aleck to come to
Carrie's rescue or get her out of jams. This is Carrie's show all the way.
She finds the clues, tackles the bad guys, and delivers justice on her own.
Carrie's
stories are hard to find. When issues of Crime Busters pop up on eBay, they
usually fetch $200 or more. Your best bet is to sample her exploits in Hard-boiled dames: Stories
featuring women detectives, reporters, adventurers, and criminals from the pulp
fiction magazines of the 1930s, edited by Bernard A. Drew, St.
Martin's, 1986. It's worth a visit to your local library.
Mark Troy ©2015
Mark Troy is the author of The Splintered Paddle, The Rules, Pilikia Is My Business and Game Face. His website
is at http://marktroymysterywriter.com
Thursday, February 19, 2015
Via The Short Mystery Fiction Society Blog: Members' Publication News
The Short Mystery Fiction Society Blog: Members' Publication News: The following members sent in publication news this month: Peter DiChellis, "More to Huff" , Shotgun Honey (February 11, 2015) ...
Thursday, November 27, 2014
Via The Short Mystery Fiction Society Blog: Members' Publication News
The Short Mystery Fiction Society Blog: Members' Publication News: The following members sent in publication news this month: Tace Baker, Bluffing is Murder , Barking Rain Press (November 2014) Linda Cahi...
Friday, September 26, 2014
Via Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: New Western Fiction E-Zine
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: New Western Fiction E-Zine: Check It Out: Welcome to Saddlebag Dispatches , Where Stories Of The West Come To Be Told. If you like stories of the Old West, you’ve c...
Friday, May 16, 2014
Via CrimeFictionWriter: Writing fiction
CrimeFictionWriter: Writing fiction: "Writing fiction is, in many ways, like a religion. It is a daily practice, a way of life, a set of rituals, an orientation toward the...
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