Frank Kane has been one of my favorite authors since I first
read one of his Johnny Liddell private eye novels in high school, fifty years
ago. I never read any of his stand-alone books until now, though. THE LIVING
END was published by Dell in 1957, and it’s going to be reprinted soon by Stark
House as part of its Black Gat Books line. That’s an excellent choice, because
I really enjoyed this novel.
THE LIVING END is the story of Eddie Marlon, an ambitious, hustling young songwriter who winds up working as the assistant to a popular disc jockey at a New York radio station. This is early in the disc jockey era, and Marty Allen, Eddie’s boss, is one of the first really successful ones. The music industry is changing, and so is radio.
Eddie’s story is as old as the hills, though. He’s a heel, through and through, and will resort to any tactic, crooked or not, in order to advance his career. When a lucky break allows him to strongarm himself into a position of power, he uses his admittedly canny instincts to reinvent himself as the most influential personality in radio, and every bit of power he seizes just emboldens him to grasp for more. The question is when, not if, all this is going to catch up to him . . .
THE LIVING END is the story of Eddie Marlon, an ambitious, hustling young songwriter who winds up working as the assistant to a popular disc jockey at a New York radio station. This is early in the disc jockey era, and Marty Allen, Eddie’s boss, is one of the first really successful ones. The music industry is changing, and so is radio.
Eddie’s story is as old as the hills, though. He’s a heel, through and through, and will resort to any tactic, crooked or not, in order to advance his career. When a lucky break allows him to strongarm himself into a position of power, he uses his admittedly canny instincts to reinvent himself as the most influential personality in radio, and every bit of power he seizes just emboldens him to grasp for more. The question is when, not if, all this is going to catch up to him . . .
Even though there’s very little action, Kane keeps the pace in this book really racing along. His style is terse, hardboiled, funny at times, poignant at others. I really enjoyed THE LIVING END and am glad it’s being reprinted. I give it a high recommendation.
2 comments:
George Kelley did this one last week! More attention than Kane usually gets in a fortnight these years, I think...
Frank King is a favorite of mine as well. I haven't read The Living End, but thanks to you, I'll keep an eye open for it. Kane wrote scripts for the original Mike Hammer TV series with Darren McGavin, too. His scripts were often the best episodes and you can imagine it's Johnny up there on the screen instead of Mike!
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