The first Mickey Spillane novel I ever read was THE DEEP, a hardback I checked out from the library when I was 12 years old and in the sixth grade. By that time I was already volunteering at the local library and could check books out to myself without anybody saying, “Hey, kid, are you sure you’re old enough to read that?”
My second Spillane novel, and my introduction to Mike Hammer, was KISS ME,
DEADLY, another library hardcover I took with me and read while my family was
visiting my aunt in Blanket, Texas. I still remember reading it in the big
brown armchair that was my favorite reading spot in her house.
Just like I remember reading the Signet paperback of THE SNAKE in the
repurposed World War II barracks building that served as the high school study
hall, or, best of all, reading ONE LONELY NIGHT in a chair on the porch of my
sister’s house one summer day, blown away by the great opening, the even better
ending, and all the stuff in between.
Which is my long-winded, nostalgia-wallowing way of saying that I love Mickey
Spillane’s books. I read them all, I reread one now and then over the years,
and I read and enjoyed many of the Spillane novels that Max Allan Collins
completed from various fragments and outlines and notes. Mike Hammer is one of
my all-time favorite fictional private eyes and Mickey Spillane one of my
favorite writers. One of the things I’m most proud of from my tenure as the
editor of Rough Edges Press is that I got to work on the great Spillane
collection STAND UP AND DIE!
So for a while now, I’ve been looking forward to SPILLANE: KING OF PULP
FICTION, the first in-depth biography of Spillane by that same Max Allan
Collins and his excellent collaborator James L. Traylor. Spillane is long
overdue for such a volume, and Collins and Traylor have done a magnificent job
of delivering it.
I learned a lot about Spillane’s childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood
than I ever knew before, and the book is illustrated with photos I’d never
seen. Spillane really comes alive in the biographical sections, a driven but
affable guy, true to his blue collar roots, never pretentious, but treating his
work a lot more seriously than the impression his self-deprecating attitude
might convey. Spillane, clearly, was able to take the job of putting words on
paper with great seriousness while recognizing the absurdities of much of the
publishing business and all the trappings that go with it. My kind of guy, in
other words.
Woven through the biography is a critical discussion and appreciation of each
of Spillane’s novels. As Collins and Traylor point out, you can’t really talk
about Spillane’s novels without talking about the endings, so spoilers abound
and anyone who hasn’t read the books should consider themselves warned. The
thing of it is, even when you know the endings, the books still hold fabulously
on rereading. Some of them I enjoyed even more, because knowing what was
coming, I could appreciate how cleverly Spillane set everything up. One of the
great joys of writing is planting a seed that doesn’t come to fruition until
much later on.
Collins and Traylor also cover the various moves, TV shows, radio shows, comic
strips, and comic books based on Spillane’s work, as well as his early comic
book scripting and his possible sales to the pulps and the slicks. (For the
record, I’m absolutely convinced that Spillane sold hardboiled detective yarns
to various pulps under the name “Frank Morris” . . . and I hope to see a
collection of those stories someday.)
There are helpful listings of Spillane’s novels and collections in publication
order, and also a chronological listing of all the Mike Hammer novels including
the ones Collins completed for Spillane. This is very helpful because for a
while now I’ve been toying with the idea of reading/rereading the Hammer series
in order, including the Collins titles. Whether anything will come of this, I
don’t know—I have lots of great ideas I never get around to—but in case I do,
this list will be very valuable.
I really enjoyed SPILLANE: KING OF PULP FICTION. It’s entertaining,
informative, and very nostalgic, but above all, just plain fun to read. It’s
the best book I’ve read so far this year and is a lock for my top ten list at
the end of the year. It's available in print, e-book, and audio editions. If you’re a Spillane fan, you’ve probably already bought it.
If you’re thinking about it but haven’t pulled the trigger yet, go ahead.
Mike Hammer would. And then tell you it was easy.
2 comments:
GREAT REVIEW!!
I'm a Spillane fan, and yes, I have the book. Halfway through it and loving every page. As with any great book, I'm slowing down because I want to stretch out the enjoyment. Thanks for the terrific review.
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