I wouldn’t be surprised if every one of you reading this knows that cousins Frederic Danny and Manfred B. Lee created the pseudonym and the character Ellery Queen. And most, if not all, of you are also aware that during the Sixties, Dannay and Lee contracted with several ghostwriters to turn out a number of novels published under the Ellery Queen name, mostly stand-alones but including a couple of series, one of them six books published by Popular Library featuring one-eyed New York City police detective Captain Tim Corrigan.
I owned all six of those paperbacks at one time or another, but I know you won’t
be surprised to hear that I never got around to reading any of them. However, on
a whim, I recently picked up the e-book edition of the first novel in the
series, WHERE IS BIANCA?, and figured it was time I finally read a Tim Corrigan
novel.
The eyepatch-wearing Corrigan lost his left eye while serving in the Korean
War, then worked with the OSS, and then became a cop despite the patch not
being regulation. His old army buddy Chuck Baer is a private detective in New
York, and rather than being at odds with each other, as many fictional cops and
private eyes are, they frequently work so closely together on cases that Baer almost
might as well be a cop himself.
In WHERE IS BIANCA?, the body of a young woman is found in the sewers and is in
such bad shape that identifying her is a challenge. Baer has been hired to
locate wealthy Bianca Lessard, who owns a number of theaters around the
country, including several in New York. She had a fight with her husband and
walked out of their swanky apartment. When she never came back, her worried
husband hired Baer to locate her. The corpse in the sewer is wearing a distinctive
ring that belonged to Bianca Lessard, but then Corrigan and Baer turn up two
more missing women who might be the victim, and that starts them on a hunt
through a circle of Broadway actors, producers, and playwrights, all of whom
seem to have shady pasts and/or secrets they want to keep hidden. It’s a
classic setup for a murder mystery in which the identity of the victim is just
as much a puzzle as that of the killer.
The ghostwriter behind the EQ byline on this novel is Talmage Powell, a
well-regarded hardboiled mystery author under his own name. Years ago I read
and enjoyed some of his novels featuring Florida private eye Ed Rivers. I’ve
always found him to be a dependable author, but I thought WHERE IS BIANCA? was
a bit of a disappointment. The plot is solid, but the characterization is pretty
flat. We don’t really get to know much about anybody except Tim Corrigan, and
to be honest, he’s just not that likable or interesting. The book is lacking in
humor, and Powell tells the story in bland, “Just the facts, ma’am” prose that
falls flat as well. It’s certainly not terrible—it read quickly and I was never
tempted to not finish it—but I was expecting more.
The next two books in the series were ghosted by Richard Deming, who I
generally consider a better writer than Powell although they’re certainly
similar, so I’ll give them a try as well. If nothing else, the books are short
and punchy and often that’s just what I want.
One more note: I don’t know who did the cover artwork on the Popular Library
edition from 1966, which you can see at the top of this post, but when I looked
at it I immediately thought of Nick Fury and Countess Valentina Allega de
Fontaine. I don’t have any way of knowing if Jim Steranko ever saw the Tim
Corrigan paperbacks, but that cover sure reminds me of Nick and Val hanging
around Fury’s apartment in NICK FURY, AGENT OF S.H.I.E.L.D. #1, the classic
story “Who Is Scorpio?” that appeared in 1968, two years after WHERE IS BIANCA?
I’d like to think that paperback influenced one of my all-time favorite comic
book stories, but who knows?
5 comments:
Thanks, James, for the fine review. Which books did Deming write?
Deming wrote #2, #3, #5, and #6. Powell also wrote #4. Deming also wrote several non-series novels as Ellery Queen: DEATH SPINS THE PLATTER, WIFE OR DEATH, THE COPPER FRAME, SHOOT THE SCENE, and LOSERS WEEPERS. He did one of the Mike McCall novels as EQ, THE BLACK HEARTS MURDER.
I think you're onto something with that theory about Steranko. The timing, look, and title similarities sure do make it plausible.
It's the best of the six covers in the series, and while I doubt that Steranko copied it consciously, he could have seen it and had the image stick in his brain without really thinking about it.
Thanks for the Deming info. It appears that all if not most of the titles are available in low-cost e-book editions.
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