Ben Haas, best known for his Westerns under the names John Benteen, Thorne Douglas, and Richard Meade, as well as thrillers and sword and sorcery novels under the Meade name, also wrote a number of soft-core sex novels in the early Sixties for William Hamling’s publishing empire, all of them under the name William Kane. I’ve read a couple of those William Kane books, and they were well-written, entertaining books. But the William Kane novel LUST TREASURES is something different, and it’s very much a precursor to the work that Haas would soon be doing.
The narrator/protagonist of this novel is Len Wolfe (any resemblance to the
term “lone wolf” is probably not coincidental), a former Marine who currently
works as a rather amoral soldier of fortune, taking any dangerous job that pays
enough, anywhere in the world. As this novel opens, he’s recruited by a lawyer
representing an American fruit company for a job in a South American country.
The company, which has extensive banana plantation holdings in the country,
hires Wolfe to deliver a $200,000 bribe to the leader of a rebel army. In
exchange for the money, the man will call off the revolution that threatens the
fruit company’s holdings. But the rebel leader insists on one condition: the
money will be paid in the form of American silver dollars. So Wolfe’s job is to
transport 200 grand in silver across a rugged jungle landscape teeming with
bandits, while also dealing with the possibility of a double cross from the
rebel leader. Not to mention the threat of the cruel dictator who runs the
country and his beautiful but possibly unhinged sister, and the complication of
the beautiful American girl who is the rebel leader’s mistress.
Now I ask you, move that plot back from the early Sixties to the early days of
the Twentieth Century, and does that sound like one of Haas’s Fargo novels or
what? That seems like exactly the sort of job Fargo would get mixed up
in.
There’s enough sex in this book to justify it being published by Hamling, but
LUST TREASURES is definitely more of an action/adventure novel than anything
else. The setup is a little slow to develop, but once Wolfe starts through the
jungle with a mule train loaded down with silver dollars, the pace ratchets up
a notch and things barrel along to a final showdown in a dungeon torture room
underneath the Presidential Palace. Haas was a master of colorful settings and
great action scenes, and there are plenty of both of those things in this book.
I think anyone who’s a fan of Haas’s work would enjoy this novel, but
unfortunately, it’s a little on the rare side and likely to be pricey if you
find a copy. If you come across it, though, and it’s in your price range, don’t
pass it up. This might be a good candidate for reprinting, one of these days.
1 comment:
Thanks for this review.
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