I’ve been hearing about GANGLAND’S DOOM, the ground-breaking study of The Shadow by Frank Eisgruber Jr., for many years. By the time I got into pulp fandom in the early Eighties, the book’s original edition, published by Robert Weinberg, had been out for several years. It was reprinted later by Starmont House and Altus Press, but I never got around to picking up a copy and reading it.
This was one of the very first books of pulp scholarship. Eisgruber takes a
good look at The Shadow’s true identity, the various false identities he
employed in his war against crime, the many agents and helpers who also enlisted
in that war, the great villains against whom The Shadow and his organization
battled, and the multitude of settings used in the almost 400 novels in the
pulp series. He covers as well the three main authors of the saga, Walter B.
Gibson, Theodore Tinsley, and Bruce Elliott, and this new edition provides
several appendixes, correspondence between Eisgruber and fellow Shadow expert
Will Murray, and an interview with him.
Will long-time Shadow fans learn much that’s new in this volume? Well, probably
not much. Numerous other books have been published that delve deeply into the
history of the character, not to mention the many articles from the journal THE
SHADOWED CIRCLE and earlier pulp fanzines. But is GANGLAND’S DOOM well-written,
informative, and highly entertaining? It absolutely is. I don’t know of any
Shadow fan who wouldn’t greatly enjoy this affectionate look at a favorite
character.
And I did come across one idea I’d never encountered before, at least as far as
I recall. Eisgruber discusses—and rightfully dismisses—Philip José Farmer’s speculation
that the flying spy G-8, The Spider, and The Shadow were all the same man. I
don’t buy that for a second, but Eisgruber mentions an alternate possibility,
that following World War I, G-8 became the detective and master of disguise
Secret Agent X, and I can believe that. I don’t know if it’s true or not, but
it seems feasible to me. (Using the word “true” loosely, of course, since we
are talking about pulp characters . . .)
As for the book itself, it’s beautifully produced. You’d expect no
less from editor/publisher Steve Donoso and his associates. I was a Kickstarter
backer and got my copy that way, but it’s available on Amazon in a hardcover
edition with a cover and illustrations by Joseph Booth (the edition I read) and
a paperback with a cover by Marcin Nowacki. There’s also a Kindle edition. You can also buy the print editions and plenty of other great Shadow material directly from the publisher, which is always an excellent option. If
you’re a fan of The Shadow, I can’t recommend this one highly enough. It’s a
great book and one of the best I’ve read so far this year.
3 comments:
Might want to pick that up. I don't have much nonfiction on the pulps, aside from the essays in Sanctum Press/Nostalgia Ventures reprints and Don Hutchinson's The Great Pulp Heroes.
I think there's a new, expanded edition of THE GREAT PULP HEROES coming out. I may have to get that one, too.
I'm pretty sure Farmer ditched the idea that the Shadow was also the Spider and G8 in Doc Savage Alive.
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