Showing posts with label Nightstand Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nightstand Books. Show all posts

Monday, March 02, 2026

Review: Stripper! - John Dexter (Robert Silverberg)


I’ve probably read more soft-core novels by Robert Silverberg than by any other author except Orrie Hitt, so I’m glad Stark House keeps reprinting them. Their latest double volume is STRIPPER!/NEVER AN EVEN BREAK, and I’ve just read the first of that pair.

STRIPPER! is one of Silverberg’s soft-core novels originally published under the house-name John Dexter rather than his usual Don Elliott pseudonym. The Nightstand Books edition came out in 1960. A revised version was reprinted in 1973 under the title ONE BED TOO MANY and the pseudonym Jeremy Dunn. This was one of the so-called Reed Nightstand editions where the sex scenes were rewritten by some unknown editor to be even more graphic than the originals while leaving the rest of the story alone. The Reed Nightstands are okay if you can’t find the originals, but in the ones I’ve compared (which doesn’t include this one), the first versions were better.

Okay, with that bibliographic digression out of the way, STRIPPER! is the story of Diana DeLisle, the stage name of Donna Hallinger, a young woman from a small town in Maryland. She’s a beautiful redhead in her early twenties who has just been promoted to doing a solo act in one of a chain of strip clubs owned by notorious gambler/gangster Johnny Lukas. Her boss at the club is Mack Gardner. And one of the regular customers is clean-cut young Ned Fawcett. Diana, who is also the narrator of this book, winds up sexually involved with all three of those men and also has actual romantic feelings for both Johnny and Ned. But since this is a book full of crime and criminals, it’s no surprise that she also winds up in a dangerous web of scheming being spun by the evil and ambitious Mack Gardner.


Silverberg tells this tale in his usual smooth, fast-moving prose that’s a great blend of dialogue and action, interspersed with a few flashbacks to give us something of Diana’s history. The sex scenes are plentiful and fairly graphic, but Silverberg does a fine job of integrating them into the plot. Let’s face it, those scenes are a large part of why these books existed, but most of the authors made something more of them, and Silverberg was one of the best.

STRIPPER! does have a late twist that’s pretty easy to predict, and I didn’t find the ending quite as satisfying as in some of the other soft-core books by Silverberg that I’ve read, but I still raced through the novel and had a fine time reading it. Silverberg is one of the most consistently entertaining authors I’ve found, and I’m always happy to read anything he’s written. This double volume is available on Amazon in e-book and paperback editions, and if you’re a fan of these wonderful examples of mid-century erotica (I forget if it was Silverberg or Lawrence Block, another prolific author in the genre, who called them that), I recommend it.

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Review: Hamilton's Harem - William Kane (Ben Haas)


First of all, the fact that this book doesn’t have LUST, SIN, FLESH, SHAME, PASSION, WANTON, or ORGY in the title makes me suspect that Ben Haas, the author behind the William Kane pseudonym, came up with HAMILTON’S HAREM and the editors at William Hamling’s soft-core empire let it go. That’s my copy in the scan, and it’s in really good shape for a paperback that’s 60 years old, almost like it just came off of some bus station spinner rack. The artist hasn’t been identified.

The fact that Ben Haas wrote this means there’s a very good chance it’ll be a fine book. The protagonist is lawyer Gage Hamilton, a no-nonsense, abide-by-the-letter-of-the-law guy who finds himself administering valuable trust funds for a beautiful blond widow and her three equally beautiful, equally blond daughters (all of whom, not to worry, are of legal age). In addition, Gage also has a beautiful blond mistress who is more than a tad jealous. Sounds like a harem to me!

Gage’s life is complicated even more when each of his legal charges has some sort of soap operatic emergency that requires them to try to wheedle large sums of cash out of their trust funds. Gage has to approve such cash outlays, and in each case, the ladies pull out all the stops to convince him to go along with what they want. Throw in a lusty stable boy, a predatory lesbian, an embezzler, a hint of blackmail, and a murder, and you’ve got a book!

Some of Haas’s soft-core books are sexed-up adventure yarns, but HAMILTON’S HAREM is more of a romantic comedy, and a good one, too. I raced through it, since Haas’s prose is some of the most readable you’ll ever encounter, and there’s a great scene where a rat gets his comeuppance. The sex scenes aren’t very graphic, and most of the book is about Gage Hamilton finding some human decency under his hidebound legal exterior. I just had a really good time reading this book. It’s not much like Ben Haas’s other books, but at the same time, I think it’s one of my favorites of his so far. You’re not likely to run across a copy—Bookfinder shows only three currently for sale on-line, and they’re all pricey—but if you do, I recommend you grab it.