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Tag Archives: Larry Kent
Pulp Friday: Australian pulp’s Spanish Connection
One of the tasks I set myself over the Christmas/New Year period was to start putting my pulp paperback collection into plastic bags. It is amazing that these fragile constructions of cheap paper, glue and card, never meant to last more than one read, have survived for almost half a century, and for a while now I’ve been thinking I should treat them with far more care.
Among my collection are a number of Larry Kent novels, which are incredibly hard to find in the wild nowadays. Most of these were purchased as a single lot on a random visit to a second-hand bookshop in the New South Wales coastal town of Ballina (better known as the home of the Big Prawn statue) during a beach holiday many years ago.
In the process of bagging these books I took the chance to do a little digging into Larry Kent’s little-known Spanish connection, which this post will examine, as well as being a long overdue coda to Cleveland Publications, until it closed early last year the last remaining player in the once large and boisterous post-war pulp publishing industry in Australia.
Cleveland was founded by Jack Atkins in Sydney in 1953. New Zealand born, Atkins was an entrepreneur and horse lover. For a time, he was also the secretary of the NSW branch of the conservative Democratic Labor Party, which split from the Labor Party over its links to communist influenced trade unions in 1955.… Read more
Posted in Australian crime fiction, Australian popular culture, Australian pulp fiction, Crime fiction, Pulp fiction, Pulp fiction in the 70s and 80s, Pulp fiction set in Asia, Pulp Friday, Pulp paperback cover art, Vintage pulp paperback covers
Tagged 1970s Australian crime fiction, Anthony Veitch, Australian pulp fiction, Cleveland Publications, Des Dunn, Don haring, Enrich Torres, faux American crime fiction, Larry Kent, Manfred Sommer, Rafael Cortiella, Spanish pulp art
Interview: Australian pulp fiction historian Toni Johnson Woods
Dr Toni Johnson Woods is someone I’ve been keen to interview on this blog for a while now.
A Research Fellow at University of Queensland, she is passionate about Australian books. Not just capital ‘L’ literature, but the local mass produced pulp fiction of the forties, fifties and early sixties, the existence of which has all but disappeared from our collective cultural memory.
Her commitment to the cause of local pulp includes having listened to hours of popular radio serials (Carter Brown Mystery Theatre and Larry Kent’s I Hate Crime), scanned thousands of pulp fiction covers and read every nearly all 300 Carter Brown novels.
She very generously agreed to answer the following questions about her work by e-mail.
What attracted you to researching pulp fiction in the first place?
One very unremarkable day I was chatting with colleagues in the tearoom. As you can imagine our conversations are very lofty – not. I asked the most basic question: who is Australia’s most popular author.
Well, we batted that around for several minutes arguing about what “popular” means, i.e. best selling, most widely read, most known author. All of these things are not the same. The discussion then turned to what is an Australian author, i.e. someone who was born in Australia?… Read more
Posted in Australian crime fiction, Australian pulp fiction, Carter Brown, Horwitz Publications, Interviews, Larry Kent, Pulp fiction, Toni Johnson Woods, Vintage pulp paperback covers
Tagged Alan G Yates, Bleeck Collection, Carter Brown, Cleveland, Erskine Caldwell, Gordon Clive Bleeck, Horwitz Publications, Larry Kent, Mickey Spillane, Signet, Toni Johnson-Woods
Books my father read
July 24 was the fourth anniversary of the death of my father, William Nette.
He died peacefully in hospital on the Queensland Gold Coast, where he had retired with my mother many years earlier. He was 86.
Like many father-son relationships, we didn’t always get on. That’s putting it mildly. But he brought a lot of positive influences to my life.
He turned me onto the joy of jazz, Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong, Art Blakey and Dave Brubeck. He had a large collection of 78s wrapped in brown paper that he’d secreted out of Papua New Guinea, where he was an armed forces disc jockey during the war, along with cartons of cigarettes he later sold in Australia.
Only recently have I realised he’s also responsible for much of the delight I find in reading and my particular fondness of crime fiction.
I remember the pivotal moment quite clearly. I was thirteen. He came home from work one day and, to my complete horror, announced he was withholding my allowance until I started reading books (comics, which I loved, didn’t count).
He set the first two books, Robinson Crusoe, followed by Treasure Island. They were heavy looking volumes with no pictures that had belonged to my father when he was a boy.… Read more
Posted in Australian crime fiction, Australian pulp fiction, Carter Brown, Crime fiction, Horwitz Publications, Larry Kent, Pan Books, Pulp paperback cover art, Vintage pulp paperback covers
Tagged Alistair Maclean, Authur Hailey, Carter Brown, Harold Robbins, James Bond, John MacDonald, Larry Kent, Mickey Spillane
The dying trade? Private investigators in Australian crime fiction
In the 1940s and 50s, some of the biggest names in Australian fiction were authors unknown today. People such as Gordon Clive Bleeck, Carter Brown, Don Haring and KT McCall were the leading lights of a huge local pulp fiction industry. It produced countless cheap westerns, science fiction and above all crime novels, printed cheaply with lurid covers and sold at news-stands on the street and in train stations. This piece was originally commissioned by the Wheeler Center and appeared on their website here.
In 1938, the federal government decided to levy foreign print publications. As a result of this decision, local publishing houses sprang up to fill the void, releasing hundreds of novels a month, including Westerns, racing and boxing stories, science fiction and crime. Hard-boiled and not so hard-boiled PIs became a standard feature of the pulp crime scene that flourished in Australia for two decades thereafter.
The authors are unknown today, despite some selling in the millions in Australia and abroad. Gordon Clive Bleeck wrote over 200 novels, including PI stories, while working full time for NSW Railroads. Carter Brown, the alias of UK immigrant Alan G Yates, is associated with nearly 300 titles.
Starting off as a hugely popular radio program on the Macquarie Network, the PI Larry Kent inspired a series of novels by Don Haring, an American who lived in Australia or a time, and Queenslander Des R Dunn.… Read more
Posted in Angela Savage, Australian crime fiction, Australian pulp fiction, Carter Brown, Horwitz Publications, Kerry Greenwood, Larry Kent, Lindy Cameron, Peter Corris, Pulp paperback cover art, Toni Johnson Woods, Vintage pulp paperback covers
Tagged Alan G Yates, Carter Brown, Don haring, Gordon Clive Bleeck, KT McCall, Larry Kent, Toni Johnson-Woods