Colorful characters with murderous motives populate this illustrated mystery, which unfolds during the Broadway season of 1953. Former striptease artist Maggie Starr continues stripping by distributing comic strips through her late husband's newspaper syndicate. When the heated rivalry between a pair of her cartoonists ends in homicide, Maggie and her stepson, Jack, turn detective. Together they seek the killer among a rogues' gallery of loan sharks, jealous husbands, bitter artists, and other suspects. Author Max Allan Collins was acclaimed by Mickey Spillane himself as a terrific writer, and this fast-paced romp through a flavorful era in comic strip history is enriched by Terry Beatty's atmospheric illustrations.
Manhattan, 1953 -- Rehearsals are underway toward the opening night of the musical Tall Paul, based on the popular comic strip of the same name by Hal Rapp. Rapp's ex-employer (and chief rival), Mug O'Malley creator Sam Fizer, has threatened to sue, saying Rapp's characters were originally created by Fizer when Rapp was working under him on the O'Malley strip. To make matters worse, Fizer's estranged wife has been hired for a role in the musical. On Halloween night, shortly after a party at Rapp's apartment, Fizer is found dead in his own room -- an apparent suicide but with painfully obvious signs pointing to Rapp as a murderer. Rapp asks Jack and Maggie Starr for help. Maggie runs the Starr Newspaper Syndication Company, and her stepson Jack is a private investigator "with one client: the Starr Syndicate." (Maggie is a former ecdysiast only 10 years Jack's senior -- a situation that is a constant source of Oedipal-incest jokes at Jack's expense.) Rapp has offered his new strip, Lean Jean, to the Starrs, so they are very invested in keeping him out of jail -- especially since it looks like he is being framed. Jack takes on the case, hoping to remove the frame from Rapp before Captain Pat Chandler can nail it on tight. Though Strip for Murder has some basis in history, author Max Allan Collins plays around with the facts here more than with his other historical-mystery novels, which usually hew closely to the facts with just a fictional character thrown in. In fact, in this case, even the main participants' names have been fictionalized right along with the timeline of events and the characters' relationships, though their real-life counterparts can easily be discovered with a little research. Collins gives them names that aren't obvious caricatures, but realistic names in the style of the real ones. (Even the fictional characters in the musical get this treatment, like turning Daisy Mae into Sunflower Sue.) Artist Terry Beatty, Collins's collaborator on various comic projects, including Ms. Tree, serves up era-appropriate comics-style drawings at the beginning of each chapter, and also adds a cute feature illustrating the motives, means, and opportunities of all the suspects just prior to the denouement. Beatty's illustrations do a lot to keep the reader immersed in the world of comics, because once you've seen his renderings of the characters, it's impossible to imagine them any other way. Even with his work isn't on the page, it's still there in the mind's eye. So, though Collins likely had real humans in mind when he created these characters, I had Beatty's renderings in mine while reading Strip for Murder, which gave it a surprising "graphic novel" quality uncommon in a prose volume. The characters are as two-dimensional as the illustrations -- but that may be intentional given the milieu (Collins did write Dick Tracy for 15 years, and his lengthy experience provides fodder for some very welcome comics-business in-jokes). What's i
Strip for Murder lots of fun and a lot of truth about comic strip writers
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
Max Allan Collins is the undisputed master of the historical mystery. His research, supported by his long time aide George Hagenauer is always so superb that the reader is immersed in whatever period about which Collins is writing. As much light 24-karat fun as this who-done-it provides STRIP FOR MURDER also qualifies as an historical mystery, being the second in a series that started with A KILLING IN COMICS. Jack Starr, in-house detective for the Starr syndicate, owned by his still glamorous ex-stripper step-mother, Maggie, are caught up in another murder case when their top cartoonist Sam Fizer is found shot to death in his posh Waldorf Astoria suite just a floor away from where Hal Rapp, his arch-enemy and creator of the fabulously successful strip "Tall Paul" is having a Halloween party for the cast of the new Broadway musical based on his cartoon strip. Everyone at the party has dressed as a cartoon strip character, and virtually all of them have motives to have killed Sam Fizer, most of all Hal Rapp himself. Unlike many of Collins' historical mysteries, this one is not based on a true life murder, but the novel is a Roman a Clef for the large dose of characters who are all too un-coincidentally similar to real celebrities of the times. Figuring out just who represents whom from real life is at least as much fun as deducing who done it! Hal Rapp is a one-legged acerbic cartoonist whose strip takes place in Catfish Holler, populated by hunky bumpkins and curvaceous, well-endowed, corn-fed beauties. Now if you can't figure out who Hal Rapp is supposed to be you're either rhyming impaired or too young to care. Others include an intellectual cigar-smoking comedian known for his weird sight gags and his beautiful singer wife. But don't take your eye off the murder, which at first seems like a suicide, but then a murder again, and may have been intended as an intentionally botched attempt to look like a suicide in order to frame Hal Rapp. Other suspects include Misty Winters, born Ethel something-or-other, the victim's wife, who has been cast by Hal Rapp in the musical to play Bathless Bessie who the boys adore but their noses abhor. This bit of wife poaching had driven Misty and Sam Fizer on the road to divorce, and further fueled their already legendary feud. Others under a cloud of suspicion include gangsters, loan sharks, and other luminaries and semi-luminaries from the comic strip world. A really superb touch is Fizer's supposed suicide note, lettered and signed just like his strip Mug O'Malley and reads, "Good-bye Mug, Good-bye Everybody, Let Me Go Out Undefeated, Sam Fizer." And the reader even gets to see it with Fizer's body slumped over his last drawn strip, thanks to the artistry of Collins's frequent partner in crime, Terry Beatty, who lends his considerable talents to give us several cartoon renderings through this basically prose novel. including a full six-page recap towards the end of the book. And I can tell you that C
Namely, jes' fine
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
Max Allan Collins is the most prolific writer since, and possibly including, Isaac Asimov. Unlike Asimov, whom I knew slightly and admired immensely, Collins is actually a good writer as well as idea man. This latest (as of this writing) episode, the second in the series featuring Jack Starr and his sexy step mom Maggie , is an oddity on any number of delightful levels. A spoof of the production of the musical "Li'l Abner" (here called "Tall Paul") it fascinates in that only Collins would think there are enough people who remember the comic strip, let alone the Johnny Mercer/Gene DePaul musical. For those that do, however, the none-too-subtle portrait of the players involved (including Edie Adams, Ernie Kovacs, Peter Palmer, etc.-we will pause briefly while the vast majority out there say:"WHO????" ) is a hoot. If Collins' history is a wee bit shaky (both "The Pajama Game" & "The Caine Mutiny Court Martial" were produced in 1954, not the 1953 of the story's setting), his style and sense of humor are impeccable. Buy this! Oh, and as an aside, demand Prime Crime bring Collins' other work for them back into print!
ThriftBooks sells millions of used books at the lowest
everyday prices. We personally assess every book's quality and offer rare, out-of-print treasures. We
deliver the joy of reading in recyclable packaging with free standard shipping on US orders over $15.
ThriftBooks.com. Read more. Spend less.