Tuesday, January 27, 2026

To the Dark Tower- Lyda Belknap Long (AKA Frank Belknap Long)

Lancer Books 1969

Cover art Lou Marchetti

I recently did another Guide to Gothics episode with my pal Eric from the Paperback Warrior on my YouTube channel where we discuss this book. We had a special guest this time around, Chris from the Youtube channel Liminal Spaces. Here is the video but if you just want the quick written review, it is below.

The book starts off with a prologue chapter from the perspective of a young boy with “a big head, round pale eyes and a mouth that was too wide.” He stumbles upon a ceremony of what could be described as a coven of witches out in the woods who are surrounding a black kettle.

So, not a good start. The visual is so cartoonish. They might as well have had green skin, pointy black hats and giant warts on their nose. This really took the wind out of my sails almost immediately. A nail in my tire. Getting hit with the ball at my first at bat. My new fish dying in the bag on the way home from the pet store.

The boy realizes he has seen something he shouldn’t have and runs through the woods in a panic. Neither we nor him know if he’s being followed. The woods open to a lone house. The boy recognizes it as his doctor’s house who he regards as a very kind man.

Before he gets to the house a man in a robe with a hood drops from the tree in the front yard. He creeps up to the doctor’s door. He places something on the porch, rings the bell and runs back to the tree.

The doctor answers the door, sees the mystery package, picks it up, gets angry and throws it into his front lawn near where the boy with the big head is hiding.

The boy sees what it is.

It’s a doll with pins in it made to look like a lady he once saw the doctor with.

The man from the tree jumps back down, the boy grabs the doll and starts running but not fast enough because he suddenly feels a pain in his back like someone threw a rock and passes out.

And scene.

We now meet our protagonist Archeologist Joan Lambert. She is driving to Glen Oaks, Kentucky to visit her fellow Archeologist slash museum manager boss slash protective boyfriend Dr Wilfred Allen. But this isn’t just a weeklong lover’s getaway with her man. Dr Allen has invited an internationally renowned psychiatrist, a psychical research scholar (a ghost hunter), an anthropologist whose focus of study was East African tribal shaman incantations and a Doogie Howser type young psychologist. Now, to what purpose would this grouping of experts on the paranormal and human mind need to be assembled?

Sixteen months prior Joan was on an archeological expedition in Pyrenees mountain range straddling the border of France and Spain. While exploring a cave she was attacked by something that is described or insinuated as organic but then she believes that it followed her and is connected to her in a mental capacity, so it is supernatural. It’s very ambiguous.

In the cave she found not only ancient cave paintings that proved witchcraft was practiced in ancient times but she also found a defiled fertility statue called the Aurignacian Venus.

So, as limp as this story is I will say Frank Belknap Long did some research here. The Pyrenees Mountains were renown for witchcraft and satanism. The area was known as the Land of the Goat. There was a book just released in 2024 called Land of the Goat: Witchcraft in the Pyrenees by Julia Carerras-Tort which looks into the history of witchcraft in that area. So, the fact that FBL hit on something that is just now having books written about is pretty impressive.

So far, I am into this book. It’s an interesting premise incorporating real world historical witchcraft and a malevolent supernatural force straight out of a Weird Tales story.

After the exposition backstory we get some action. While Joan is driving a black monstrous figure appears in the middle of the road. Joan swerves to avoid it and wrecks her car. This part kind of reminded me of the scene in the Mothman Prophecies.

She climbs from her wrecked car, gasoline dripping everywhere, glad to be alive but then she remembers that she is out in the middle of nowhere, alone with a monster. She looks up to see it standing there. Its face is skull like. It has a hood on and even though the robe covered it she was sure it still had its taloned hands. With the gasoline leaking she thinks about lighting a match as she would rather take her own life than let this creature get ahold of her.

And that’s when the creature started coming for her. She gets up and panic runs through the dark forest. She can hear the thing pursuing her. Eventually she runs into a man. It’s the local sheriff out a-huntin. She passes out in his arms.

Hope you guys enjoyed that excitement. That’s about it.

There is an interlude chapter jammed in here where a newlywed couple are traveling through. They run out of gas. See a man in the forest with what looks like red hunting gear on. They walk through the woods to a clearing and see two cloaked men and a woman near an open grave. They do a ritual and then throw a dead woman in the grave. The couple runs back to their car in shock. Another car happens upon them so they can go get gas. Twenty min later both cars are at the bottom of a ravine. This chapter seemed kind of unnecessary as it just rehashes the prologue. In fact, the first three chapters have a character running through the same exact woods.

Speaking of reiteration. Joan wakes up inside Dr. Wilfred Allen’s home. Here she pretty much retells the second chapter over again. Isn’t that one of the rules of writing? Don’t rehash something you’ve already covered?

Later that night she hears a noise outside her window. She looks out to see 12 naked men and women circled around a figure twice the size of a man but looks like an impaled frog. The people start banging it out. She thinks, I would be all right with this if it was just a regular orgy but she knows that its part of a witch ceremony so she feels queasy.

The Sheriff shows up to check on her. He tells of the murder of the big headed boy from the beginning. He also pulls out the voodoo doll that we now know is Joan.

Wilfred tells of how the doll was left on his porch and he threw it away. The sheriff is like, ok, why didn’t you tell me? Which, yeah that’s fishy, Wilfred.

Sheriff infers that Joan has something to do with it. Wilfred takes sheriff to the porch to go off on him.

While the two are outside the guests come up and introduce themselves to Joan. The first is a women who tells her she is Wilfred’s half sister...oh and also that she spent a year in prison after being falsely accused of murder but has recently been exonerated when the real killer confessed.

Wilfred never even mentioned he had a sister let alone one in prison even though they are very close. Hmmm.

Oh ho ho the plot thickens!

At the end of the day, the ideas, themes and ambience in this are wonderful but FBL likes to circle around the cool stuff at arm’s length. There is a lot of unnecessary talking in this and what’s even worse is they are talking about what has already been shown in the story. The part that I found most interesting, the creature from the Pyrenees caves, is all but forgotten once she gets to Kentucky. It is never explained or concluded.

I’m putting this one down as another miss from my boy Frank here. I really need to go back and read his golden era Weird Tales stories. These later novels aren’t doing it for me.

Saturday, January 24, 2026

The Pulp Price Guide- An interview with Tim Cottrill

I had the opportunity to sit down and chat in person with Tim Cottrill, owner of the Bookery book shop here in Dayton and author of the Bookery's Guide to Pulps and Related Magazines. A brand-new edition of the price guide was just released in December of 2025 by Ed Hulce’s Murania Press. You can pick up the price guide directly through his website and it is also available on Amazon.

Tim has been doing the pulp price guide since 2001 and has had the book shop since the mid-80s. He is a knowledgeable and friendly guy, and I think there is something in this video for both of the folks who are just now learning about the pulps and the ones who have been collecting all of their lives. Hope you enjoy!

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

The Hawk Series by Dan Streib

About ten years ago I was in Mesa Arizona at an excellent used bookstore called The Book Maze. I was perusing the action shelf when I came upon one of the greatest covers I had ever seen. Hawk number 13, The Hawaiian Takeover by Dan Streib. The cover had a guy with a savage look on his face. He was holding a giant gun. All around him were scenes of action straight out of an 80s B-movie. I was intrigued!

At the time I had never read a Men’s Adventure novel. I hadn’t even heard the term before.

I read it right away. I was surprised to see that all of that exciting adventure from the cover was actually in the book. Yes, he stabs a shark with a knife. Yes, he drops a man from a helicopter into lava. Yes, there are lots of sexy naked ladies. But that was just the tip of the iceberg. The book was packed full of visceral entertainment. Real cave man shit. It was fun and exciting, ridiculous and hilarious. This was the kind of fantasy I’ve been looking for. Sure, we enjoy the exploits of Frodo and his magical ring, but did Frodo ever get attacked by a female assassin with a gun hidden in her vagina?? Hell no. Frodo is probably a virgin. As soon as those pants came down, he’d be passing that ring over willingly in his excitement, hoping to get a taste. But our pal Michael Hawk has seen them all and let me tell you, he isn’t falling for no banana in the tailpipe, if you know what I mean.

As of a few weeks ago I had every book in the series except one. I talk about it all the time on my YouTube channel and one of the pals we made there, Stiv Nagen/Max Dacron wrote me an email and said he has the book I am looking for. He graciously sent it to me and finally the collection was complete. Big hearty shout out for my man, Stiv!

Now that the series was finally complete I wanted to write up this entry and make a video about it. In the video I closely examine the cover art and read off the back synopsis. Here in the blog I will just post pictures of the covers. Check out the video if you’d like more:

The Hawk Series was a Men’s Adventure paperback original series published by Jove that ran from 1980 to 1981 and had 14 entries.

Four in 1980

Ten in 1981

 So, as you can imagine, the Hawk Books probably didn't have a lot of thought put into them, but you know, they're action-adventure books. How much thought do you need put into it?

The star of the show is Michael Hawk. He is a freelance reporter though that profession is abandoned pretty quickly in the series. In book one he half-heartedly tries to save the daughter of a South American dictator/drug cartel Patron. He fails and with her dying breath she curses him with “more wealth than a small nation,” as she gives him the numbers to a secret bank account called, Crusaders International. Which is what gives him the tagline, The Deadly Crusader.

And now with nothing but his extremely good looks, his ability to be the best at everything he does and an endless supply of money, he travels the world, getting into vigilante adventures to take down communists, sadistical human traffickers, organized crime groups, nazis and your random evil mastermind. But don’t worry he still finds time to bag some ladies and live that good life. Unfortunately, he must keep on the move as all the baddies are after his money including the United States Government who simply want him to pay his rich guy taxes which he doesn’t think he should have to pay. I mean, he did earned that money with hard work and perseverance… wait, no he didn’t, it was bloody drug money given to him for failing to save a woman’s life.

Hawk is the man ladies love and the man you wish you were. His name says it all; Michael Hawk. AKA Mike Hawk.

And you are probably wondering what author would have the cojones…the vision to name their leading Men’s Adventure character Mike Hawk??

Well, that man is…

Dan Streib (1928-1996)

There isn’t a lot of info out there about ol’ Dan Streib but I found this obituary from the LA times which I think sums him up perfectly.

Daniel T. Streib, 67, author of children’s stories and action, adventure and romance novels. Born in Rockfield, Ill., Streib earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism at the University of Iowa and was a combat officer in the Korean War. Originally a reporter and photographer in Iowa, he based his first book, “Code Name: Countdown,” on knowledge about spacecraft he acquired as a communications specialist for General Dynamics in San Diego.

The book was made into a movie in France. Streib, who frequently wrote under his own name, also penned romance novels under the pseudonym Lee Davis Willoughby and adventure books under the names J. Faragut Jones and Jonathan Schofield. His work included three popular illustrated action books for teenagers, “Ride Along,” “Million Dollar Hunt” and “Deadline”; a 10-book (incorrect LA Times! It was 14) series about the single adventure character Michael Hawk, and a six-book series, “Counterforce.” For nearly 30 years, Streib also taught fiction writing in high school and college. He died on Monday in San Diego of a heart attack.

Pseudonym of Dan Streib: (thank you Paperback Warrior)

Paul Ross- Chopper Cop (first two entries of three)

Frank Colter- Death Squad (two entries)

Mark Cruz- Kill Squad (five entries)

And he wrote one Nick Carter- The Night of the Avenger

-Grant Fowler (two entries)

-Counter Force (nine entries)

All of the beautiful cover art for the Hawk books was done by seasoned Men’s Adventure artist Samson Pollen. And honestly, that’s what made me pick up the book in the first place. It totally encompasses that 80s b-movie action level of excitement. If you are looking for more artwork like this, I would suggest checking out The Men’s Adventure Library series of Samson Pollen’s artwork that originally appeared in the Men’s Adventure Magazines of the 50s,60s and 70s.

The model on the cover of every Hawk book is male model Chad Deal.

He graced many genre fiction paperback covers in the 70s and 80s but most folks would probably recognize him from all of the romance covers he did. It recently blew my mind when I stumbled upon his current realtor profile page and saw that he IS Hawk. First off, he lives in Hawaii. A very Hawk place to live. He is a Vietnam Vet. Water Sports and Saftey Instructor. Classical Concert Pianist. Surfer. Sailor. Skier. Outdoor Survival Skills AND check out his martial arts training: Student of Traditional Asian Martial Arts; Shuri Ryu Okinawan Karate Do (4th Degree Black belt), Shuri Te Bujitsu Kai (3rd Degree Black Belt), Okinawan Goju (2nd Degree Black Belt), Shin Shin Toitsu Aikido (2nd Degree Black Belt), Hung Gar Kung Fu / Instructor-Member, International Shuri Ryu Association, United States Karate Association, and “White Crane International”

Streib might have thought he was Michael Hawk but it turns out it was no coincidence the universe gave us Chad Deal’s face as the face of Hawk. Could you imagine randomly bumping into the real-world Hawk? My mind would be blown. Anyway. If you are looking to buy a house on the island of Kauai from Michael Hawk go hit up Chad Deal at Kauai Tropical Properties.

Thursday, January 8, 2026

The Wilds by Julia Teweles

The Wilds was originally published in 1989.

This is the Fathom Press reprint from 2025.

I interviewed the author, Julia Teweles! The interview is after the review in the video. The written review of the book is below.

Ex-high school driver’s ed teacher and mountain climber extraordinaire turned camp counselor, Gordon Hollos arrives at the Sierra Nevada Mountains to take the kids on the annual hike into the wilds for the ominously named Wolf Gulch Ordeal. He questions why he is even there. Last year they lost a kid. He got left behind and when Gordon found him his stomach was ripped apart by what looked like a wild animal. But what animal would do such a thing and not remain with its kill, he couldn’t figure out. He knows the history of the mountains and ponders on the dread and disaster that has happened in the past. The Wolf Gulch Ordeal passes through the very area that the Donner Party were trapped in.

The Donner party was a group of settlers who in 1846 left their home in Illinois to travel to the new and prosperous California. Due to some bad directions, they got behind on time and didn’t arrive at the mountains until late October. Through the journey in the mountains the snow started to fall and they were trapped. Running out of food and supplies they resorted to eating their dead.

And here we have the first taste of the threat of the antagonist. Mother nature. Gordon alludes to the mountains being cursed. The ghost stories that are associated with the mountain. Is it supernatural or is nature being nature? He has a bad feeling about this year’s hike, but he also knows that if he doesn’t conqueror this feeling right now it will be with him his entire life.

We then meet the kids.

Del is fifteen and six foot four. He’s the popular leader, handsome and strong, all set for a future life of success. He’s genuine and cares about his fellow smaller campers. He feels the need to protect them but also lets them know who is in charge.

Kyle is what will be Del’s competitor for lack of a better word. They are friends but it immediately becomes complex. Kyle has an overbearing father who demands he man up. He doesn’t want a wimp for a son so he signs him up for this strenuous hike through the mountains. Kyle hates his father and at times he feels like not only is Del pressing him like his dad but Del is also the son his dad wishes he had. Kyle is resourceful though and when it comes down to it he can take care of business just like Del. He also has a very dark backstory that adds to the suspense when things start getting desperate.

Speaking of backstory’s our driver’s ed teacher turned camp counselor Gordon once beat the shit out of some smart-ass kid and lost his job for it. How will he react when trouble comes?

It’s hike day. Gordon and newbie camp head director Jerry Dugan gather the kids for a rousing preparation speech. Gordon is dark and serious warning of the very real dangers of the mountain. To make sure the kids are taking it seriously he peppers in a ghost story of the remaining member of the Donner Party; a large German man-eater wandering the wilds looking for stray campers. Jerry is inexperienced and ready for some fun and not thrilled with Gordon’s approach of keeping the kids in line.

The kids are of varying ages and there are lots of kid shenanigans; sneaking liquor, capture the flag, canoe-joust, campfire stories etc. Through these we learn their personalities. There are about ten of them I believe but for the sake of a shorter review we won’t break it all down. I will mention here is where we see the first conflict between Del and Kyle which will propel the narrative later on.

Up the mountain we go. We’re having a great time.

Along the way Del is lured into the woods off the trail. He thinks he hears a babbling brook and wants to see it. He's almost mesmerized. He gets lost almost instantly. He feels like a fool. This is exactly what Gordon had been harping everyone about over and over. He stumbles through the brush looking for an exit and almost falls off a cliff. Are the Wilds trying to kill him?

Our first moment of the possible supernatural tension. The feeling of being disoriented in the forest, the paranoia of what is unseen. The way your mind starts playing tricks on you. If you’ve even been in this scenario, you know how real it is. Wonderfully written and completely eerie.

Next day Gordon forgets his canteen and Kyle offers to go get it. Del says he'll go with him. Kyle doesn’t want to be near Del. He's still mad about the capture the flag incident. He's shitty to him so with hurt feelings Del heads back to the others. Kyle finds the canteen by a river. He jumps in. While in there he thinks he sees a bloated purple face and hands reaching for him. He heads back up the mountains to regroup but gets lost. There is an incident and now the kids and adults are separated.

Del immediately takes charge. It’s a shorter distance to keep going than it is to go back. It starts snowing and decisions must be made. And here you have bulk of the Wilds.

The kids are lost and running out of food. We have the Donner Party seeds planted from the beginning. The narrative hints at supernatural but it could also be madness. We have the ghost stories of the mountains. We have character backstories of grey shade morality waiting to reveal true self when pushed to the limits. This is a very suspenseful thriller. The moments when decisions are being made that will literally determine life and death are intense. I love how far down the characters get. They shed their societal personalities and become something more primitive and animalistic. What is inside each of us when survival is it stake? How does being in this predicament affect your mind? And always out there in the shadows is the threat of something not of this world or is it all just part of the madness?

The prose is easily digested, clear and concise. As the book goes on the chapters get shorter. I don’t know if this was on purpose or a happy accident but it really makes you feel like time is running out.

The Squeeze by Gil Brewer

The Squeeze was originally published in 1955 as one half of an Ace Double. The other being Love Me to Death by Frank Diamond.

In this here 2025 reprint from Stark House The Squeeze is paired with another Gil Brewer noir, And the Girl Screamed.

Cover art for the original edition and the Stark House reprint by Harry Barton.

Gil Brewer was born in 1922 to an air adventure pulp fiction writer also named Gil Brewer. He was a World War 2 veteran who left the cold of upstate New York winters for sunny St. Petersburg, Florida. His first novel Gun the Dame Down was published by Fawcett Gold Medal in 1951 which started him on his career of pulpy paperback royalty. He unfortunately was a lifelong alcoholic. He died in 1983.

Written review below. Video review here:

Our protagonist is Joe Maule and he is an everyday Joe. He once had a good job and a good girl with a promising life ahead of him. Then one day he stopped by an illegal gambling house run by syndicate man Victor Jarnigan. In a four-night gambling binge Joe lost twelve thousand dollars. He had to sell his house. His lady left him. He lost his job and now lives in a shack on a Tampa beach.

One evening he is visited by Fritz, Jarnigan’s muscle and told his presence is requested at Jarnigan’s home.

Maule has no choice but to attend. He still owes the hood money. With interest.

Jarnigan lets him know there is only one way out of his financial predicament and that is to do what he’s told. He tells him a story of a career thief who accidently killed a guard on a job. He was caught and executed. The two hundred thousand that the thief saved is still out there. The only person who knows its whereabouts is the thief’s straight friend who lives with his wife and her sister. But the man lives a life of a shut-in, and the house has the latest high-tech security. Maule’s job? He is given the serendipitous task of seducing the sister Caroline to get her to lead them to the money. Lucky for him, she’s a smoking hot red head.

Joe stops by a bar she is known to frequent. He makes his moves but she has her guard up. Within a couple days has precured the much coveted single guy salvation, the phone number.

He calls Caroline up for a date. She wants to go swimming at 6am. A deal breaker for me but Joe doesn’t have much of a choice, he has to get into that house. Luckily for him, after the swim she invites him back to the house for breakfast. There he meets the married couple. The wife is an obnoxious drunk. The husband is edgy and not thrilled about seeing this strange man in his fortress.

A week goes by and the waves of love have washed them out to…love sea.

Without even being prompted she asks Joe to help her get the money away from her brother in-law.

Everything seems to be going well for Joe until Jarnigan’s hoods show up on his door. He’s taking too long and not following instructions. They pummel his face. Caroline stops by to see him and upon seeing Joe’s black and blue face wants to know what happened.

He comes clean about Jarnigan, his debts and what he has been tasked to do. Instead of being mad, she comes up with a plan.

Why can Joe trust? It’s a classic noir story. Is she a femme fatale leading Joe to even further detriment or is she true? Is she working for Jarnigan? Will Jarnigan even square up if Joe can recover the money? And that glorious stack of cash. There still is the obstacle of her brother in-law. This story was worthy of the black and white movie treatment. Or maybe even cooler, a story that would appear in EC Comics Crime series.

The writing style and storytelling here are incredibly smooth. It’s bare bones but not boring or bloated. All muscle, no fat. Punchy and clear. It’s a book where you can pick it up after a couple days and not need to skim the previous chapter for a refresher.

At times it can even be humorous but in a dark way. There is a scene in particular that reminded me of the episode of the Sopranos where Pauly and Chris are lost in the woods. Five stars.

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

The Tracker #2 Green Lightning by Ron Stillman

1990 Charter/Diamond Action Adventure

Ron Stillman is the pseudonym of fellow Ohioan Don Bendell. Born in 1947 and still alive according to my research.

The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction states that the Tracker “stories are told in a maliciously exaggerated parody of the conventions of this sort of fiction.”

The Tracker series had eight entries. Bendell wrote the first six.

Written review below. Video review here:

Tracker Number Two- Green Lightning starts off just like I like it with a very sexy description of a leggy toned babe slowly pulling her stockings up her shapely legs and then…

shaving her mustache?

Turns out the babe is actually undercover hitman Miguel Atencio. He is in Cleveland for the Broncos/Browns game airing on Monday Night Football. Also in attendance is the president of the US. Which in 1990 would be George Bush the first. It never says it directly but the story takes place in the US in 1990 so I’m going to make that connection.

Miguel is hired by an “electronic oriental mafia”, (their words) Ryoku Rai Kyookai, AKA: the Green Lightning Society. And the most hilarious reasoning behind this task? He is to kill the president as he is too competent, and they need someone with less political experience in there.

In the crowd as his luscious alter-ego, Miguel notices number 80 of the Denver Broncos acting weird, looking up at the crowd like he's looking for someone. It's nothing, he decides. He takes out his grenade launcher but as soon as he does, number 80 reaches in the Gatorade tub and pulls out a rifle and shoots him between the eyes. Turns out, number 80 doesn’t actually play for the Broncos he is in fact secret spy Natty Tracker. USAF Major. Ninja in training. Quarter Norwegian. Quarter black. Quarter Sioux. Quarter Tonto Apache. Electronics and weapons expert. His backstory? Blinded when a drunk driver made him swerve off the road in his 1963 split window corvette. Along with being the ultimate soldier he is a tech wizz and created a pair of goggles that not only lets him see again but does all manner of high tech gobbledy gook. He is insanely rich from his electronic inventions but dedicates his life to killing the enemies of his country.

The President thanks him. He says, “how did you know?”

“Adam's apple, sir. Women don't have Adam's apples.”

“Well, I'll be damned.”

Haha! I thought this was the competent president.

At the end of first chapter we have Natty Tracker wondering who is the next scum bag he will be killing.

The second chapter starts with a description of a cute little five-year-old girl. And just like Mr. President George Bush’s son said, “Fool me once, shame on you…fool me twice? Won’t get fooled again.” It’s obvious by how over the top adorable and wholesome the little girl’s description is that we are about to get something gnarly. And we do. After we learn about her honey colored curly hair shining like the sun we read about her dad do something that should never be done. After the assault, while dad of the year is sleeping, the little girl comes in with a razor and slits dad’s throat. When the cops ask what happens she blames it on Mom. She goes into foster care. Same thing happens. She kills him also. She grows up. Becomes a serial killer of men who deserve it. She likes to bite their dicks off and keep them in jars in her library. On her last kill it happens to coincide with a man the Green Lightning is after also. They are impressed and want to hire her.

This book is all over the place. It takes a minute to get into the main plot which is Tracker taking on the Green Lightning Society. We have more introductory chapters of characters who are bit players. It’s like when you have a big todo list and a day off. You start one project but don’t finish and then do a little of everything on the list and by the end of the day nothing is actually done.

In the third chapter we are introduced to Reverend Clyde Ormand. A preacher in a South Carolina Church. He doesn’t really matter when it comes to the story but it’s insane so let’s go over it.

He is a coke head with a $500 a day habit. To help fund his habit, he sells it to junkies in town and some of his upper echelon parishioners. He gives a 15-year-old girl blow for sexual favors. His coke arrives from Columbia in hollowed out dead bodies that are shipped to his morgue. Once he takes the coke out of the bodies, he gives the carcasses to his brother's slaughterhouse where they grind the bodies up with the beef that goes out to the local grocery stores. One day the bodies stop showing up. A Japanese man shows up instead with a bag of coke. He says he is the new connection and shows the reverend a video of them killing the Columbian dealer by cutting off his head.

Finally, we are back to Tracker. He is randomly attacked by ninjas after banging his smoking hot Native American kindergarten teacher girlfriend. Luckily his neighbor is a house full of KGB agents assigned the task of keeping an eye on Tracker. The Russians want his tech and for that they need him alive so Tracker is aided by the Russians who snipe one of the ninjas from their window.

Too much Tracker for you? Good news. We have another character introduction. Back in Japan at the Green Lightning Society Monday morning meeting we meet a sexy female agent who after killing a traitor of the organization she is tasked with hunting down and hiring the serial killer lady from the beginning. The one who bites off dudes dicks. She plays on her desire to rid the world of men who have SA tendencies and tells her that Tracker is a dirty rapist. She’s in.

She picks up Tracker in a bar. But Tracker is a super man and knows something is up. He smooth talks his way into getting more info on who hired her and then turns her into the police. All of that brutal killer backstory and buildup and we get a nice dinner and a book ‘em Danno?

You know what this book needs? More ninjas. Tracker is back at home. Ninja attack. Again. This time they get him. They take him to an abandoned building, strip him naked and tie him up. Don’t worry though, Tracker has a fake finger which he unscrews and takes out his escape tools. After cutting himself free he throws a bomb at the ninjas and dives out a window. We then get a couple pages of a naked man fighting ninjas. Tracker commandeers a car which has a super-hot red head named Dee Light. Hmm. Also, released in 1990 was the smash hit Groove is in the Heart sung by bright red-headed looker, Lady Miss Kier. Is this the author inserting his Dee Light fantasies?? Anyway. They make a couple jokes about his naked body and how she’s checking out his dick.

"You're a little cockeyed"

He takes her back to his house and beeee—ohhhhh. (slide whistle sound here).

Outside it says there is an African American man. Screeching brake sound! In 1990 in a bonkers over the top action men's adventure book and they use the phrase African American?? This is a first. I didn't even realize that terminology was around then.

Tracker gets in his supped up car and heads up to the mountains so he can take the ninjas down on his turf. We get a big, long car chase action scene with rockets and helicopters.

At the mountain Natty heads up knowing the ninjas will follow. He toys with them. Steals their clothes at night. Kidnaps them one by one. Moves their fire in the middle of the night. He gets info about who hired them.

In Japan we meet the Green Lightning main assassin Ken Fuji-something. We are losing interest fast here.

He is 6'11 solid muscle. Karate and judo and all kinds of martial arts master. Ripped the head off of his father after being told by father he raped mom.

Tracker goes to Japan to fight him one on one. Decent punch and kick fight scene. Tracker wins. Gets info on who the boss is. Travels back to the US to bang Dee Light some more.

Back to Japan to find lady assassin.

The ending is him messing up the organization through their bank accounts and financial investments. Um. Ok. Haha!

Yeah, this book should have been wrapped up a long time ago. It’s very sporadic. Things happen for no reason. Characters are given lush introductions and then never appear again. The antagonist is the shady Green Lightning Society, but they are so mysterious they aren’t even in the book. I’ve seen better plot development in Saturday morning cartoons. It is hilarious though. And if it is indeed a parody like The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction site says then the author did their job. I don’t know though, it feels real to me. Like the author was trying to tap the Men’s Adventure main vein and inadvertently made something funny. It could go either way. I’m on the fence about it. That being said, I would one hundred percent pick up the others in the series. It has lots of 80s pop culture referenced; Robocop, Bo Jackson, Carl Lewis, Lawrence Taylor, Andre the Giant and if nothing else it was a ton of fun.

Christmas Mystery- Simenon and Carr

Written review below. Video review here:

Maigret’s Christmas

Originally published in 1951

It’s a chilly Christmas morning and Jules Maigret, Chief Inspector of the Paris Police Department, has the rare day off, much to his disappointment. His wife wants him to sleep in but once he is awake, he must get out of bed. Plus, in her good nature she tries to give him breakfast in bed which he is not a fan of as it makes him feel like he’s an invalid or a senile old man, so he quickly gets up and starts moving around. It’s a little melancholy around the apartment as Madame Maigret looks out the window and sees the children starting to come outside and play with their new toys. Years ago, the Maigret’s lost a child in its infancy and it’s a very brief somber moment for them.

They see two women from the building across the street approaching. Madame Maigret points out that she thinks the older woman has a crush on Maigret, which she is amused by. Just like in all of my favorite Maigret stories the loving relationship between Maigret and his wife is on full display here. It’s very sweet. But don’t worry because the story is about to dump grit in your eggnog.

The two women arrive at the Maigret’s apartment. The older woman is excited and the other whose name is Madame Martin, radiates apprehension.

Madame Martin unenthusiastically adopted the daughter of her husband’s brother. The little girl is bedridden with a broken leg. The older woman explains to Maigret that on Christmas Eve a man dressed like Santa appeared in the little girl’s room. He was lifting up floorboards and when he noticed the little girl was awake he gave her an expensive doll and made the international sign for shhhh.

Most curious Maigret thinks. He is intrigued and on the case. Looks like he won’t be pacing around the apartment like a caged animal all day after all.

And here we have the usual Maigret investigation. The gradual discovery of the players and suspects. Madame Martin’s husband is out of town on business. On Christmas day? Well, that’s odd. Where is the father of the little girl? Oh, he’s a hopeless drunk and has been ever since the death of his wife. Where was he last night? Seems like something a desperate drunk might do but then again wouldn’t the girl have recognized her own father. And the shadiest of all is Madame Martin herself. We need to look into her backstory. Hell, maybe it isn’t any of these clowns and it has something to do with who lived in the apartment before the Martins.

For a quick minute I was afraid it was going to be some custey family friendly Maigret where it was hinted at that the Santa in the story was real but thankfully this is your typical bleak and bitter Simenon, real criminals with nefarious motives that lead to desperate actions. It’s a classic Christmas tale with thieves, murderers, porn distribution and Santa!

Blind Man’s Hood by John Dickson Carr

Originally published in 1940

Muriel and Rodney Hunter are driving out to the country of the Weald of Kent in South East England for a Christmas party at their friends, the Bannisters. They are a young couple living their best lives so they made a stop at a local pub along the way to drink ale and sing carols which brought them late to their destination. When they approached the lonely old seventeenth-century Bannister home all of the lights were on and the front door was wide open.

The Hunters approach the door with apprehension. Where is the music, the voices, the kids playing outside? When they walk in, they see a healthy fire in the hearth. Rodney heads right for it to warm up while Muriel looks around. They hear someone approaching. It is a young woman. She is dressed very proper and is carrying a small bag of linen. The woman apologizes for not being at the door to greet them properly. She tells the Hunters that the Bannister’s are all at church.

“Even the servants?”

“Yes, everyone.”

For the last 60 years everyone that has even lived in the home leaves on Christmas Eve during these hours. Because obviously, this is when the murder occurred.

Rodney is like, what the hell are you talking about?

And the odd woman responds, “Oh, I’m not a crazy person.” And chuckles.

Rodney begins to wonder if this woman is a serial killer and has murdered the Bannisters and if he goes to take a look around the place will be littered with the bodies of his friends.

The woman leads them into the library for drinks. Out of the corner of his eye Rodney sees a curtain move. The woman notices that he noticed and laughs. She tells him, don’t even bother checking, no one will be there.

Muriel is beyond creeped out by this eerie woman and finally blurts out, who are you and what are you doing here?!

The woman then launches into the story of the murder that occurred at the house. And this is what John Dickson Carr is known for, the locked door mystery. We get a set up of a young couple who have recently moved into the house. We get what looks like a deadly love triangle but the problem is that the evidence clears all involved. Yet, inside the home, a woman is found dead. Head bashed in and lit on fire.

But the murder occurred in February. So what does this have to with Christmas Eve, Rodney asks.

The woman launches into the second story. Eight years after the murder there is a Christmas Eve party hosted by the new owners of the house. All of the big wigs in town are invited including some of the suspects of the murder. After all of the kids go to bed the adults play Blind Man’s Bluff. I guess a game like Marco Polo but on land. The person that is it must put a pillowcase over their head and try and tag someone else. There is a woman in a blue dress standing over by the fire. The host puts the pillowcase over her head.

With the bag over her head, she crouches low and starts to move forward, her body jerking around. She heads straight for one of the suspects.

This was one of the creepiest ghost stories I have ever read. The jerky movements of the woman with the pillowcase over her head were described in such an inhuman way. It reminded me of a Japanese horror movie. It literally made all of the hairs on my body stand up. They mystery is explained of course by the end and it really was a complex puzzle that makes sense once you know the answer.

I was floored by this one. Probably one of the best short stories I have ever read.