Author: Yours Truly Johnny Blogger

EP2324: Dragnet: The Big Pill

Jack Webb

Friday and Smith are called in when two AWOL marines are found poisoned.

Original Air Date: October 19, 1952

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Audio Drama Review: Four by L’Amour


As I’ve mentioned before, Random House adapted several stories by the great Western Author Louie L’Amour to audio. Most of these are available as single releases, but some are available as collections, particularly those who have the same lead character. However, this collection of four audio dramas only has the irresistible rhyming title with four different heroes (all but one a one-shot character.)

In “No Man’s Man,” Gunslinger Lou Morgan is hired to get rid of a suitor to a woman he was madly in love with. However, he arrives to violence and so many complications.

I like this story. Even though it’s in the Old West, it reminds me of a classic hard-boiled detective novel: There’s a lying client, dangerous hoods, a mysterious woman who captures our hard-bitten hero’s heart. It has great action and a solid story.

In “Get Out of Town,” fourteen-year-old Tom Fairchild is the man of the house at his farm after his father dies and he goes to town to findhelp. He chooses to hire an ex-convict, Riley, against the advice older men in town. Tom’s an interesting character and this is a coming of age story for him. In the course of the hour audio drama, we see how he changes, in his relationship to Riley especially, as there’s a romantic spark between Riley and Tom’s mother. The story’s ending isn’t quite what you expect, particularly if you’re looking for big western action, but it’s still good drama.

In “McQueen of the Tumbling K”, Ward McQueen, the foreman of a ranch, sees a wounded man fleeing through the Tumbling’s K spread. In town, he learns a gambler is setting up a town and making advances towards the female owner of the ranch. In the middle of this, McQueen is waylaid and left for dead.

This story’s not horrible, but it’s the weakest story of the collection. The villain is painfully obvious, but McQueen is also too strong a hero. Once his physical survival is assured, there’s  not much of a question of the outcome. Everyone in town knows him and no one knows the villainous gambler. The earlier stories worked because you had established lone strangers in Morgan and Riley facing off against local bad guys without any locals having a reason to back them up. Here it’s reversed and doesn’t work as well.

Finally, we have “Booty for a Badman,” featuring one of L’Amour’s well known Sackett characters, Tell Sackett. Tell has had little luck as a miner, which makes him the logical choice to transport the other miners’ gold. Every miner who has left the camp as a known success ended up dead. If they send out someone who everyone knows has a failing mine, he shouldn’t get stopped–in theory.

Carrying $40,000 worth of gold is a risky proposition and it becomes even riskier when Tell encounters an Army wife who has had a breakdown and runaway as she can’t take the strain of living in the West.

This is a good story with a great sense of drama as well as a strong action scene. While we only get to spend an hour with Tell, we get a strong idea of his character. The resolution was one I could have seen coming a mile away, but it’s still a fun story.

Overall, while I liked some stories more than others, this is a nice sampling of stories from one of the most beloved best-selling authors of all time.

Rating: 4.0 out of 5.0

 

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EP2323: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Empty Threat Matter

Bob Bailey

Johnny is called in to protect a retired lawyer who’s been receiving death threats.

Original Air Date: November 27, 1960

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EP2322: Boston Blackie: Inspector Farraday Gunned Down

Richard Kollmar

Boston Blackie sets out to find out who shot Inspector Farraday.

Original Air Date: October 22, 1946
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EP2321: Richard Diamond: The Blue Serge Suit

Dick Powell

The owner of a high end male clothing store hires Diamond to find out why someone is stealing all of his blue serge suits.

Original Air Date: February 9, 1951

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EP2320: Pursuit: Pursuit of the Masked Five

While transporting a member of a masked gang on a train, the remaining members of the gang hijacked the train and shoot the suspect right in front of Inspector Black.

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Original Air Date: July 8, 1950

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EP2319: Night Beat: Anton’s Return

Frank Lovejoy

Randy meets a feverish woman who believes he’s her husband, Anton. Randy sets out to find her husband when he learns she’s about to die.

Original Air Date: July 13, 1951

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Video Theater 116: Dragnet: The Big Dance

Friday and Smith search for two young hold up men.

Season 2, Episode 33 (June 25, 1953)

EP2318: Dragnet: The Big Lie

Jack Webb

Friday and Smith investigate when a woman reports her son was shot.

Original Air Date: October 12, 1952

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Book Review: The Stones Cry Out


The Stones Cry Out by Sibella Giorello features FBI Geologist turned Rookie FBI field Agent Raleigh Harmon. She is assigned to a civil rights case in her hometown of Richmond, Virginia after a police detective and a black gym owner fall to their deaths in the middle of a rally led by the mayor. More than 200 people were present, but no one claims to have seen anything.

Her supervisor wants the case closed quickly and wants Raleigh and her over the hill partner, do the most perfunctory of investigations. Raleigh wants to get to the truth, but to do that she has to deal with a host of uncooperative witnesses and buried secrets.

This book does so much right. It creates a believable and relatable protagonist in Raleigh. She’s smart, dedicated to getting justice, and tenacious. She also has a complicated life. Rookie FBI agents rarely get assigned as close to home as she was but she has an ailing mother who is a bit eccentric and finds peace in regularly attending Pentecostal tent revivals.

Faith plays a role in her life and motivates her in her work, but author Sibella Giorello avoids her being preachy, pushy, or arrogant.

The book also does a very good job with its setting. There’s a clearly a great deal of appreciation and knowledge of Richmond that went into this book, but the description isn’t overwhelming as many books can be.

The investigation itself is well-handled. It shows the challenge the FBI often faces when assigned Civil Rights cases as their job is to get to the truth, yet they’re not trusted by people in the local community and they’re not welcomed by local police.

There’s also a good deal of forensic science in the book, particularly geology, being Raleigh’s specialty.

The book only has one major flaw and that is that the final third of the book really depends on Raleigh making a very stupid mistake and two random men who have nothing to do with the investigation assaulting her out of nowhere. While I suppose random things do happen, even to FBI Agents, it felt like the story slightly derailed even though it did eventually recover.

Overall, this is a well-written book with a great heroine. It’s a solid procedural with many interesting aspects to it, and this is one series I’d like to read more from.

Rating: 4.25 out of 5.0

The digital form of this book is available for free for the Kindle.

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EP2317: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Double Deal Matter

Bob Bailey

The Canary Diamonds have been stolen again.

Original Air Date: November 20, 1960

When making your travel plans, remember http://johnnydollarair.com

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EP2316: Boston Blackie: Hazel Henry’s Rodeo Murder

Richard Kollmar

Someone plants a spur under a trick horse rider’s saddle at the rodeo and Blackie comes in to investigate.

Original Air Date: October 15, 1946

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EP2315: Richard Diamond: The Caspary Case

Dick Powell

A woman hires Diamond to protect her. He arrives to find her murdered.

Original Air Date: February 2, 1951

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EP2314 Pursuit: Pursuit of the Man Who Couldn’t Go Home


Inspector Black is called to a hotel room where a man is out on a ledge, saying he can’t deal with his guilt over a killing he’d committed.

Original Air Date: July 1, 1950

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EP2313: Night Beat: The Bill Perrin Amnesia Case

Frank Lovejoy

A discharged soldier with amnesia asks Randy’s help to find his wife and recover his memory.

Original Air Date: July 6, 1952

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Mail a donation to: Adam Graham, PO Box 15913, Boise, Idaho 83715

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