Author: Yours Truly Johnny Blogger

EP1686: Nick Carter: The Case of the Midway Murder

Lon Clark

A friend of Nick’s father  is murdered while searching for a mystery man at a circus.

Original Air Date: August 1, 1948

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EP1685: Philip Marlowe: The Hiding Place

Gerald Mohr

Marlowe reflects on the result of an investigation that forces him to tell a widow her son is dead.

Original Air Date: May 9, 1950

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EP1684: Ellery Queen: Nikki Porter, Suspect

Charles Tingwell

A man is found murdered in Nikki’s compartment and she’s suspected of murder.

Original Air Date: November 19, 1954

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EP1683: The Saint: No, My Darling Daughter

Tom Conway
The Saint is hired by a wealthy woman to protect her wild daughter from a shady gambler she wants to marry.

Original Air Date: July 15, 1951

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Book Review: Black Eyed Blonde

In Black-Eyed Blonde, mystery writer John Banville writing under the pen name of Benjamin Black takes on the task of writing a new Philip Marlowe novel more than a half century after the passing of Marlowe’s legendary creator Raymond Chandler.

The plot is a well-done but typical hard-boiled story line. A strikingly beautiful woman walks into Marlowe’s office and hires him to find her boyfriend.  Marlowe finds out the boyfriend was killed, but the woman claims to have seen him in San Francisco after that.

Banville doesn’t come close to matching Chandler’s powerful prose and snappy dialogue. In many ways, while this Marlowe isn’t a pushover, he’s far more polite and measured than Chandler’s Marlowe ever was, certainly far softer than he was in The Long Goodbye which this book is set after. To be fair, I don’t think that’s entirely a bad point, given Marlowe was almost over the top in that.

However, what Banville does get right are the Chandleresque characters, these sort of quirky and engaging side characters that hold not only Marlowe’s attention but ours. The plot is a  solid and engaging piece of classic hard-boiled detective fiction until the last couple chapters,  which isn’t common in pastiches. I’ve read some of Robert Goldsborough’s Nero Wolfe novels and spent most of the books unable to get into the unsubstantial plots and have stewed over how unlike Nero Wolfe the story is.  In Black-Eyed Blonde, there were a couple minutes where I thought, “This isn’t really Philip Marlowe but whatever it is, it’s very good.”

However, the ending was a bit of a letdown. Without going into details, the book becomes, in many ways, a sequel to The Long Goodbye.  There’s no need for a sequel to The Long  Goodbye, and the ending of this book doesn’t add luster to that classic tale.  Too often pastiche writers assume we want sequels and follow ups to previous stories. With Marlowe, what I want are new standalone mysteries that measure up to what’s come before.  Unlike Nero Wolfe, Marlowe was never a character whose existence depended on a regular cast or continuity.  And to be fair, this element  only looms in the end of the book. Still, I would have preferred a conclusion that made the book standalone rather than on the shoulder’s of a predecessor.

Overall, if you like classic hard-boiled novels, you’ll enjoy this book provided you’re not turned off by it’s attempt to make itself a sequel to one of the most beloved hard-boiled novels.

Rating: 3.5 out of 5.0

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EP1682: Dragnet: The Big Poison

Jack Webb
Friday and Romero investigate the death of an elderly couple.

Original Air Date: September 7, 1950

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EP1681: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Delectable Damsel Matter

Bob Bailey

Johnny is called to investigate when a beautiful socialite reports her jewels stolen.

Original Air Date: June 15, 1958

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EP1680: Nick Carter: The Case of the King’s Apology

Lon Clark

Nick finds a dead collector and near his body they find a forged apology letter from King George III.

Original Air Date: June 27, 1948

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EP1679: Philip Marlowe: The Sea Horse Jockey

Gerald Mohr

Marlowe is called to deliver a jeweled sea horse for sale.

Original Air Date: May 2, 1950

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EP1678: The Ford Theatre: The Adventure of a Bad Boy

Hugh Marlowe

Ellery Queen investigates the attempted poisoning of a cantankerous woman and the most obvious suspect is her eight-year-old nephew.

Original Air Date: January 4, 1948

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EP1677: The Saint: Satan’s Angels

Tom Conway

Simon is called in to investigate the disappearance of a trombonist in all-female orchestra.

Original Air Date: July 8, 1951

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DVD Review: Red Skelton Whistling Collection


The Whistling Collection from Warner Archives features all three MGM films from the 1940s in which Red Skelton played Wally Benton, an actor/writer who plays the Fox, a radio detective who comes up with his own plots.

In Whistling in the Dark (1941) , Wally, his girlfriend Carol (played by Ann Rutherford), and the sponsor’s daughter are kidnapped by a racketeer who wants to murder a man who is en route to New York. Wally poses a threat to the racketeer’s plans to lay claim to a wealthy woman’s fortune. Wally is forced to come up with a perfect murder plot and he has to figure out how to save his life from it and the life of the two women with him, as well as an innocent man set to die. He does so in a way that’s both ingenuous and hilarious, and it involves a brilliantly madcap fight with the thug Sylvester (Rags Ragland).

In Whistling in Dixie (1942), Wally and Carol travel down South to investigate mysterious goings on in a Southern town including the disappearance of a young man. There the Fox seems to have found Sylvester working for a local judge but it turns out to be his not so evil but just as dub twin brother Chester (also played by Rags Ragland.) There’s a genuine mystery, political corruption, a Confederate treasure, and lots of shenanigans involving twins.

In Whistling in Brooklyn (1943), Wally is framed as Constant Reader, a murderer who has been sending notes to a politician after committing his crimes. Wally has to prove his innocence and his efforts including going undercover as a pitcher on a Major League baseball team in which every player wears a beard. Several real-life Brooklyn Dodgers appear, including then-manager Leo Durocher. Ragland returns as Chester. The whole thing ends up in another madcap fight scene, this time aboard the ship.

Overall, the Whistling movies are a lot of fun. Unlike some lesser comedy detective mysteries, they never seem to forget that the lead isn’t just supposed to be funny, he’s supposed to be a detective. Throughout Wally shows  clever thinking, although his good plans occasionally go wrong. Skelton and Rutherford have strong chemistry. No one will confuse them for William Powell and Myrna Loy, but they make a nice on-screen pairing.

The stories’ take on the radio drama of the era is fun and cute. The first two stories have quite a bit of cleverness behind their plots. The third is a bit more thin. The way Wally is framed weak, and like the second movie is centered on him and his girl trying to get married even though there wasn’t a reason why they wouldn’t have married after Whistling in Dixie. The final third of the movie is funny, but essentially it’s two very long slapstick scenes at the ballpark and aboard the ship with the only breaks being people taking cabs to get one from scene to another. Nothing against slapstick, but I preferred the style of the other two movies better.

Still, all three films are good, and they all work with good performances from the returning cast and nice gags throughout. If you love detective movies with a dash of comedy or just love Red Skelton, this is a great collection to purchase.

Rating: 4.0 out of 5.0

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EP1676: Dragnet: The Big Check

Jack Webb
Friday and Romero search for a man who has been writing bad checks at small businesses across Los Angeles.

Original Air Date: August 31, 1950

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EP1675: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Wayward River Matter

Bob Bailey

Johnny is called in to investigate when a town is being destroyed by a flood.

Original Air Date: June 8, 1958

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EP1674: Nick Carter: The Case of the Flowery Farewell

Lon Clark

Nick is called in to investigate the case of a relatively young industrialist who appears to have committed suicide.

Original Air Date: June 20, 1948

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