Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Bed of Fear

Douglas Duperrault (1928-2005) began his career in radio with WFLA in Tampa, Florida. While enjoying a long and successful career in radio broadcasting, promotions, and marketing, Duperrault also authored short stories for Spree magazine and wrote paperback originals. His sleaze novel Spotlight on Sin was packaged with Harry Whittington's Backwoods Shack and published by Lancer as a twofer paperback in 1954. Other novels like Trailer Camp Woman (1959), Army Tramp (1969), and Gang Mistress (1953) were published by the likes of Croydon Publications, Bedtime Books, and MacFadden. 

My first experience with the author is his 1959 sleaze paperback Bed of Fear. The book was originally published by Stanley Library and now exists in an all-new edition by Cutting Edge Books. It is available in both digital and physical versions and is also packaged in the digital omnibus Suburban Sins: Eight Full Novels and TV Noir: Three Full Length Novels

Twenty-something Jane Martin works diligently as a secretary for the fictional TV station KLKS. In an effort to work her way through the corporate shuffle she has to handle the workforce skirt-chasers that consistently attempt to bed her down. At home, she's left unsatisfied and unfulfilled by her domineering husband Dan, a drunk louse that serves as a placid lover. 

Bed of Fear is a mattress romp as Jane is led to different beds by the various men in her life. There's the young and handsome weatherman that lures her back to his place in a quest to lose his virginity to what he admires as the true love of his life. Jane's boss Joe takes her to bed in New York City on an advertising trip that descends into a torturous affair teetering with both pleasure and pain. There's also the insatiable neighbor Harry that watches with a close eye anytime Dan leaves Jane alone at home. 

Through 154 pages, Duperrault takes readers on a brisk and entertaining read as Jane determines the value of her life, the unending sacrifices she must make, and the commitments of marriage in an unstable relationship. Like any good sleaze novel, the author takes these characters through sexual escapades by describing feelings, tensions, and release without graphic references to the actual act. It's a wonderful talent shared by many authors of this era and Duperrault certainly holds his own with his contemporaries. Comparisons could be made to author Don Lee, another writer that Cutting Edge Books recently reprinted.

Get Bed of Fear HERE.

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