Friday, March 28, 2025

The Iron Tiger

The Iron Tiger was Jack Higgins' (Henry Patterson) 18th career effort. The book was written, along with A Candle for the Dead, in between the author's Paul Chavasse series of spy-fiction installments. The novel was published in hardcover by John Long in 1966 under the name Harry Patterson. It was later published in paperback by Fawcett Gold Medal under the Higgins household name.

The book stars Jack Drummond as a WW2 veteran that served the British Navy as a pilot. He was dismissed from service after receiving an incorrect location for bombing that led to the deaths of a number of Allied personnel. He secretly works for British intelligence flying missions over the border in Tibet. His job is twofold: He smuggles in arms for the resistance fighters to repel the Chinese Communists while also relaying strategic locations of red forces. However, the author introduces a new schematic to Drummond's mission. 

The Khan of Balpur (I don't know, just go with it) has a son that was recently injured in an accident. His eye needs surgery that he can only obtain in a Chicago hospital. A nurse named Janet has just left a two-year tour of service in the Vietnam War and has now been asked by a charity organization to accompany the Khan's son to Chicago by airplane. The issue is getting Janet into Balpur under the influence and occupation of Chinese forces will be a real burden. Getting out of Balpur will be equally dangerous. One guy can do it – Jack Drummond. 

A Higgins book for me is like a western fan reading Louis L'Amour. You just know it will be a breezy easy read with huge upside, enjoyment, and a plot that is mostly tangle free. Higgins easy prose, high-adventure setting, and admirable heroes makes his books so damn exhilarating to read. The Iron Tiger is no different. Higgins places Janet and Jack against formidable opponents while dealing with the loss of transportation. Both become stranded with a religious missionary group. The road to safety is a daunting gauntlet of enemy forces, spies, double-crosses, and death. The group must safely cross the border into the arms of India. That's where the bulk of the narrative lies and readers must journey with these likable characters on a deadly road trip that winds through the book's 160 pages.

Higgins was just so good and The Iron Tiger is another must-read high-adventure novel. Recommended. Get it HERE.

Note - A novel by Jon Cleary titled Pulse of Danger seems to have this same plot. The book was published in 1968.

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

The Couples Trip

Ulf Kvensler is a Swedish actor, screenwriter, comedian and author who broke through in the U.S. market with his award-winning 2022 thriller, Couples Trip. It’s a wilderness adventure survival thriller with a good buzz on social media.

The novel opens in Stockholm during the summer of 2019 while most of the residents are on vacation elsewhere. The narrative toggles between the first person flashback narrative of a 31 year-old hard-working attorney named Anna and police interviews after an awful incident occurred wherein Anna survived and others did not.

The incident is the titular couples trip, and the couples are Anna & Henrik (engaged) and Milena & Jacob (newly-dating). The girls and Henrik have known one another for years, and three-person adventure vacations are the norm.

This time, Jacob will be the largely unknown fourth wheel.

The trip is a rock climbing, camping and hiking week in a dense and giant Swedish National Park - a mountainous winter wasteland stretching for miles. When they meet Jacob, he’s easy to like and seems like an avid outdoorsman. Nevertheless, there are some early clues that Jacob is not who he claims to be. Only after it’s too late do we learn what a psychopath Jacob appears to be.

The novel takes the reader on a wild ride through the frigid Swedish wilderness. Fear of heights? There’s some scary stuff here for you. Terrified of freezing to death? This novel has you covered. There’s a lot of great Woman vs. Nature survival content here - along with evading and avoiding a psycho traveling companion - like a modern, Swedish Deliverance.

The twisty ending left me wanting something a bit more definitive, but the ride to get there was a thrilling, icy adventure making this contemporary novel an easy recommendation. Get it HERE.

Monday, March 24, 2025

Conversations - Jackie L. Hatfield, Jr.

In this exclusive video, Eric sits down with Jack Hatfield, the direct descendant of "Devil Anse" Hatfield, one of the most iconic participants in the infamous and violent Hatfield McCoy feud. Jack talks about a new publication titled "An American Vendetta: Legend of the Hatfield McCoy Feud" and its original format in 1889. Additionally, Jack explains his family's bloody roots, the rivalry between West Virginia and Kentucky, the key instigator Frank Phillips, and the Hatfield McCoy Foundation and Museum. Stream the audio only portion HERE or any streaming platform. Download audio HERE. You can watch the video interview below or on YT HERE.



Friday, March 21, 2025

Men's Adventure Quarterly #11

Believe it or not, Robert Deis and Bill Cunningham are all the way up to issue 11 now of their Men's Adventure Quarterly Magazine. They just keep churning these books out and each one of them is just a real masterpiece of vintage fiction from the 1950s, 60s, and 70s. This new issue is available now and I thankfully have my copy. I love the whole UFO and alien thing. I've been following that stuff since I was a little kid watching Unsolved Mysteries on NBC each week and from watching the Sightings show on Fox. Of course, I love the X-Files as well. So, I was happy to see that this new publication is the UFO Issue. 

In the book's introduction, Bob Deis explains the connection between UFO pop-culture and the Men's Adventure-Magazines, which honestly I didn't even realize until I saw this issue was coming out. Deis explains how he grew up in Dayton, Ohio, home of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, where the Project Blue Book was headquartered (the U.S. government's official investigation into UFO sightings). Deis traces the public's interest, and awareness, of UFOs to magazine format in the Spring 1948 issue of Fate.  Later, the 1950 issue of True contains one of the most significant stories on UFOs, authored by Major Donald E. Keyhoe, which Deis examines in detail. This issue contains that article in its entirety, which is just fascinating. Deis goes on to outline UFO articles that appeared in Real, Man's Magazine, Saga, and Argosy among others. 

There are amazing magazine covers of various issues of True Strange, an odd men's adventure magazine, with an introduction by Deis for the article "Are They Hiding the Truth About Flying Saucers?" by Frank Edwards. 

Gary Lovisi, who's an amazing voice of vintage fiction, has an article titled "Space Sploitation", which examines the Flying Saucer phenomena as it relates to paperbacks published by the likes of Popular Library, Panther, and Fawcett Gold Medal

"The Way-Out World of Mr. Adamski" is an article by W. Douglas Lansford. It first appeared in Climax in October 1961. That article is in its entirety in this issue with an introduction by Deis explaining the history of George Adamski, a man who released a photo of a cigar-shaped UFO to the press in 1947. He claimed he saw 184 UFOs fly over California's Palomar Observatory. 

This book is chock-full of UFO articles, including "UFO Agents of Terror" from an October 1967 issue of Saga which discusses the government's attempts at silencing people that speak out about UFO phenomenon. Another interesting one is "The New Menace of U.S.O.'s" in the November 1974 issue of Male. This talks about the frequent sightings of UFOs being seen underwater. 

Popular British paperback collector Jules Burt has an article in this issue about Gerry Anderson's UFO TV series. He goes into the history of the show and the extension into paperback fiction, comics, and movies. There's also a gallery of actresses from the show. Plus this issue's gallery pages captures a lot of beautiful women that have performed in science-fiction movies like Forbidden Planet, Devil Girl from Mars, and Tarantula.

There is just so much to enjoy in this issue even if you aren't a UFO fan or believer. The vintage artwork, magazine covers, movie posters, actress pin-ups. I mean what's not to like? This is another solid issue and I highly recommend it. 

Get the issue HERE


Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Worm on a Hook

Although I don't know Vern's real name he is an online film critic that boasts a solid and dedicated following since 1999.  His blog Vern's Reviews is updated almost daily with new film reviews or tidbits of social commentary. He has authored articles and columns for The Ain't It Cool News, Thrillist, and CliNT Magazine. In 2004 he began writing non-fiction books about film and his book Seagalogy: A Study of the Ass-Kicking Films of Steven Seagal was published by Titan Books in 2008. In 2014 his first work of fiction appeared, Niketown, that blends social satire with crime-fiction. 

My first experience with Vern is his 2020 novel Worm on a Hook. A PW fan reached out and advised me that the book should appeal to my outrageous literary taste. He was kind enough to gift me this 366-page trade paperback and I read it in about two days. 

The book is presented in a non-linear timeline with events jumping back and forth in time. As the book begins, construction workers disturb an underground tunnel system that is used by a legendary hook-handed slasher named Stoneback. With his newfound unearthing the good citizens of rural Iskum Island, a fictional retreat off the coast of Washington, are in for a slaughter. The reader's interest lies within a handful of characters that have arrived on the island for a beer festival. 

Worm on a Hook is an obvious homage to the blood-soaked slasher cinema that haunted Kodak 5247 film stock in the 1970s and 80s. But, I actually found the book to be more like a Marvel mash-up of Black Widow fighting Deadpool. There's more action than horror with the book's unique approach to character development presented as various life events for both the main character, the ultimate final girl Florence, and the legendary killer himself, Stoneback. Their personal histories and various collisions made for an entertaining reading experience that propelled the central narrative at a brisk pace. 

If you enjoy an over-the-top beat 'em up or the mystique of a hook-handed mauler then Worm on a Hook should wiggle its way into your heart. It is nostalgic, action-packed, and a refreshing take on a horror formula. Recommended! Get it HERE.

Monday, March 17, 2025

Paperback Warrior Podcast - Episode 116

It's another brand new episode of the Paperback Warrior Podcast! On this episode Eric recaps the recent gifs he received from fans and readers and looks at all of the happenings on the podcast and YouTube channel this month. In addition, a feature is presented on Pat Frank, a mid-20th century writer that is considered one of the first post-apocalyptic fiction authors to emerge after WW2. Also, a feature is presented on Armed Services Editions paperbacks and the history behind this patriotic and monumental printing mission in the 1940s. Listen on any streaming platform, play below, download HERE, or view directly on YouTube HERE.

Listen to "Episode 116: Pat Frank and the Birth of Doomsday Fiction" on Spreaker.

Friday, March 14, 2025

Backfire

Backfire was a 1959 crime novel by Florida author Charles L. Burgess (1907-1967) that was only ever published in Australia until it was recently unearthed and reprinted by Stark House along with several of his non-fiction true crime magazine pieces.

Martin and Angela Powers are the perfect suburban newlywed couple. He’s a salesman for a cosmetics company and he’s about to learn that someone is trying to kill him. Who would want him dead? He’s not connected to anything shady at all, right?

Martin survives the first attempt on his life from the “pockmarked man” and begins some sincere soul searching to determine the motive for the killer. The police aren’t much help at all, so this is Martin’s mystery to solve.

The author reveals the solution to the reader (but not to Martin) of who is trying to kill him pretty early in the paperback, but the killer’s motivation remains unclear. For his part, Martin hits the road alone to search for answers in his own past that may provide some clues as to his assassin’s motivations.

Backfire is a journey of self-discovery for Martin as he attempts to get closer and closer to the truth of who he is and subsequently the truth of who wants him dead. There are good action set-pieces along the way and Martin trods a logical path. Overall, it read like a an extended crime story from Manhunt with a tidy solution.

Burgess was a talented author of his era with limited fiction output. Thank heavens for Stark House for keeping his work alive and available. 

Get the book HERE.