Friday, December 29, 2023

Friday's Favorite OTR

 Frontier Town: "Valley of the Varmints" 2/6/53



Someone wants to buy two neighboring ranches and might just be willing to kill to get them.


Click HERE to listen or download. 


Thursday, December 28, 2023

Beaver Cleaver Goes Catatonic!

 



Pretty much the first thing that happens in the 1957 film noir Shadows on the Window is a small boy (Jerry Mathers) who witnesses a murder while looking through the window of a house.


The murdered man was employing the boy's mom (Linda Atlas, played by Betty Garrett) as a temp stenographer for the day. So when the boy runs off and then is found by two truckers wandering in a daze down the road, no one knows for sure where he came from. In the meantime, the three killers (who had come to the home to rob the man's safe) are now holding Linda hostage and debating whether they need to kill her as well. The bad guys are in over their heads and simply don't know what their next move should be.




It's a great set-up for a legitimately suspenseful movie. The boy's dad (Tony Atlas, played by Phil Carey) is a cop. When the boy ends up at the police station, another cop recognizes him. But the boy is zoned out, unable to answer any questions, even from his dad. It's soon apparent that Linda is in some sort of trouble. Or dead. Tony knows she was taking temp work, but the two are estranged and he doesn't know where she was going that day.


There's a small glitch in the logic of the movie as the cops investigate. The truckers had taken the boy to their dispatch office, from where the police were called. But as Tony and the other cops investigate, they have to start from scratch, with no idea who originally found the kid. Apparently, no one bothered asking the truckers who they were when they turned him over to the cops? That seems unlikely. 


Despite this, the investigation progresses in a logical and suspenseful fashion. The cops follow leads through the night and into the next morning. 




In the meantime, Linda is doing what she can to play up to the one bad guy who seems reluctant to commit another murder. She even manages to vamp another of the guys and create an opportunity to knock him on the head and make a break for it. But she's caught and it seems more and more likely she'll be killed.


She's also, of course, worried sick about her son. From her point-of-view, he's simply disappeared.


The interconnected story threads involving Tony (trying to find Linda) and Linda (trying to stay alive) intertwine nicely and come together at the end for a strong conclusion. Shadows on the Window is worth 73 minutes of your time.



Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Willy Schultz -- The Final Chapter

 It took nearly a half-century, but when the Willy Schultz stories were collected into a hardback last year by Dark Horse Books, writer Will Franz was finally able to wrap up the series. Sadly, Sam Glanzman is no longer with us, but Wayne Vansant stepped in and did an excellent job drawing the story.


I normally don't cover recent comics, but this is an obvious exception. Franz does a magnificent job of bringing the saga to a close. He had only 20 pages to do so and when this chapter suffers, it is because Franz has only a couple of panels to cover aspects of Schultz's story that might have taken up multiple chapters had Charlton stuck with the series back in the 1970s. The story is undeniably rushed. But its a case where it would be unfair to criticize a writer for working within the space he'd been given. It's great to have an end to the story and Franz, as I said, does a magnificent job.



The chapter opens with a shocking scene--Elena (the girl who was falling in love with Willy) has been captured and hanged, along with several other partisans. In addition, Willy is forced to acknowledge that the pardon he'd been promised was never going to happen--even if the murder conviction was thrown out, he had literally fought for the Germans while in Africa. He was going to be considered a traitor no matter what.


Soon, Willy is found by the Germans. But he's wearing a German uniform himself so is once again able to pass himself off as a Wermacht officer, claiming his papers were taken when he was captured by partisans. He ends up fighting on the Russian Front.



It's here that I most regret that Franz had only 20 pages to work with. Moral dilemmas facing Willy are mentioned, but glossed over without the indepth dialogue that Franz was so good at giving his characters to express those dilemmas. Willy is forced to fight Russian partisans who are really no different that the Italian partisans he had fought with. Later, he's forced to realize that he (and, in fact, every German) has been fighting to keep the death camps operating--there is simply no turning away from that responsibility. 



All of this deserves more than a passing reference and I have no doubt Franz would have handled these issues brilliantly had he been able to do so in the '70s. It's no fault of his that he has to rush through all this when he did get a chance to bring the saga to an end. But it will always be a regretful "what could have been."


Willy gets a chance to surrender to American troops just before a random artillery shell wounds him and leaves him scarred. While he recovers, Germany surrenders. But Willy has to run when someone recognizes him. He joins the French Foreign Legion and ends up fighting in Vietnam.



After the French are defeated, the story skips ahead to 1969. Willy now owns a plantation in South Vietnam. He's married to Ilse, the German nurse he had met in North Africa. She has her own scars--her family had been executed after the July 1944 atttempt to assassinate Hitler and she had been tortured by the Gestapo. But the two are together and have made peace with the world.



It's a satisfying ending, though I can't help but spoil it a little in my mind by wondering what happened to Willy and Ilsa after South Vietnam fell five years later. 


But I really am complaining too much. It's is cool that "The Lonely War of Capt. Willy Schultz" was finally brought to a strong conclusion by the saga's original writer. 


Next week, Captain Marvel Jr. deal with a conspiracy of shape-shifting aliens.


Monday, December 25, 2023

Cover Cavalcade

 DECEMBER IS DETECTIVE COMICS BEFORE BATMAN MONTH!



Another 1938 cover by Creig Flessel. 

Friday, December 22, 2023

Friday's Favorite OTR

 You Are There: "Signing of the Magna Carta" 1/18/48



CBS News is on the scene at Runnymede on the day King John has agreed to sign the Magna Carta. 


Click HERE to listen or download.



Wednesday, December 20, 2023

CHRISTMAS BREAK

 



No Wednesday or Thursday posts this week. We'll be back to our regular schedule next week.


Merry Christmas, everyone.



Monday, December 18, 2023

Cover Cavalcade

 DECEMBER IS DETECTIVE COMICS BEFORE BATMAN MONTH!



A 1938 cover by Creig Flessel. 

Friday, December 15, 2023

Friday's Favorite OTR

 Inner Sanctum: "Death out of Mind" 12/29/47



A man is convinced his own conscience has taken human form and is trying to kill him.


Click HERE to listen or download. 

Thursday, December 14, 2023

Blowhard or Hero? Or Both?

 


Between 1894 and 1903, Arthur Conan Doyle wrote 17 short stories about a Napoleanic soldier with a tendency to brag about his accomplishments. The stories have an older Gerard, long after Waterloo, describing his adventures as a young officer and mentioning multiple times per story how he always conducted himself with courage and cunning. He's a great storyteller, though, so the tales he tells are enthralling.


I see two possible ways to interpret the Gerard stories. Either he was an unexceptional soldier (or perhaps not a soldier at all) who tells tall tales about a fictional version of himself. OR he was an exceptional and brave warrior who had the chops to back up his ego. In this latter case, the stories he tells are true.


I enjoy taking the second option. Gerard's stories are a lot more fun if (in the context of Doyle's fictional world) really happened. He can be a bit of a blowhard, but earned his bragging rights several times over.


"How the Brigadier Came to the Castle of Gloom" was published in the July 1895 issue of The Strand. Gerard tells a story from 1807, when he was a captain serving in Poland. While on a mission to bring fresh horses back to his unit, he meets the young Sub-Lieutenant Duroc, who is looking for the man who murdered his father during the bloody days of the revolution.



Gerard and Durac end up at the castle of Baron Straubenthal, the man who commited the murder. Durac challenges the Baron to a duel, but the villain is without honor and tricks them into walking into a supply cellar. The two soldiers are locked inside while the Baron sends a messenger to a nearby unit of Cossack raiders. 


So an escape needs to happen quickly. I don't want to give away too much, because there's a link below to find the Gerard stories and read them for yourself. But it involves an unhappy stepdaughter smuggling them a key, a gunpowder bomb, a fight with a dog, and a sword duel. 


It's great stuff. Whether Gerard is telling a "true" story or if he's inventing/exaggerating his exploits, he (or rather Conan Doyle) is one of the best storytellers ever. 


The stories were eventually collected into two volumes. You can find the first one HERE and the second HERE.

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Time Travel and Hulk Don't Mix

 

cover art by Herb Trimpe

Herb Trimpe returns as the artist in Hulk #204 (October 1976), with Trimpe also providing the plot. Len Wein.


In the last issue, Hulk and his gal Jarella were both taken from her microscopic world. Jarella is in isolation until Doc Samson can make sure Earth's atmosphere won't hurt her. Hulk, though, doesn't get this and throws a generic Hulk temper tantrum.



It's interesting to see General Ross's reaction to this. A few years earlier, he would have been happily trying to take down Hulk. Now he at least partially sympathizes with the Emerald Giant (though he can still shout out an occasional "brute!") and primarily wants to make sure no one gets hurt.


Anyway, Hulk is gassed unconscious. Later, a Doctor Kronus comes up with a plan to cure Banner of being the Hulk. The method? Send Banner back in time and simply avoid being exposed to gamma radiation.


Banner talks this over with Jarella first. After all, she loves him as both Banner and the Hulk, so she has a say in the decision. 


It's clear here that Wein was fitting Trimpe's plot into the ongoing arc about Jarella and he does a fine job with this. It's kind of too bad, though, that the obligation to do this was there. Jarella doesn't effect the Kronus story in any significant way. Saving a few pages to add to Hulk's pretty cool fight scene against Evil Kronus at the climax would have been nice.




Anyway, Banner ends up back where it all started. Rather than personally dragging Rick Jones to a shelter, he merely yells a warning about a bomb. Rick jumps for cover, but doesn't quite make it. Banner is no longer the Hulk, but Rick is dead.


Banner snaps back to the present, where he's married to Betty and no one knows the Hulk. But he's mentally crippled from his guilt over Rick, considering himself a murderer. (According to the Marvel Wiki, Banner didn't really change history, but created an alternate Earth--Earth-20476, to be precise.)



It's then that Dr. Kronus attacks, summoning up the Hulk from an alternate past in order to destroy him. In this reality, Kronus considers Banner/Hulk responsible for destroying his life's work. We're not given the details of this, but we really don't need them. This is a case where a detailed back story simply isn't required and Wein was wise not to try to explain to much. (Though I suppose that decision might have been based fitting the story into 18 pages.)


Anyway, Kronus is now a super villain with the ability to manipulate time. I like the ensuing fight scene, which takes us a million years back in time and has Kronus doing stuff like summoning up a glacier from the Ice Age and trapping Hulk inside it.


This is the scene I really wish would have been a page or two longer. Oh, well. It was definitely cool while it lasted.


Hulk gets the best of Kronus, but when he smashes Kronus' helmet, he sees Rick Jones inside. Hulk reverts to Banner, travels back in time and "fixes" the original event so that everything works out the way it did the first time. Rick is saved, but Banner is now the Hulk.



It is a filler issue before getting back to the Jarella story arc, but it's a good filler issue, with a strong story and a great fight scene. And it's always nice to see Herb Trimpe artwork in any issue of the Hulk.


Next week is a Holiday Skip Week. In two weeks, we'll look at the final chapter in "The Lonely War of Capt. Willy Schultz."

Monday, December 11, 2023

Cover Cavalcade

 DECEMBER IS DETECTIVE COMICS BEFORE BATMAN MONTH!




Here's another 1937 cover by Creig Flessel.

Friday, December 8, 2023

Friday's Favorite OTR

 Screen Guild Theater: "The Petrified Forest" 1/7/40



Bogie recreates his role as outlaw Duke Mantee in this condenced adaptation of The Petrified Forest.


Click HERE to listen or download. 

Thursday, December 7, 2023

Zorro's Double Danger

 

cover art by Sam Cherry


Johsnon McCulley's short story "Zorro's Double Danger" (West Magazine, February 1946) presents the swashbuckling hero with an interesting problem. He's scheduled to fight a duel in his identity as Don Diego Vega. But Don Diego is supposed to be a foppish weakling. Diego can't throw the fight, because that means getting killed or maimed. But he can't win without making people wonder how the young man suddenly became a skilled swordsman.




It began one morning when Don Diego and his mute servant Bernardo go shopping. While Diego is in the store, a jerk named Rojas begins to beat Bernardo for refusing to talk to him. He didn't realize Bernardo was mute, but doesn't care even when Diego calls him out on this. Servants exist to be beaten, after all.


Diego has no choice but to challenge Rojas to a duel. But that creates the problem discussed earlier. 


The answer? Well, Rojas beat up a peon, a class Zorro is sworn to protect. So Zorro can get a message to Rojas to meet him in a certain field the night before his duel with Diego. If Zorro wins that duel, Rojas won't be in a condition to fight Diego.


What Zorro doesn't count on is that Rojas isn't just a jerk, but a double-dog jerk. Maybe even a triple-dog jerk! When the masked hero arrives at the field to fight the duel, he discovers that Rojas has ratted him out and sent a squad of soldiers to capture him...


It's a great story. I'm afraid I haven't found this one online anywhere, so I can't provide a link to it. But the original Zorro stories have been reprinted. For anyone who enjoys a succinct, exciting adventure tale, these stories are worth tracking down.



Wednesday, December 6, 2023

Willy Schultz--Chapter 16

 

cover artist unknown

Fightin' Army #92 (July 1970) gave us the last chapter of the saga of Willy Schultz in its original run with magnificent Sam Glanzman art. It's not the very last chapter--when this series was reprinted by Dark Horse last year, writer Will Franz did provide a final chapter. Sam Glanzman is gone, but artist Wayne Vansant provided great art work. We will, in a couple of weeks, break the usual rule about covering anything other than pre-digital media to review that final chapter. But for now, we're looking at the final Charlton Comics chapter.



Willy is still serving with an Italian partisan unit and that unit is not having a good time. There's a trader in their midst and partisans waiting for a supply air-drop are ambushed and killed because the Germans knew they'd be there.


Most of this issue then moves to Willy and OSS agent Jon Daurio drinking together. Jon has just learned that his wife died in childbirth. Willy tries to comfort him as best he can. Jon, after getting more than a little drunk, pontificates on the brutality of war. He still believes that Willy is guilty of the murder of an American officer, but how is he any different from the rest of them, who kill their fellow human beings every day?



Willy also shares a very human moment with Elena. This is one of the strongest chapters in the series. It has only a little action and is very dialogue-heavy--something that can be a weakness in graphic storytelling. But Franz writes great dialogue. Willy, Jon and Elena all have distinctive personalities. It is simply a great scene.



Soon after, Jon and some partisans are gunned down by the traitor in their midst. Jon lives long enough to finger Elena's father as the traitor. The old man is quickly run down and killed, with the partisans promising that Elena need not know about him.


That leaves Willy in command of the partisans. And after this, Charlton pulled the plug on the series (though they did reprint portions of it in later years). Willy doesn't get a satisfying end to his saga for over fifty years. 


But he did get that ending eventually. As I said, we'll take a look at that finale in a few weeks. Next week, we'll check to see how Hulk is doing with his girlfriend Jarella. 

Monday, December 4, 2023

Cover Cavalcade

 DECEMBER IS DETECTIVE COMICS BEFORE  BATMAN MONTH!



This 1937 cover was drawn by Creig Flessel


Friday, December 1, 2023

Friday's Favorite OTR

 The Saint: "Fishes Gotta Eat" 4/29/51



Simon agrees to help a woman find her missing husband. Not surprisingly, this leads him to a murder.


Click HERE to listen or download. 

Thursday, November 30, 2023

Hot Money and Hot Diamonds

 



Read/Watch 'em In Order #165


The third Dan Fowler novel--Hot Money--ran in the December 1935 issue of G-Men. George Eliot Fielding, writing under the house name C.K.M. Scanlon, continues as the writer.


This one builds on an interesting premise. 100 grand in cash was paid as a ransom in a kidnapping. The kidnapped lady was released, but the crooks got away with the money. That money, though, is hot. The serial numbers are known. If its spent anywhere, the Feds will swarm down on the spendee.


But the action soon moves out of the United States. In Paris, an Apache (the name used in the early 20th Century for Parisian street thugs) was arrested and found with a bill from the ransom in his possession. Dan Fowler is sent to the City of Lights to check this out.


Dan comes up with a plan to psych out the Apache and get him to talk, but this lead takes them to a murdered man. While chasing a suspect, Dan is briefly captured by the villains. He gets the best of his guard, killing the man, but the main villain gets away without being identifed.


Another bill has turned up, this one used by a snotty rich woman who is known for trying to sneak jewels past Customs whenever she returns to the States. Both Dan's attention and the attention of various bad guys turn to the jewels she is currently carrying. This brings the action back to New York City, though before arriving, Dan is knocked on the head and tossed off a passenger ship.


The action scenes in a Dan Fowler novel are always great--Dan swimming until exhausted, then getting ashore to be pursued by gunmen, is wonderfully intense. But the novel also works as a police procedural. When the jewels are eventually stolen from the snooty rich lady, the number of suspects expands and the G-Men pursue various leads in a logical, step-by-step manner. 


There's still plenty of action, though. A raid on the gang that pulled off the original kidnapping leads to a wild gun battle and the bad guys escaping on a boat equipped with a heavy machine gun. Later, there's a raid on a society wedding using tear gas, which involves Dan in a tussle to take a gas mask away from one of the villains. The climatic action scene has Dan holding off a quartet of bad guys, running out of ammo while trying to survive long enough for help to arrive. 


It's great stuff, perhaps the strongest of the series so far. Of course, I couldn't help noticing that Dan Fowler--supposedly the best G-Man in the business--gets himself captured a lot. You would think they would warn against that sort of thing when you are training at Quantico. 



Wednesday, November 29, 2023

Underwater Pirates

 

Cover art by Jim Aparo


The cover story for Adventure Comics #441 (October 1975) has some interesting credits. It was written by Paul Levitz and drawn by Jim Aparo. But then DC editor Carmine Infantino decided the dialogue had to be re-written by a more experienced writer. David Michelinie did so and this dialogue was pasted onto the original art.


The end result is an entertaining but flawed story. Aquaman is conducting his daily kingly business (meeting with diplomats, guild leaders, etc.) when he's interrupted by pirates dressed in traditional Gold Age of Piracy garb (but also wearing breathing masks) announce their presence. Their leader, Captain Demo, announces his intention to take over Atlantis.



Aquaman swims out to confront the pirates, whose "sailing ship" travels underwater and is equipped with laser cannons.  Here, we run into the story's main flaw. We see only portions of the ship as the action unfolds (at least until we see it fleeing at the end of the story). An underwater sailing ship is a cool idea and we should have been given a real sense of its scale. But instead, we see just bits and pieces.


It seems odd that an artist as skilled as Aparo or an editor as skilled as Infantino would miss this, but there you go.




Aquaman defeats the crew and also manages to beat down Captain Demo. But then Demo threatens Aquaman with his hook hand. Abruptly, the action switches from the fight back to Atlantis a short time later. Aquaman has surrended the city to Demo. Apparently, the pirate has one heck of a hook hand.



The pirates start demanding tribute, threatening to bankrupt the undersea kingdom. Mera tries to stop Demo, but Aquaman actually knocks her out rather than let her succeed. 


It's a neat little mystery. We discover the answer when Aquaman tricks Demo into getting the hook hand trapped in an oyster equipped with a jamming device. The hook is rigged to send out a radio signal that will detonate bombs hidden around Atlantis. Aquaman had to let Demo have his way until he could do something about that.


Aquaman and a posse of sea creatures drive the pirates out of Atlantis, though Demo makes a getaway in his ship. Aquaman figures that Demo will be back one day. Sadly--because an underwater pirate is an undeniable cool idea--I don't think he ever does. He simply sails away into Comic Book Limbo.


Overall, the story is visually fun and worth reading. 


Next week, we'll return to the Lonely War of Captain Willy Schultz.





Monday, November 27, 2023

Cover Cavalcade

 NOVEMBER IS DINOSAURS IN THE PULPS MONTH!



A Harold V. Brown cover from 1940. 

Friday, November 24, 2023

Friday's Favorite OTR

 Mysterious Traveler: "Change of Address" 1/22/52



A man wants to get away from his controlling wife. He sees an opportunity to do so when he rents a house that is "made for murder."


Click HERE to listen or download. 

Thursday, November 23, 2023

Those Poor Moon People!

 NOVEMBER IS DINOSAURS IN THE PULPS MONTH!


cover art by Frank R. Paul

Well, I already knew that dinosaurs once saved Earth from the Martians. Today, I discovered a tale in Amazing Stories (February 1929) that tells us Earth was saved from the Insect People of Mars by the last living Tyrannosaurus Rex. "Death of the Moon" was written by Alexander Phillips. 


The poor Lunarians were running out of the resources they need to maintain a liveable atmosphere on the moon. Fortunately, they have a Jor-El-level genius among them who has a plan. Build a space ship; fly to Earth; make sure Earth is habitable; return to the moon; build a lot of space ships and move everyone to Earth.


It's not a bad plan, if only because it represents the only way the Lunarians can survive. If successful, it means mankind will never show up, because the Lunarians will be filling that ecological niche already. But--well, you can't really blame the Lunarians for not knowing about humanity before humanity existed.



The Lunarian scientist and his crew take off and arrive on Earth. They explore and like what they see. Well, at least until they see a hungry Tyrannosaur...


The story is a short, fun bit of science fantasy. Phillips, though, also manages to insert a bit of meloncholy at the story's end, as the last T-Rex, dying from raygun wounds after unknowingly saving mankind, passes on. The following quote is a spoiler, so jump to the link at the bottom of this post to read the story yourself before continuing:


The sinking sun bathed the saurian’s grim visage in a soft, warm light and as he gazed into the last sunset he would ever see, across far spaces into the mellow glory of the Life-giver, Tyranosaurus’ eyes softened and he was vested with a dim, far-away dignity as one whose purpose is accomplished. Gradually the harsh sobbing diminished and finally ceased and Tyranosaurus Rex, King of the Giant Lizards, most terrible of all carnivores, and most feared, had gone forever from earth.


The sun was gone. Far along the west stretched a streak of amber light, all else the night had claimed. High above the canyon, showing through a space in the leaves, sailed the round, full moon throwing her pure, white light, like a protecting mantle, over the broken, pathetic body of her perished son, the inventor, while deep below her surface she hid a race awaiting his triumphal return. Long would they wait — Long.


Poor Moon People. Poor T-Rex. -sigh-


The story is available to read online HERE

Wednesday, November 22, 2023

Willy Schultz, Part 15

 

cover art by Sam Glanzman

Fightin' Army #91 (May 1970) brings us another excellent chapter in "The Lonely War of Capt. Willy Schultz," written by Will Franz and drawn by Sam Glanzman.


I really enjoy the way this story is constructed. It starts in the midst of action, with Willy being tracked by a trio of Germans. Willy kills one of them, but is himself wounded.



We then jump to a flashback--and a brief nightmare by Willy during that flashback--that together fill in the back story. Willy, Elena and a squad of other partisans are ambushed by Germans. Only Willy and Elena (who has some sharpnel in her leg) get away.




They take refuge in a farmhouse, but there's reason to suspect the husband and wife who live there may sell them out to the Germans. After all, the Germans would kill the family if its found they were hiding partisans AND the partisans have themselves stolen from farmers in the past. 


Still, there's no choice. Willy tries to stay away to watch the couple while Elena sleeps, but he drifts off. When he wakes up, he sees the husband has indeed led Germans to the house. Willy runs for it, trying to lead the Germans away from Elena. That's where we rejoin him, wounded with two more Germans still on his trail. 


He manages to take them out and return to the farm. More partisans have arrived and Elena is okay. But Willy isn't terribly happy with the farm couple.





In the end, though, he can't pull the trigger on them. Nor does he allow anyone else to kill them. He's simply had enough killing for the day.






It's a chapter that tells a suspensful story AND comments effectively on the brutality of war. As I mentioned before, I'm impressed by the combined use of flashback and nightmare to gradually give us necessary plot exposition. This chapter is a great example of just how exceptional as a whole this saga is. 


Next week, we'll dive into the ocean to visit with Aquaman.

Monday, November 20, 2023

Cover Cavalcade

 NOVEMBER IS DINOSAURS IN THE PULPS MONTH!



This 1939 cover was painted by Harold V. Brown.

Friday, November 17, 2023

Friday's Favorite OTR

 Suspense: "Death on My Hands" 5/10/51



Phil Harris stars as a band leader who ends up the target of a lynch mob when a young fan is accidentally killed while visiting him. Alice Faye plays the one person who sticks by him.


Click HERE to listen or download. 

Thursday, November 16, 2023

Desperate Plan after Desperate Plan

 

cover art by Rudolph Belarski

I've been reading through a PDF copy of the October 1940 issue of Foreign Legion Adventures, the second and also the last issue of this title, which depended largely on reprints. I've already covered a couple of the stories HERE and HERE.


Well, there's one more story inside this issue that's worth talking about. "Renegade Caid," a novella by F. Van Wyck Mason, was originally published in Argosy in 1930. Though it doesn't quite measure up to J.D. Newsom's "Soldiers of Misfortune" (the best story in the issue), it's still a slam-bang adventure, full of non-stop and brutal action.



Legion sergeant and former Texas Ranger Lemuel Frost is leading three other men on a recon patrol. While they out on the desert, their outpost is attacked and wiped out. The only survivor is Frost's best friend, who has been tortured and dies soon after being found among the dead.


The attackers were led by a Russian with a lot of combat experience. He used to be known as Prince Michailov who fought for the tsar, then sold out his troops to the communists, then sold out the communists. Now he's in North Africa, using a Muslim title and calling up troops for a violent jihad against Europeans. His troops are well-armed and well-disciplined, making him very, very dangerous.


Frost and his three men are the only ones who know about him, also finding out that he plans to raid another Legion outpost on the way to looting a supply depot and then attacking Christian natives who are gathered at a fair like lambs brought for slaughter.


Frost has an unfortunate (but historically accurate) tendency to use the N-word when referring to any non-white, but there's no doubting either his courage or his determination to avenge the death of his friend. He and his men ride their camels nearly to death to reach that second outpost. But the officer there has a grudge against Frost and fails to take his warning seriously. Frost's patrol rides on and the outpost is overwhelmed by Michailov's forces minutes later.


There's still a chance. The supply depot is at the other end of a narrow pass through some mountains. It can be easily defended if Frost's patrol can get there first. But their camel's are exhausted; they are hotly pursued; and there's more enemy troops in front of them.


Frost fights and improvises, tricking two groups of Michaelov's men into fighting each other. The Legionnaires arrive at the depot, only to find there's just four men stationed there with only a little bit of ammunition for their two machine guns. There's several boxes of dynamite, but no wire or detonators.


Frost must improvise again. There might yet be a way to stop Michaelov, but this might also mean asking a friend to die. When THAT plan doesn't quite work, Frost sees one last suicidal chance to turn the tide. 


"The Renegade Caid" takes a few pages of exposition to get things rolling, but then it gallops from page to page at a lightning pace as the Legionnaires gallop desperately from one seemingly hopeless situation to another. It's a great example of the sort of blood-and-guts adventure storytelling that the pulp magazines were often so good at. 


The story is available online HERE



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