But there are still forgotten Dent novels. Six appeared in book form during his lifetime. The first of these, published under Doubleday’s Crime Club imprint in 1946, was Dead at the Take-Off.
The hero of this one is Chance Molloy. Sounds like a good name for a P.I., or maybe a gambler. Nope. This guy is the once-rich and still powerful owner of an airline company. His chief antagonist is a corrupt U.S. Senator, Senator Lord (who is described as having godlike power). The backstory is that Molloy has invested up to his eyeballs based on the belief the army will sell him transport planes after the war. But Senator Lord, owner of a competing airline, has employed dirty tricks to nix the deal. As a result, Molloy’s despondent brother (and partner) commits suicide. Molloy is prepared to use any means necessary to expose Lord, avenge his brother and save his company - even if that means using Lord’s innocent daughter against him.
What follows is a complex plot with a wide cast of characters, many of whom are also quite complex. Though there are a number of stock characters too, this is not a Doc Savage novel. It’s the real thing. Point of view shifts frequently, much more frequently than is common in today’s fiction. There are enough character arcs to make your head spin, but Dent handles it them all with ease.
There are at several subplots going at once. The romantic subplot alone could power a whole book. Both the captain and co-pilot are in love with the stewardess, who happens to be Molloy’s ex-girlfriend - and her soon-to-be-ex husband is aboard plotting revenge. Meanwhile, Molloy is falling for the Senator’s daughter. But as crazy as everything gets, Dent wraps it all up in the end.
The main reason I read this, and the main reason I enjoyed it, is Dent’s style - an easy blend of smart, hardboiled prose and dry humor. I have the second (and last) Chance Molloy book, Lady to Kill, in my to-be-read pile.
An unintentionally interesting aspect of this book is the picture of commercial airline travel circa 1945. Instead of proceeding immediately to the airline terminal, passengers purchase tickets at the company’s office in downtown New York, where billiards, ping pong and reading materials are available in the lounge. They are then ferried by limousine - at their own expense - to the airport. On boarding the plane, they are allowed to smoke, bring their own liquor, and even carry guns. They’re seated in compartments of four seats each, as in old railway cars, and the seats fold down into beds. The restrooms are spacious lounges, with two toilets on the side. Ah, the Golden Age of air travel.
NOTE: I read the Crime Club edition, but without a dust jacket the cover is less than picturesque. The Ace Double version was retitled High Stakes. Why? Maybe to fit better on the spine with the flipside, Nightshade by John N. Makris.
Look for the list of this week's other Forgotten Books on Patti Abbot's pattinase.
16 comments:
Fantastic review. So much I didn't know about Lester Dent and it's nice to read about his writings other than Doc Savage.
A new one on me. Top review.
Nice work. I need to read more Dent.
As you can imagine, I'm a big big fan of Dent. And I second Laurie's comments. I picked up a couple new facts about Dent. Thanks.
I'd heard he'd written quite a bit of stuff other than DOc Savage but I had not heard much about that work.
I read several Doc Savage in my teens and liked them. I've been thinking about buying some of these reprints and giving them to my son for Christmas....
Great pick, excellent review.
Dent is a really interesting guy. I always think "science fiction" when his name comes up, though I know he wrote in a variety of genres, even romance, if I recall correctly, under a pseudonym, of course.
I haven't read this one, but may keep an eye out for it.
Thanks, folks.
Those Doc books would be a great gift for a teen, Kenneth. I started the series when I was 13 and never stopped.
Did Dent ever write science fiction? Never heard of any, but I wouldn't be shocked.
I've always thought of the Doc Savage books as science fiction because of all the crazy tech gear that Doc uses, and the bizarre, fantastical villains and situations.
It's amazing that ACE BOOKS was able to publish so many name writers while paying them a pittance. Lester Dent, Robert Bloch, Harry Whittington, etc. were all part of some great ACE DOUBLES!
You're right, Tosser, there were lots of sci-fi elements in the Doc stories, and the science fiction section was where the used book stores used to shelve them, before they became 'collector's items'.
Dave --Doc Savage fan that you are, I'm curious: where do you stand on Philip Jose Farmer? I've never read his DS books, only read about them.
About Farmer - I enjoyed his Apocalyptic Life. I read A Feast Unknown and The Mad Goblin/Lord of the Trees (the Doc Caliban/Lord Grandrith books) so long ago I don't remember what I thought of them. I'm a Tarzan fan too, of course. I have Farmer's official Doc Savage and Tarzan books, Escape from Loki and The Dark Heart of Time, but haven't read them yet.
On the topic of airlines back in the day, the movie WITH A SONG IN MY HEART (THE JANE FROMAN STORY) had a scene in which co-pilot Rory Calhoun ducked into the cabin to deliver the usual If We Crash spiel. When he finished the passengers applauded.
Evan, after some research, I guess I stand corrected. I really thought I remembered some SF by Dent, but all I can find is what you already know of. I figured if it was anywhere, it would be in Clute (THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF SCIENCE FICTION), the best reference work on the genre, and that entry only speaks of Doc Savage. So put it down to muddle brain, of which I am often the possessor.
When I was in grade school, my favorite science fiction writer (aside from Jules Verne and H.G. Wells) was Lester Del Ray.
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