Yikes! Will
Murray’s brand-spanking-new Spider novel is another magnificent feast for pulp
fans.
I got a
charge out of the first few pages, where Will gives a sly nod to one my own
favorite pulp writers—Frederick Nebel. But the real shocker came on page 12,
when I realized this was prelude to everyone’s favorite pulp epic—THE PURPLE
INVASION.
Will has
already treated us to some truly audacious ideas (like teaming Doc and the
Shadow), Doc and Tarzan with King Kong, and the Spider with G-8 and Operator #5),
but to thrust the Spider into the “War and Peace of the Pulps” is audacity on
an even grander scale.
What the
Spider and his guest-star Operator #5 don’t know—but we do—is that no matter
how hard they fight to stop the Invasion (and they fight very hard), it’s
coming at the U.S.A. like a juggernaut, and once it begins the Purple Empire (a
thinly disguised Germany) marches across country taking untold millions in
casualties.
But the
threat of the Purple Invasion is just the context. The meat of the book is the
relationship between Richard Wentworth and his guest star Jimmy Christopher and
their battle against the bloodcurdling new villain Will has invented to bedevil
them.
First the
relationship. These heroes have met before (in Will’s earlier novel The Doom
Legion), and respect each other’s abilities. Under other circumstances they
could be close friends. But the straightlaced Operator #5, who sees right and
wrong in strictly black and white, cannot abide the freewheeling philosophy of
Wentworth, who recognizes that law and justice can be two different things. And
Christopher’s suspicion that Wenworth himself is the Spider makes him even more
prickly. So while the enormity of the threat facing the country demands they
work together, they must dance around their differences—a handicap that takes
them to the brink of being mortal enemies.
As the for
the villain, The Hangman is a merciless psychopath who’s the point of the spear
for a civilian army of homegrown Purple fascists. His rope, as you’ll see on
the cover, has a noose at one end and a scythe at the other, and he’s equally
deadly with both.
And, of
course, this wouldn’t be a Spider novel without a grisly menace to the city,
and Will serves one up that Wentworth’s chief raconteur, Novell Page, would
have envied. What is it? I’ll let you discover it for yourself (and shudder!),
but having accompanied Doc, the Shadow, G-8, #5, the Spider and many lesser
heroes on such doomsday missions, I can assure you this is one of the
creepiest.
Can our
heroes catch or kill the Hangman before he kills them? Can they save New York
without killing each other? Can they stop the Purple Invasion in its infancy
and spare the USA a coast-to-coast bloodbath?
Only Mr. Murray—and those who have read The Hangman from Hell—know for sure!
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