Arriving in bookstores as I write, books seven and eight in Véhicule's Ricochet Books series. Following visits to Niagara Falls (James Benson Nablo's
The Long November) and Toronto (Hugh Garner's
Waste No Tears), we're returning to Montreal with:
The Mayor of Côte St. Paul by Ronald J. Cooke, the strange story of Dave Manley, a struggling writer drawn into the world of slot-machines and rum-running by a good looking gal who wants nothing so much as to open a lingerie store in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia. Both work for the Mayor, a sadistic crime boss who takes pleasure in murdering people with darts.
Printed once by pre-romance Harlequin in June 1950, the Ricochet edition is the first in more than sixty-five years.
Hot Freeze by Douglas Sanderson, post-war Canada’s greatest noir novel, introduces "inquiry agent" Mike Garfin, ex-RCMP (he made the mistake of bedding a suspect's wife). In this first of
three or four adventures, he's hired to figure out what exactly is going on with one of Westmount's spoiled bisexual teenaged sons.
Published in 1954, by Dodd, Mead (New York) and Reinhardt (London), then in 1955 by Popular Library (New York), this edition is the first in sixty years.
Both
The Mayor of Côte St. Paul and
Hot Freeze feature Introductions by yours truly – my first since David Montrose's
The Crime on Cote des Neiges (or, if you prefer,
Meurtre à Westmount).
Long-time readers will recognize both titles.
I first wrote here about Hot Freeze in the earliest days of 2011.
The Mayor of Côte St. Paul consumed not
one, not
two, but
three posts later that same year.
The Mayor of Côte St. Paul and
Hot Freeze are available from the usual online sources, better bookstores and, of course,
Véhicule itself.
I would be remiss in not recognizing the role played by Greg Shepard of Stark House Press in the Hot Freeze reissue. In recent years, Stark House has reissued six Douglas Sanderson novels, including A Dum-Dum for the President, the third – or is it fourth? – Mike Garfin thriller.
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