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Rêves de Noël
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A JOURNEY THROUGH CANADA'S FORGOTTEN, NEGLECTED AND SUPPRESSED WRITING
Death About Face Frank Kane Toronto: Harlequin, 1951 |
A Scottish transplant by way of the United States, Bertrand W. Sinclair wasn’t Canada’s most prolific pulp magazine writer; I know of two hundred and ninety-four appearances, which is nowhere near the fifteen hundred or so (I lost count) logged by Ontarian H. Bedford-Jones. Sinclair isn’t our best-known pulp writer, either; that title belongs to Thomas P. Kelley, author of The Black Donnellys, Vengeance of the Donnellys, I Found Cleopatra, and, of course, The Gorilla’s Daughter.
Sinclair’s distinction rests in being our best pulp writer. Though his plots are invariably marred by melodrama — a prerequisite in pulps — he usually brought something to his stories that shook convention. My favourite Sinclair novel is The Hidden Places. Serialized in The Popular Magazine (Oct 7 - Nov 20, 1921), it concerns a disfigured war veteran who seeks sanctuary on the remote BC coast from Vancouverites disgusted by his appearance. By great coincidence, he finds his nearest neighbour is his wife, who believes he'd died in battle. She is now married to another man.
As I say, melodrama.So begins my latest Dusty Bookcase review, posted today on the Canadian Notes & Queries website. Here's the link.
La femme de sa mort [Vanish in an Instant] Paris, Presses de la Cité |
Mortellement votre [Beast in View] Paris: Presses de la Cité, 1957 |
Un air qui tue [An Air That Kills] Paris: Presses de la cité, 1958 |
Au violeur! [The Fiend] Paris: Gallimard,1966 |