Henry Kane
Author of Kill as Directed
About the Author
Series
Works by Henry Kane
Henry Kane. La Cuisine infernale : EPrey by dawne. Traduit de l'américain par M. Maj Berg (1966) 2 copies
The Gorgeous Murderer 2 copies
A Fistful of Death 2 copies
moisson de poupées 2 copies
Kiss, Kiss, Kill, Kill 2 copies
Muerte de una cortesana 1 copy
Nobody Loves a Loser 1 copy
Vittima designata 1 copy
Asesinato por millones 1 copy
Un cadáver por Navidad 1 copy
Muerte de un cobarde 1 copy
Destinazione obitorio 1 copy
Harrastuksena hunajapuput 1 copy
Tail Job, The 1 copy
Operation Delta 1 copy
Come Kill with Me 1 copy
The Glow Job 1 copy
El Factor de la Virilidad 1 copy
Decision 1 copy
Cadavériquement vôtre 1 copy
One Little Bullet 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1918
- Gender
- male
- Agent
- Morrison, Henry
- Places of residence
- Long Island, New York, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- New York, USA
Members
Reviews
I don't care for characters who have a hobby of memorizing quotes. An impressive feat in real life, but an excuse to pull half your book from Bartlett's in fiction. McGregor is a James Bond knockoff - handsome, muscular, a gourmet - but the story is very well written for all of that. Less than 200 pages, typical for the time, and well worth spending a few hours with.
review of
Henry Kane's Armchair in Hell
by tENTATIVELY, a cONVENIENCE - October 28-30, 2020
I don't remember whether I read mention of Kane somewhere & bought this bk b/c of that ot whether I just found it at my favorite used bkstore & got it b/c I figured it was promising. Whatever the case, I've already more or less forgotten it but I think I enjoyed it as much as I usually do hard-boiled detective pulp fiction (w/ the exception of Mickey Spillane). I reckon Kane's pretty typical.. but in a show more way I like.
"The devil was a dentist with a drill. I was in an armchair in hell.
"So I woke up: but the buzzing persisted.
"I lay stiff and supine. I lay stiff and prone. I held my breath. I let it go. I wriggled. Resolutely.
"Then I slid my head beneath the pillow and I tried to crawl in after it but I couldn't quite make it, so I kicked off my covers and I put my legs down over the edge of the bed and I palmed my hands over my ears and I hung there, miserably.
"The buzzing crystalized into sound with meaning.
"Someone had dug his finger into the hole around my doorbell, and it was endless, like music out of a juke box in the rear end of a gin mill." - p 5
Do you ever read a word & think something like I haven't seen that word for awhile!? It's a pleasure, at least for me. In this case the word is "supine". Of course, one doesn't read much about gin mills anymore but that's diferent. The narrator refers to himself as a "private richard", that's a little different. He's also hungover, that's not different. &, of course, the person at the door is a friend who's also a client & there's been a murder.
""What cooks?"
""I've got a dame at home."
""Lovely."
""In bed."
""Very lovely."
""A brunette."
""A brunette!" I yapped at him, nose to nose, and I waited a second, and then I went away and started pulling off my tie. "For that I'm taken out of a warm bed and pushed around. Because the guy is a nut on blondes."
""A dead brunette." - pp 8-9
Some guys have all the luck. I mean what're the chances of going out to pick someone up at a bar & getting them home & then finding out that they're dead? Well, ok, that's not what happened.
"Solidly, a man sat with his back to us in the chair at the foot of the table. Quietly. A man with a high proud plume of wavy iron-gray hair. I couldn't see his face. He didn't turn around. It wasn't that he was impolite; it was more that a knife was in his back, high, in a corner, the snub hilt pointing back at us like a stiff tongue pushed out in derision." - pp 10-11
Like I sd, some guys have all the luck. This guy didn't. Then there's booze.
""Have a slug of gin." I showed him how.
""No sir," he said with admirable firmness. "I do not partake of intoxicants. I keep it for my maiden sister. She visits sometimes in the mornings—"
"His eyes began to go. I shook them down. "Marmaduke," I said. "You don't look so good. I insist."
""If you insist, sir—"" - pp 24-25
Do people still think of booze as a medicine? As a 'pick-me-up'? I remember drinking "Invalid Stout" in Australia, it was supposedly healthy for invalids, I sure liked the stuff - & it was cheap. What I like better is hard-boiled detective humor. I'm not sure whether that's cheap or not.
""They have added a record to that album. Now there's an American private detective who has no wife, or sleep, or food, or rest. He drinks, drinks more, and more; flirts with women, blondes mostly, who talk hard but act soft, then he drinks more, then, somewhere in the middle, he gets dreadfully beaten about, then he drinks more, then he says a few dirty words, then he stumbles around, punch-drunk-like, but he is very smart and he adds up a lot of two's and two's, and then the case gets solved. See what I mean?"" - pp 47-48
This novel's copyrighted 1948. Notice that the detetctive "gets dreadfully beaten about" but he doesn't get killed. Do people still act that way? Or do people just get killed right away? I mean why take the risk that the detective might solve the case? Beating the guy up but not killing him seems practically old-fashioned.
The private richard has a team.
"Scoffol and Chambers. Scoffol is short and round and beet-faced with short-cropped white hair, parted down the middle; small legs, little feet, short back, and short stomach, circular and comfortably nudging the vest buttons. I'm another kind of guy. I'm a long one with a clarkie mustache, six feet two, sort of raw-boned with big shoulders (or I get a new tailor). Scoffol is the boulder; I am a phosphorescent glimmer. You can wipe the glimmer off the boulder. You cannot budge the boulder, not a real bouldery boulder. Not without a derrick.
"We have a system in our business. We mind our own. Mostly, I handle the roughneck trade. Or they handle me." - p 74
He goes to a dance club & he handles her.
""Too tight," she said again, suddenly, sadly.
""Sister," I said. "You're nuts. You are gorgeous and even beautiful and completely out of this world, but you're nuts. You've got a fixation. Or something. We are a couple with rare propriety. Furthermore, that's the way I dance. With you, or anyone. With my mother."
""With your mother?" Her black eyes opened and she giggled. "Like that, boy, it's incest, or whatever they call it. Just loosen up, long guy."" - pp 101-102
You know that expression I don't get even, I get odd? Well, it doesn't apply here.
"I threw it with my right with the gun slanting sidewise. I threw it with everything that was left in me, bowling-ball fashion, like you need a ten-strike and you hate the pins; but straightaway, no English. It caught him spruce on the point of the chin and I heard the crunch of vertebrae as his head flashed back and hit bottom, and there he was like a bent Buddhist; his toes touching and his knees touching and then the great inverted arc of his belly and then his head touching; and his breath came in gurgles like soda pop out of a bottle.
"I didn't have to do it. Mostly, it was for business.
"A private richard must not absorb a licking unless he returns it twofold, approximately; it is one of the rules of our outrageous game. If not, he might as well shut up shop." - p 116
There must be a name for that sort of philosophy. What is it? Far.., far— something?
"Cry spat the wood out of his mouth. "I come on a mission of peace," he insisted, "but outside in a nice shiny car I got five boys. If I don't show in an hour, they got pineapples. What you peel with your teeth and you throw."
""You could get killed like that," the Butcher said.
""Me? The hell with that. I'm what you call a fartalist."
""Fatalist," I said.
""I know professor. I am making like a comic. Good, huh? You ready?"" - p 155
How many of you remember that "pineapple" is slang for an American hand-grenade? As opposed to "potato masher" for a German one? Knowing this sort of thing will get you a nice cushy job as an unpd bk reviewer someday if you keep your nose to the grindstone.
"We jelled that way. Telescoped down, it was a picture for the front cover of the Idiot's Crime Gazette with ads in the back for the water pistols. "What the hell?" I said. "What are you doing here? Who's writing this story?"" - p 224
Why?! I'm surprised you asked! We both are. Anyway, Henry Kane's a pretty good writer for this sort of thing. That just goes to show how many good writers there are out there that've fallen thru the cracks. show less
Henry Kane's Armchair in Hell
by tENTATIVELY, a cONVENIENCE - October 28-30, 2020
I don't remember whether I read mention of Kane somewhere & bought this bk b/c of that ot whether I just found it at my favorite used bkstore & got it b/c I figured it was promising. Whatever the case, I've already more or less forgotten it but I think I enjoyed it as much as I usually do hard-boiled detective pulp fiction (w/ the exception of Mickey Spillane). I reckon Kane's pretty typical.. but in a show more way I like.
"The devil was a dentist with a drill. I was in an armchair in hell.
"So I woke up: but the buzzing persisted.
"I lay stiff and supine. I lay stiff and prone. I held my breath. I let it go. I wriggled. Resolutely.
"Then I slid my head beneath the pillow and I tried to crawl in after it but I couldn't quite make it, so I kicked off my covers and I put my legs down over the edge of the bed and I palmed my hands over my ears and I hung there, miserably.
"The buzzing crystalized into sound with meaning.
"Someone had dug his finger into the hole around my doorbell, and it was endless, like music out of a juke box in the rear end of a gin mill." - p 5
Do you ever read a word & think something like I haven't seen that word for awhile!? It's a pleasure, at least for me. In this case the word is "supine". Of course, one doesn't read much about gin mills anymore but that's diferent. The narrator refers to himself as a "private richard", that's a little different. He's also hungover, that's not different. &, of course, the person at the door is a friend who's also a client & there's been a murder.
""What cooks?"
""I've got a dame at home."
""Lovely."
""In bed."
""Very lovely."
""A brunette."
""A brunette!" I yapped at him, nose to nose, and I waited a second, and then I went away and started pulling off my tie. "For that I'm taken out of a warm bed and pushed around. Because the guy is a nut on blondes."
""A dead brunette." - pp 8-9
Some guys have all the luck. I mean what're the chances of going out to pick someone up at a bar & getting them home & then finding out that they're dead? Well, ok, that's not what happened.
"Solidly, a man sat with his back to us in the chair at the foot of the table. Quietly. A man with a high proud plume of wavy iron-gray hair. I couldn't see his face. He didn't turn around. It wasn't that he was impolite; it was more that a knife was in his back, high, in a corner, the snub hilt pointing back at us like a stiff tongue pushed out in derision." - pp 10-11
Like I sd, some guys have all the luck. This guy didn't. Then there's booze.
""Have a slug of gin." I showed him how.
""No sir," he said with admirable firmness. "I do not partake of intoxicants. I keep it for my maiden sister. She visits sometimes in the mornings—"
"His eyes began to go. I shook them down. "Marmaduke," I said. "You don't look so good. I insist."
""If you insist, sir—"" - pp 24-25
Do people still think of booze as a medicine? As a 'pick-me-up'? I remember drinking "Invalid Stout" in Australia, it was supposedly healthy for invalids, I sure liked the stuff - & it was cheap. What I like better is hard-boiled detective humor. I'm not sure whether that's cheap or not.
""They have added a record to that album. Now there's an American private detective who has no wife, or sleep, or food, or rest. He drinks, drinks more, and more; flirts with women, blondes mostly, who talk hard but act soft, then he drinks more, then, somewhere in the middle, he gets dreadfully beaten about, then he drinks more, then he says a few dirty words, then he stumbles around, punch-drunk-like, but he is very smart and he adds up a lot of two's and two's, and then the case gets solved. See what I mean?"" - pp 47-48
This novel's copyrighted 1948. Notice that the detetctive "gets dreadfully beaten about" but he doesn't get killed. Do people still act that way? Or do people just get killed right away? I mean why take the risk that the detective might solve the case? Beating the guy up but not killing him seems practically old-fashioned.
The private richard has a team.
"Scoffol and Chambers. Scoffol is short and round and beet-faced with short-cropped white hair, parted down the middle; small legs, little feet, short back, and short stomach, circular and comfortably nudging the vest buttons. I'm another kind of guy. I'm a long one with a clarkie mustache, six feet two, sort of raw-boned with big shoulders (or I get a new tailor). Scoffol is the boulder; I am a phosphorescent glimmer. You can wipe the glimmer off the boulder. You cannot budge the boulder, not a real bouldery boulder. Not without a derrick.
"We have a system in our business. We mind our own. Mostly, I handle the roughneck trade. Or they handle me." - p 74
He goes to a dance club & he handles her.
""Too tight," she said again, suddenly, sadly.
""Sister," I said. "You're nuts. You are gorgeous and even beautiful and completely out of this world, but you're nuts. You've got a fixation. Or something. We are a couple with rare propriety. Furthermore, that's the way I dance. With you, or anyone. With my mother."
""With your mother?" Her black eyes opened and she giggled. "Like that, boy, it's incest, or whatever they call it. Just loosen up, long guy."" - pp 101-102
You know that expression I don't get even, I get odd? Well, it doesn't apply here.
"I threw it with my right with the gun slanting sidewise. I threw it with everything that was left in me, bowling-ball fashion, like you need a ten-strike and you hate the pins; but straightaway, no English. It caught him spruce on the point of the chin and I heard the crunch of vertebrae as his head flashed back and hit bottom, and there he was like a bent Buddhist; his toes touching and his knees touching and then the great inverted arc of his belly and then his head touching; and his breath came in gurgles like soda pop out of a bottle.
"I didn't have to do it. Mostly, it was for business.
"A private richard must not absorb a licking unless he returns it twofold, approximately; it is one of the rules of our outrageous game. If not, he might as well shut up shop." - p 116
There must be a name for that sort of philosophy. What is it? Far.., far— something?
"Cry spat the wood out of his mouth. "I come on a mission of peace," he insisted, "but outside in a nice shiny car I got five boys. If I don't show in an hour, they got pineapples. What you peel with your teeth and you throw."
""You could get killed like that," the Butcher said.
""Me? The hell with that. I'm what you call a fartalist."
""Fatalist," I said.
""I know professor. I am making like a comic. Good, huh? You ready?"" - p 155
How many of you remember that "pineapple" is slang for an American hand-grenade? As opposed to "potato masher" for a German one? Knowing this sort of thing will get you a nice cushy job as an unpd bk reviewer someday if you keep your nose to the grindstone.
"We jelled that way. Telescoped down, it was a picture for the front cover of the Idiot's Crime Gazette with ads in the back for the water pistols. "What the hell?" I said. "What are you doing here? Who's writing this story?"" - p 224
Why?! I'm surprised you asked! We both are. Anyway, Henry Kane's a pretty good writer for this sort of thing. That just goes to show how many good writers there are out there that've fallen thru the cracks. show less
EDGE OF PANIC: A few drinks with a blonde, and then smashing violence and a blacked-out memory by Henry Kane
Economically written, fast-paced post WWII crime novel. Married insurance agent blacks out after an alcohol soaked day. When he awakens, there is a dead woman beside him. Did he do it?
Picture Glenn Ford as the insurance agent, Lizabeth Scott as the femme fatale, Broderick Crawford as the Police Captain, and Barbara Stanwyck as the loyal wife. A good evening's entertainment.
Picture Glenn Ford as the insurance agent, Lizabeth Scott as the femme fatale, Broderick Crawford as the Police Captain, and Barbara Stanwyck as the loyal wife. A good evening's entertainment.
A detective tale in the Raymond Chandler - Dashiell Hammet style.
P.I. Peter Chambers witnesses the murder of Mrs. Rochelle Pratt Curtis in front of the Club Nevada. Shortly before he had been inside enjoying the show and having drinks. He had been approached by a friend who had a friend who needed his service, a Mr. Blair Curtis. Thus starts a tale of intrigue with numerous characters with names like Matty Pineapple, Augie Piazza, Grandma Ed Holly, the beautiful Edith Wilde and more. There show more are also a few more murders along the way.
Written in 1947, Chambers is one of the wise-cracking, tough talking, woman loving types. He never shows fear and has little hesitation when action is required. He enjoys fine clothes, classy living quarters, good booze and beautiful babes. He is good at what he does and knows it. In his own words; "I was flash. I was ready money. When I had it. I was the guy with plenty of padding in the shoulders of the special made-to-order suits, with stripes, with a suggestion of peg in the trousers, with jackets that had to be long enough for a guy that measured six feet tow. I was the guy that shot crap with the boys and took out the office help, when they were cute. I was the guy for the dames." He is at home with high-hats and the lowlifes and can get his information from both.
The story line is a bit complex and at times it is hard to see the connections between some of the characters. Secret lives, high-end jewellery heists, blackmail, a multiple murderer; everyone seems to have something to hide and Chambers is determined to find out what and if it helps solve the case. With people being unwilling to talk, Chambers has to do a lot of leg work and thinking to come up with the solutions. Yes, there is more than one mystery between the covers of this book. show less
P.I. Peter Chambers witnesses the murder of Mrs. Rochelle Pratt Curtis in front of the Club Nevada. Shortly before he had been inside enjoying the show and having drinks. He had been approached by a friend who had a friend who needed his service, a Mr. Blair Curtis. Thus starts a tale of intrigue with numerous characters with names like Matty Pineapple, Augie Piazza, Grandma Ed Holly, the beautiful Edith Wilde and more. There show more are also a few more murders along the way.
Written in 1947, Chambers is one of the wise-cracking, tough talking, woman loving types. He never shows fear and has little hesitation when action is required. He enjoys fine clothes, classy living quarters, good booze and beautiful babes. He is good at what he does and knows it. In his own words; "I was flash. I was ready money. When I had it. I was the guy with plenty of padding in the shoulders of the special made-to-order suits, with stripes, with a suggestion of peg in the trousers, with jackets that had to be long enough for a guy that measured six feet tow. I was the guy that shot crap with the boys and took out the office help, when they were cute. I was the guy for the dames." He is at home with high-hats and the lowlifes and can get his information from both.
The story line is a bit complex and at times it is hard to see the connections between some of the characters. Secret lives, high-end jewellery heists, blackmail, a multiple murderer; everyone seems to have something to hide and Chambers is determined to find out what and if it helps solve the case. With people being unwilling to talk, Chambers has to do a lot of leg work and thinking to come up with the solutions. Yes, there is more than one mystery between the covers of this book. show less
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