Twisted Minds and a Haunting Voice Dick Callingham's "Terror Keepers" aka Patrick Quentin's A Puzzle for Fools was the March 1936 cover story in Detective Story Magazine |
As "Dick Callingham" Rickie and Hugh published three known pieces in Detective Story Magazine, a pulp magazine that served as one of their most frequent repositories of short fiction.
These pieces are "Striking Silence" and "Terror Keepers," both from 1936, and "The Frightened Killer," from 1937. I have been able to see a copy of the March issue of DSM containing "Terror Keepers," and it turns out that it is the first published version of the premier Patrick Quentin novel, A Puzzle for Fools, which was published six months later.
Putting on the Ritz Ad for Lucky Strikes, America's favorite cigarette, on the back cover of DSM Slimming women were advised to reach for a Lucky rather than a sweet |
After 1937 Rickie and Hugh increasingly focused their attention, when it came to short fiction (including short novels), on the more prestigious (and lucrative) glossy women's magazines, dubbed "slicks." Their fiction in pulps like DSM was altogether grislier stuff, aimed at a primarily male audience that took their crime writing neat. A Puzzle for Fools is set at an asylum (albeit a swankier one) and has plenty of outre details. Later Patrick Quentins would dial down the horror (though not the suspense) and dial up the glamour.
More coming soon, I hope, on the mystery of Webb and Wheeler short fiction, as Crippen and Landru gets set to mail pre-orders of their new Rickie and Hugh short fiction collection, The Cases of Lieutenant Timothy Trant. It's a good 'un! Getting to work on, among other projects, Moray Dalton, Christopher Bush, Bernice Carey and Rickie and Hugh's Timothy Trant has been a great blessing.
Nix on Parties! Ad from DSM Even more terrifying than crime for many pulp fiction readers was the scourge of pimples, which threatened to extinguish one's social life |
It always got worse at nights. And that particular night was the first time they had left me without any kind of dope to help me sleep.
Opening Sentence of a A Puzzle for Fools:
It always got worse at night. And that particular night was the first time they had left me without any kind of dope to help me sleep.
Just one change here, from nights to night. However, don't think that Hugh, who did the transfers from magazine publication to published novel, didn't make improvements in the writing. You can see it, for example, in the novel's final lines--though you don't want me to quote those, surely!
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