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Johnny Liddell

Created by Frank Kane
Pseudonyms include Frank Boyd
(1912 – 1968)

 

 

Frank Kane‘s New York private eye JOHNNY LIDDELL may have never been essential reading, he was arguably the quintessential fifties private eye, comfortably and even enjoyably generic, an endlessly malleable amalgamation of everything that made that decade’s dicks swing. Created by Kane for an 1944 for a pulp story, and went on to write countless novels and short stories about him. His paperback covers were often top-notch, with covers by some of the hottest illustrators of the day (by artists such as Bill George, Victor Kalin, Harry Bennett, Robert Stanley, Robert McGinnis, etc.) and he made frequent appearances in all the crime digests, including Manhunt and Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine

Johnny started out as an agency man, but by Bullet Proof (1951), he was out on his own, with his own New York agency. In fact, Johnny was so generic that as the genre evolved, so did he. Originally, pretty much a riff on Hammett’s Continental Op, but the fifties he was riffing closer to Spillane’s Mike Hammer, somehow younger, slimmer, sexier and altogether more prone to violence than in his earlier incarnation. Nonetheless, it was a solid series, nothing really exceptional, perhaps, but fondly regarded by many, including myself. It got the job done, sorta like Johnny.

As Bill Crider put it on Rara-Avis in April 2000, if it’s a Frank Kane book, chances are “it’ll be a competent, straightforward P.I. story.”

Sure, Kane often cannibalized his earlier work, but then, so did Chandler. And Kane gets some bonus points for creating beautiful, redheaded reporter daughter Muggsy Kiely, who appears as Liddell’s girlfriend and occasional sidekick/foil in several novels; rather reminescent of Lucy Hamilton’s role in Mike Shayne cases.

Kane was also able to inject a little reality into the mix occasionally, thanks to his brother, Vincent, who was an plainclothes cop for the NYPD and sometimes provided technical advice. Kane supposedly spent much time talking to his brother — and other policemen in the force — learning about crime-oriented “tough guys” and gaining insight into their motivations. Through conversations with his brother, Kane developed opinions about how real life detectives might approach those on the wrong side of the law.) In fact, he actually wrote one NYPD cop novel based on his brother’s work.

In addition to the Johnny Liddell stories, he wrote one NYPD cop novel based on his brother’s work. He also wrote scripts for radio (The Shadow, The Fat Man, Gangbusters) and television shows (S.A.7, The Investigators, and most notably Mickey Spillane’s Mike Hammer). Rumours have it that many of the Hammer scripts were just adaptations of his Liddell stories with Hammer substituted for Liddell. Kane also wrote a couple of original novels based on characters from television series, Staccato (as Frank Boyd) and The Line-Up (as Frank Kane).

    

UNDER OATH

NOVELS

SHORT STORIES

COLLECTIONS

FURTHER INVESTIGATION

Report respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith. Thanks to Jim Doherty for some of the info on this page, and a tip of the fedora to David Spencer for the heads-up. And a very special thanks to Maura Fox, Frank Kane’s grand-daughter, for all the extra info.

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