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Slim Callaghan

Created by Peter Cheyney
Pseudonym of Reginald Evelyn Peter Southouse Cheyney
(1896-1951)

Hard-boiled (some would argue over-boiled), bull-in-a-china-shop SLIM CALLAGHAN, prone to lying to just about anyone about just about anything, is–after Lemmy Caution–the most famous of Cheyney’s tough guys. Unlike Lemmy, readers are mercifully spared the ersatz Americanisms–Slim is an English tough guy, a private eye working in England.

Anthony Boucher even tagged him “the Sam Spade of London” and ranked Farewell to the Admiral as “fair ersatz Hammett.”

I’m not convinced. Sure, Slim’s still one tough bloke, a nasty bit of goods. Compared to Caution, Slim’s slightly more polished, although he’s still such an obnoxiously crude caricature of a brash, hard-boiled tough guy, he’s still hard to swallow. He’s no Sam Spade in my book.

Then again, what do I know? Boucher’s considered the ne plus ultra of crime fiction critics, and then there’s Gary Warren Niebuhr, a guy almost as obsessed as I am with private eyes, who cited The Urgent Hangman as one of the twenty-one classics in his A Reader’s Guide To Private Eye Novels. Which is pretty high praise, indeed. Although he doesn’t exactly say why he thinks it’s one of the twenty-one classics of the genre.

Still, Cheyney was immensely popular, particularly in England and Europe. He made it into half a dozen films, some of them in French. His rougher edges were generally toned down for his film appearances, and Uneasy Terms, a 1948 British flick, in particular is quite effective, with Michael Rennie as Slim, who agrees to meet a prospective client and is subsequently drugged.

Cheyney seemed to know what his fans wanted, and wasn’t shy about giving them what they wanted. Incredibly prolific, he churned out a steady stream of books and short stories. He also created private eyes Nicholas Gale, Terence O’Day, Johnny Vallon and Carlyl O’Hara, and, of course, FBI agent/thug Lemmy Caution.

 

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Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.

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