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Steve Drake

Created by Richard Ellington
(1914-80)

“Broadway is my beat and murder is my business!”
— cover blurb from Shakedown

Over the course of five novels and a few short stories, former actor and G.I. and current Broadway wisenheimer STEVE DRAKE finds that private investigation may not be the nicest work in the world, but “it’s a living.”

One of the unfairly forgotten P.I. series of the late forties/early fifties, not as hard-boiled as Spillane, perhaps, but generally offering some good local colour, an appealing medium-boiled hero and some deftly plotted, satisfyingly complex mysteries. In fact, despite the usual tough guy trappings (wise-cracking, brandy-slurping, etc., plus check out that cover over there!) at times Drake seemed to be almost wandering into amateur sleuth territory, with Exit for a Dame (1951) in particular recalling an Ellery Queen impossible crime story.

Mind you, Ellery never served, and never charged $30 a day (plus expenses).

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Richard Ellington worked in radio, both as a performer and writer, during and after World War II, and was the head writer for ABC’s The Fat Man (1946-51), “created” by Dashiell Hammett.  Ellington ended up running a hotel in the Caribbean. He also was one of the main scriptwriters for radio’s The Fat Man. Coincidentally, a “printer” named “Richard Ellington” co-edited (along with folksinger Dave Van RonkThe Bosses’ Songbook: Songs to Stifle the Flames of Discontent (1959) which was dedicated to J. Edgar Hoover.

I’m just sayin’…

NOVELS

SHORT STORIES

Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith. Thanks to David Nobriga for shaking my cage.

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