Showing posts with label Hanro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hanro. Show all posts

Monday, 2 January 2012

Harlequin Authors Part XIV - Day Keene (1)

Day Keene (1904-1969) was a prolific pulp writer from the thirties to the sixties. Six of his many novels were published by Harlequin Books of Toronto and Winnipeg. Five of the six have the notice on the front cover "An original novel - not a reprint" but as we shall see this is misleading.

The first three books were published as paperback originals:

Love Me - and Die! -  Phantom 504 (New York: Hanro, 1951)
Hunt the Killer - Phantom 507 (New York: Hanro, 1951)
If the Coffin Fits - Graphic 43 (Hasbrouck Heights, NJ: Graphic, 1952)

The Harlequin editions are clearly published later so the notice is not correct. The original editions also have this notice and somehow it has been carried forward to the Harlequin editions.

The artwork is redrawn.

Harlequin 167 - May 1952

Harlequin 167 back

Phantom 504 - 1951

Harlequin 168 - May 1952

Harlequin 168 back

Phantom 507 - 1951

Harlequin 180 - July 1952

Harlequin 180

Graphic 43 - 1952

Thursday, 24 June 2010

Harlequin Canadian Paperback Originals Part I

There is a group of five books published by Harlequin Books in 1952 and 1953 that state "An original title - not a reprint" on the cover. With the exception of a couple of later books Harlequin did not advertise its few paperback originals. These appear to be exceptions to the rule - or are they?

The books were published by New York's Hanro Corporation in late 1951 and early 1952 under the Phantom Books imprint:

Love Me and Die!       Phantom 504 (1951)
Crime On My Hands    Phantom 506 (1951)
Hunt the Killer           Phantom 507 (1951)
Naked Fury               Phantom 509 (1952)
Wake up to Murder     Phantom 513 (1952)

The Harlequins are all copyright Harlequin and don't mention Hanro but, given the dates on the Hanro editions, the Harlequin editions are clearly not originals. Perhaps Hanro and Harlequin acquired the rights to publish in the US and Canada respectively at the same time but Harlequin just took longer. Harlequin then wasn't technically acquiring "reprint" rights.

Day Keene is a pseudonym for Gunard Hjerstedt (1903 - 1969). Keene became an actor in repertory theater in the early 1920’s. When his actor friends decided to try film, he instead turned to writing, and during the 1930’s was a principal writer for the “Little Orphan Annie” radio show, as well as contributing to the pulps. After he moved to the west coast of Florida, he began writing paperback originals in the late 1940’s, mostly fast-paced crime stories. By the 1960’s, he had abandoned mysteries for mainstream novels.

Carl Hodges (1902 - 1966) was a contemporary of Keene.

Harlequin 167 - May 1952

Harlequin 167 back

Harlequin 168 - May 1952

Harlequin 168 back

Harlequin 182 - August 1952

Harlequin 182 back

Harlequin 185 - August 1952

Harlequin 185 back