Showing posts with label Sam Fuller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sam Fuller. Show all posts

Saturday, 18 February 2012

Are Any of the First Ten Harlequin Books Worth Reading?

Start of a new series of posts about Harlequin. I'll answer the question -which books Harlequin published in its first ten years are worth reading? Or which Harlequins will bump Moby Dick or, The Whale down my reading to-do list? We'll start with the first ten Harlequins:

1 Bruff, Nancy                    Manatee
2 Wees, Frances Shelley     Lost House
3 Hunt, Howard                  Maelstrom
4 Bryant, Arthur Herbert      Double Image
5 Nichols, Margaret             Close to My Heart
6 Snow, Charles H.             Wolf of the Mesas
7 Cooke, Ronald J.             The House on Craig Street
8 Wees, Frances Shelley      Honeymoon Mountain
9 Fuller, Samuel Michael      The Dark Page
10 Long, Manning               Here's Blood In Your Eye

There is one book here I have read - The House on Craig Street, a Canadian author's PBO that is not worthy. What about the other books? Does a book need to be in print (not a POD object which is a collection of reproduced pages and not a published book)? No, but it helps.

There is one book here that qualifies - The Dark Page which happens to be the only book on the list in print. That edition has an introduction by Wim Wenders who explains why Sam Fuller's novel is a worthy.

Harlequin 9 - August 1949

Harlequin 9 back

Kingly Reprieve - 2007