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The New Mammoth Book Of Pulp Fiction

por Maxim Jakubowski (Editor)

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Join shady operators, voluptuous molls, ruthless big-shots, and crooked cops in this massive collection filled with seven decades worth of pure, unadulterated pulp fiction. From Mickey Spillane to Dashiell Hammett, all the greatest writers are here, so watch your back!
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A Real Nice Guy, by William F. Nolan
The Girl Behind the Hedge, by Micky Spillane

These were the only two stories, out of the whole 814 pages of this book, that I would give more than two stars for. And the Spillane story is really spoiled by being too sexist.

Pulp is what it says, and pulp is what you get; one really shouldn't expect more. But it made me a bit weary and frustrated to read over and over how women were portrayed, and unrealistic situations were written, and were there any characters who didn't smoke all the time (and never outside), and how did they all get to drink alcohol at work? ( )
  burritapal | Oct 23, 2022 |
File under "mixed bag." Lots of noir from the 1950s and later (not my cup of tea, but if it's yours then look no further), as well as some interesting if not entirely effective selections from major hardboiled writers like Dashiell Hammett and Paul Cain (each satirizing the genteel aristocratic crime story with "The Diamond Wager" and "The Tasting Machine," respectively). The highlights are "One Escort--Missing or Dead," a rip-roaring detective yarn by Roger Torrey (author of a lone, semi-legendary hardboiled novel, 42 Days for Murder), and Ross Macdonald's excellent "Sleeping Dog." It's a shame that Macdonald didn't give us more Archer stories; for the most part, they really were as good as the novels. Among the (relatively) more recent material, Lawrence Block's "A Candle for the Bag Lady" is good, too.

Two and a half stars. ( )
  Jonathan_M | Feb 23, 2020 |
There’s an image I get when people say pulp fiction (not the movie). It’s tough talking private dicks. It’s dark streets filled with potential danger. It’s tall, leggy blondes who pull gats out of their purses. There’s a tautness of language that allows you to picture exactly where the action takes places, down to the dry, desert wind or the dirty streets with danger in every doorway. As one website states, it’s “…the one-two punch of dialogue and the action…”

The two Otto Penzler Black Lizard Big Book anthologies of pulp mysteries take the best stories of the 1920s through 1950s and jam them into two 1,100 double columned paged books. These are the crème de la crème of pulp writing with top of the line authors such as Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, Earle Stanley Gardner, Carroll John Daly and James M. Cain.

The New Mammoth Book of Pulp Fiction, originally compiled in 1996 and recently revised and reissued contains 33 stories ranging from 1929 to 1987, with most of them written in the 1950s. Unfortunately it doesn’t contain stories from top of the line pulp authors. As a result, the stories, though most of them are interesting and fun reading, don’t have that certain something that defines it as pulp fiction. They don’t have that darkness, the grittiness of, what in my mind, is a true pulp story. Jakubowsky should really have just called the book a collection of mystery stories but that, ovbiously, doesn’t have the same impact as saying pulp mystery.

Other things lacking in the book: there are no author bios so that you can get a feeling for the lives of the authors. Many of them had quite interesting lives. (These are included in the Penzler anthologies.) Additionally, there seems to be no rational order to the stories. Not alphabetical by title or author. Not chronological by date of issue. It seems totally random which makes it difficult to see how pulp fiction might have changed over the decades.

Because I was under a review deadline, I put together an Excel spreadsheet and ordered the stories chronologically and then read one from the beginning, one from the middle and one from the end of my list, so that if I couldn’t finish reading before deadline, I’d have a sampling from each time period. To be quite honest, I’m not sure if that made a difference.

I guess, like Jakubowsky, you could make the claim that pulp mysteries never left. They’ve always been around and have changed with the times. And that may be so. If that is the case, though, based on the stories in the New Mammoth Book of Pulp Fiction they’ve softened over the years. There’s nothing in the language to distinguish them. It’s not hard-driving. It’s not period driven. It’s bland. There is no “…one-two punch of dialogue and … action…”

So, if you’re looking for an anthology of good mystery stories, then I’d certainly give the New Mammoth Book of Pulp Fiction a try. If you’re looking for great pulp mysteries, check out Otto Penzler’s anthologies. ( )
1 vote EdGoldberg | Apr 21, 2014 |
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Mammoth Books (Mammoth Books 319)
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Join shady operators, voluptuous molls, ruthless big-shots, and crooked cops in this massive collection filled with seven decades worth of pure, unadulterated pulp fiction. From Mickey Spillane to Dashiell Hammett, all the greatest writers are here, so watch your back!

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