January 15, 1924. Dennis Lynds was born on this date. He wrote under the name Michael Collins, and won the Edgar award for his first novel, Act of Fear. It featured one-armed private eye named Dan Fortune, who is often described as a transitional figure between the Hammett/Chandler school of private eyes and the Parker/Muller/Paretsky clan. Besides almost twenty other books, Fortune starred in "Scream All The Way," a story in the August 1969 issue of Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine. I know that because it is the earliest story I can be certain I read in that magazine. The tale and its illustration have stayed in my mind.
Under the name William Arden, Lynds also wrote fourteen books in The Three Investigators series, which I always enjoyed much more than the Hardy Boys.
January 15, 1924. And speaking of Dashiell Hammett, he celebrated the birth of Dennis Lynds by publishing "The Man Who Killed Dan Odams" in Black Mask Magazine. It's a suspenseful tale of a murderer in Montana who escapes from jail and runs into an innocent woman...
January 15, 1945. On this date the Alfred Knopf publishing house started the Black Widow Thrillers, series. It was perhaps the first attempt to canonize mystery fiction, creating a set of standard issue reprints of classic novels. The first to arrive were Hammett's Maltese Falcon, Chandler's Big Sleep, and Ambler's Coffin for Dimitros. Hey, Hammett is in three entries in a row. Is that a trend?
January 15, 1948. Sorry, no Hammett. On this date Columbia Pictures released I Love Trouble, a noir movie written by Roy Huggins and starring Franchot Tone and Janet Blair. If it is memorable today it is probably because Tone played a character named Stuart Bailey. You may remember that name from the classic TV show 77 Sunset Strip. The movie and TV show were both based on Huggins' books/stories about that private eye.
January 15, 1965. On this date a certain famous person rang a certain famous doorbell...
January 15, 1973. This was the year ABC gave up on trying to find a talk show host who could compete with Johnny Carson. They chose instead to fill their late night slot with ABC's Wide World of Entertainment. On this night they introduced one segment of it, a series of 90-minute movies called Wide World of Mystery.
I learned about this in a very entertaining article by Michael Mallory in the latest issue of Mystery Scene Magazine. (You do subscribe, don't you? If not, why ever not?) The first night's movie was called "An Echo of Theresa," but I want to tell you about a movie that appeared in the series later. With Mike's permission, I repeat part of his description here:
While many of the stories bordered on the bizarre, none were stranger than "The Werewolf of Woodstock," which aired January 24, 1975. Set in 1969 (obviously) it concerns a bitter, alcoholic farmer who loathes the younger generation, particularly those who attended Woodstock, which was staged near his property and left the place trashed. During a freak electrical storm he takes a direct hit from a lightning bolt; instead of killing him... it turns him into a werewolf! In his new bestial form he goes on a rampage against anyone he deems a "hippie," chiefly the members of a garage band who come to the site to record their own album (so they can claim it was "recorded at Woodstock").
If this makes you desperate to see the movie (produced by Dick Clark!) there are excerpts available here and here. Perhaps that is as much as a human being can stand. The series ended in 1976, and personally I don't miss it a bit.
January 15, 1981. I remember exactly where I was that evening: watching the premiere of a great cop show on TV. Remember Hill Street Blues? It received 98 Emmy nominations. Hell, even its theme song was a hit.
January 15, 1993. This day saw the publication of Generous Death, Nancy Pickard's first novel. (Well, her first published one. She wrote one before this but, as she said, it "just sat there like a dead trout.") Since then she has won multiple awards including the Shamus, Macavity, Anthony, and Agatha