"Doom Offshore."
By Edward Ronns (Edward S. Aarons, 1916-75).
First appearance: Popular Detective, October 1941.
Short story (10 pages).
Online at Pulpgen (HERE).
"Death Stalks in the Wake of a Northeaster As Toby Waters Pilots Killers to a Fatal Trap!"Kidnapping a fellow's girlfriend is one thing, but stealing a tugboat and a bunch of barges, that's something else . . .
Comment: Good descriptive writing with plenty of atmospherics, set during the Neutrality Acts days just before Pearl Harbor.
Typos: "a crash from behind as is the first"; "every lime a northeaster blows"
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"Case of the Promiscuous Corpses."By Edward Ronns (Edward S. Aarons, 1916-75).
First appearance: Detective Short Stories, November 1941.
Short story (11 pages).
Online at Comic Book Plus (HERE; select page 40).
(Caution: Violence against animals as well as people.)
"Johnson straightened with a deep sigh from his examination of the two corpses on the floor—the man and the gamecock. Johnson wiped his mouth and said: 'It's plain as the nose on your face, Bill. Potassium cyanide. Both of them'."A double murder—one a man, the other a domestic fowl—but the same motive killed them both . . .
Comment: The title makes no sense.
Typos: "Seputy-Sheriff Dooly"; "Morton's voice came cauitously"; "he laughed, bareing even"; "Since Lassiter nad Morton"; "Claney did the spur"; "but Carig was"
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"Murder Buys a Hat."By Edward Ronns (Edward S. Aarons, 1916-75).
First appearance: Thrilling Detective, July 1942.
Short short story (7 pages).
Online at Pulpgen.
"Rookie Crown Gets the Lowdown on a 'Suicide' When Georgie Puts Her Wits to Work for Him!"We featured this story once before (HERE).
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"Death on the Meter."By Edward Ronns (Edward S. Aarons, 1916-75).
First appearance: Thrilling Detective, January 1945.
Novelette (19 pages).
Online at Pulpgen (HERE).
"Detective Dolliver of Homicide Runs a Chase With Doom on the Trail of a Killer—and Learns That the Female of the Gun Racket Species Can Be More Deadly Than the Male!"Chapter I: "Big Man in the Shadows"
Chapter II: "Letters and Pearls"
Chapter III: "Fatal Rendezvous"
Chapter IV: "Two Shots"
Chapter V: "Gun Woman"
Juicy love letters revealing an illicit affair and a couple of missing pearls kickstart
a trifecta of mayhem and murder, with only a clear-thinking police lieutenant and
a felonious Scandinavian standing in the killer's way . . .
Comment: The Chandler influence is evident in this one, with shiftiness, shenanigans, and slayings amongst the hoi oligoi and a plot that's been "borrowed" many times since for TV crime shows.
Typo: "Did you ever head of"
Resources:
- Edward S. Aarons is still popular, so if you experience an information overload consulting these sources don't blame us: Wikipedia (HERE), the GAD Wiki (HERE), Mystery*File (HERE) and (HERE); about the Sam Durell spy series: Mystery*File (HERE), Stop You're Killing Me (HERE), Spy Guys and Gals (HERE), Goodreads (HERE), and Existential Ennui (HERE).
The bottom line: "He who would search for pearls must dive below."
— John Dryden
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