CHARACTERS: In previous books Ed and Uncle Am were confined to their previous life, so to speak, in the world of travelling carnivals with their sideshows and amusement attractions and the con artists and murderers hiding among the tents and Midway. Having proven themselves as amateur sleuths they now turn professionals and are taking on seemingly routine work until this decidedly bizarre case involving extraterrestrial communication and lycanthropy. Ed is sent from the Chicago offices to travel south to the central Illinois town of Tremont where he meets up with a variety of intriguing characters.
Among them are Stephen Amory, the eccentric inventor who has a secret about his new radio system more eyebrow raising than the rumors that he’s listening in on Martians. There is also Justine Haberman, who as Ed and Uncle Am’s rich client has a smaller role than I anticipated but also raises the sexual innuendo bar several notches high in her scenes with Ed. She is so taken with Ed she loans him the use of her Cadillac which makes him all the more noticeable in Tremont. Sheriff Kingman is one of those rural policeman with a short fuse and little tolerance for city slickers. He doesn’t like Ed much and isn’t afraid to express his dislike violently. And then there’s Mollie Kingman who also sets off Ed’s libido in a dangerous way. She has a secret too that shouldn’t have been such a surprise to me, but darn it if Brown didn’t succeed in fooling me.

Ed and Caroline spend many hours together sorting through the oddities of the murder of a man whose seems to have been attacked and killed by a wild beast and whose body then disappeared. When Ed is fingered by the irate Sheriff Kingman as Suspect #1 and throws him in jail Caroline bails him out. She then does her best to keep Ed out of jail while also entrusting him to provide her with inside dope on the murder case so she can finally scoop the Chicago newspapers with headline news.
INNOVATIONS: It's easy to see that the story is an innovative blending of science fiction, horror and detective novel plot devices. Brown spent equal time as a crime writer and science fiction writer back in his days as a fictioneer for numerous pulp magazines. His interest in genuine science fiction (as opposed to the kind of SF-Fantasy that filled the pages of pulps) shows in his detailed descriptions of the physics of radio wave propagation, the history of radio transmission, radio wave discoveries, and his knowledge about possibility of life on other planets and their satellites. Of course, this is all science circa the late 1940s and some of it has been disproved, but to readers of this era it must’ve seemed fairly sophisticated stuff in a mystery novel.

THINGS I LEARNED: Oliver Heaviside was a self-taught physicist and electrical engineer who in 1902 first theorized about a layer in the atmosphere that reflects radio waves and allows them to travel beyond the horizon. At the same time another physicist in a different part of the world Arthur Kennelly was developing his own theory about radio wave propagation. For decades this atmospheric layer was known as the Kennelly-Heaviside layer. Today it’s known as the E layer of the ionosphere. The Heaviside layer is mentioned early in The Bloody Moonlight when Ed Hunter is talking about Amory’s invention and how it could receive transmissions from outside the Earth’s atmosphere.

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Courtesy of myvintagetv.com |
EASY TO FIND? There are several copies of the original Bantam paperback in the used book market. Hardcover editions, either the US or the UK, tend to be more expensive and those with DJs are priced in the collectible market since Brown has always been a collectible author. A little over ten years ago an indie press released an omnibus of the first four Ed & Am Hunter detective novels called Hunter and the Hunted (Stewart Masters Pub Ltd, 2002) and new copies of that mammoth hardcover reprint can still be found via the leading online book retailer. That same retailer offers eBook editions of all of Brown’s mystery novels but only in Kindle format (obviously). In any case it should be fairly easy to find a copy of this book whether you prefer print or digital.
I've been a fan of Fredric Brown for decades. When HUNTER AND THE HUNTED was published, I thought more of Brown's books would be reprinted. Now, just about everything is available in ebook format. Brown wrote some pretty good Science Fiction, too!
ReplyDeleteI have that recent collection, and several other Brown books. George is right, he wrote some excellent SF as well as crime fiction.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this insightful and enticing review, John.
ReplyDeleteI've only read a handful of his work, such as the marvelous Night of the Jabberwock and Death Has Many Doors, before he dropped off my radar again. But this one got my attention. I find the idea of the interstellar radio to be especially interesting as a plot-thread for a detective story.
Isn't that strange? I know next to nothing about science-fiction, but I found most of the mysteries on which the sci-fi genre intruded to be pretty good (e.g. Mack Reynolds' The Case of the Little Green Men).
I've got that Mack Reynolds book but --of course-- still haven't read it. I smell a post in the making, TomCat: Science fiction elements in detective fiction. Who'll write it first? :^D
DeleteYou have a head start, John. 'tain't fair! If that's a mugshot of Frederic Brown, he could have sold a few copies just with his face alone on the cover. Scary looking dude.
DeleteThat's Oliver Heaviside! I wonder if his barber later worked in the make-up department for the Universal horror movies. Not a flattering look even for 1902.
DeleteYou should read The Case of the Little Green Men as soon as humanly (or extra-terrestrially) possible, because it is a small gem.
DeleteA down on his luck private eye gets hired by a group of science-fiction fans to investigate the presence of alien life on Earth, but this group is soon getting bumped off in (semi) impossible ways that seem to betray an alien hand (getting thrown from flying saucers or shot at with ray-guns). The book also uses the science-fiction fan community of the early 1950s and some parts of the book takes place at a con, where everyone's in costume.
And I guess you should write that post, because I do not know enough to give any lectures about science-fiction. Even if they are closely linked to the mystery genre.
Frederic Brown. Frederic Brown. Nope, never read him. But you sure make this book sound like something I'd like to read, John. I see he has a book called 'Mrs. Murphy's Underpants'. Hmmmm.....!
ReplyDeleteYes, he does. And another one called We All Killed Grandma! With your love of classic cinema and TV I'm surprised you don't know his name. There's a movie of one of his novels starring Anita Ekberg as a schizoid killer called THE SCREAMING MIMI. Know that one? One of his books was adapted for the "Thriller" TV anthology series: KNOCK THREE, ONE, TWO. Five of his stories were adapted for the Alfred Hitchcock TV show as well. His writing has turned up a lot on TV during the 50s and 60s and in the movies, too. Check out his imdb.com page
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