There’s a lot of stuff going on right now. Some of the “solutions” to COVID-19/the Wuhan Coronavirus are wrong, infuriating, and scary. In the short term, a lot of us are worried about our jobs–will they even exist once this mess blows over?
People around the world are worried about putting food on the table. For those in that position, I urge you to be as wise as you can with what resources you have.
For those who have food and water covered, but are bored and need something to do, Virtual Pulp is cutting the prices on our E-Books. I’ve suddenly got a lot more time to read than normal, and it’s one positive side effect of this crisis. Below are text links and image links (yes–you can just click on the book cover image to buy one from Amazon) for reduced-price E-Books. They’re available in all electronic formats and pretty much every online book store except Google Play.
Stay safe and keep your powder dry.
The entire Retreads series is available for a song at Amazon. Well, I don’t think they actually make you sing. But the three E-Books will cost less than a cheeseburger from the drive-through.
And, of course, the books are for sale individually, too. Hell and Gone was the series premier, my first bestseller, and still the most popular of all my books.
Virtual Pulp contributor Paul Hair also has some work published you should look at. It is not on sale currently, but still worth a read. You can find his short stories in the Appalling Stories series.
Women’s History Month is here (or so people tell me). And in celebration of that, I’ve put together a few clips that feature a handful of some fine moments in Hollywood history that involve women.
So without further ado, here they are in chronological order based on the year of release of the films.
1939: Gone with the Wind
Rhett Butler picks up Scarlett O’Hara and carries her upstairs to spend the night with him . . . whether she wants to or not.
https://youtu.be/RTw6ZLYudPc
1942: The Black Swan
Tyrone Power’s character manhandles Maureen O’Hara’s character throughout this film. Here are three scenes where he shows her who’s boss.
1946: Duel in the Sun
Jennifer Jones’s character is on her hands and knees, scrubbing away and really putting her hips into it when in walks Gregory Peck’s character. . . .
1951: Anne of the Indies
It’s two leading ladies here. Jean Peters’s pirate character attempts to sell Debra Paget’s character at the slave market. I couldn’t find a video clip of that scene, but here’s a link to an image of it at IMDB.
And you can watch the theatrical trailer for Anne of the Indies to get a flavor of the movie too.
1952: The Quiet Man:
John Wayne’s character finally has enough of Maureen O’Hara’s character, and he takes her for a little walk, dragging her along (literally at points) while the good townsfolk cheer him on.
https://youtu.be/E4Y5GpnWt5k
1953: Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
Sure, everyone remembers Monroe’s famous “Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend” song and dance in that pink dress. But there are plenty of other memorable moments in this movie. For instance, when Monroe’s character measures her hips and finds they aren’t quite the right size to fit through the window.
1956: Anything Goes
So they made them change the lyrics to the song “Anything Goes” in the movie with the same name, and a lot of people don’t like it. But it’s still a fun number. Mitzi Gaynor is a triple threat: acting, singing, and dancing, with dancing being the strongest of the three.
1959: The Indian Tomb
Debra Paget dances while barely wearing anything. (Skip to the 1:15 mark to see the actual start of the dance.)
https://youtu.be/jtkMUsRZP1k
By the way, that dance was not a one-off. Paget was a great dancer (and she was gorgeous). Here she is in a scene from Stars and Stripes Forever (1952).
1960: The Millionairess
The nurse tells Sophia Loren’s character to undress. And so she does.
1963: Donovan’s Reef
John Wayne’s character administers some corporal punishment to Elizabeth Allen’s character.
1963: McLintock!
John Wayne’s character administers some corporal punishment to Maureen O’Hara’s character.
1963: Spencer’s Mountain
Henry Fonda’s character administers some corporal punishment to Maureen O’Hara’s character (occurs around the 1:19 mark).
1963: 4 for Texas
What do you get when you put Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Charles Bronson, Ursula Andress, Anita Ekberg, and The Three Stooges in one movie? 4 for Texas. And you get multiple good scenes. One such scene is where Andress’s character explains to Martin’s character that she’s seeking a master—not a partner.
1964: Goldfinger
The scene where Bond tames Pussy Galore is famous—or rather, infamous. Why? Because it’s no longer politically correct.
1966-1968: Matt Helm Series
The Silencers (1966), Murderer’s Row (1966), The Ambushers (1967), and The Wrecking Crew (1968) are the four Matt Helm films that Dean Martin made. They all feature Martin and a lot of women. Here are two memorable scenes.
In The Silencers, Dean Martin’s character rip the clothes right off Stella Stevens’s character. (I couldn’t find a legit YouTube clip of it.)
And in The Wrecking Crew, Sharon Tate’s character runs up to Martin’s character and has a spectacular fall.
And for a little bit of trivia, in addition to Tate being in The Wrecking Crew, the film also featured Nancy Kwan, Elke Sommer, Tina Louise, and an uncredited Chuck Norris. Bruce Lee served as a “karate advisor.”
1998: The Mask of Zorro
Catherine Zeta-Jones’s character decides to get into a sword fight with Zorro. It doesn’t end well for her.
So enjoy and share these clips on social media. I’m sure everyone will agree with me that it’s a great way to celebrate Women’s History Month.
Top Image: Screen capture of scene from ‘McLintock!’
Below is a letter that I will be sending to Congress and the White House, as a wise citizen suggested we do. I advise everyone who doesn’t want the USA to become a third-world police state to tell them something similar. You can use this as a template, or even copy-paste it. I don’t mind.
I can guarantee you that if we don’t at least try, then nothing will change. Evil prospers when good men do nothing.
Dear Politician:
I want a stop to foreign aid to China. In fact, stop giving it to all nations that hate us.
I want a roll-back of the regulations and taxes that make it impossible for American manufacturers to compete with China’s slave labor sweatshops.
I want a wall on our southern border and a stop to all handouts to illegal aliens. I want you to put Americans first for a change.
I want you to quit letting big tech firms have their cake and eat it too: either they are utilities and are not allowed to censor anybody; or they are private companies that can censor, and can therefore be held accountable for what they don’t censor.
I want the law upheld–and not just the laws that you personally approve of. Punish criminals; quit trying to punish citizens who have done nothing wrong, but only exercised their rights, which you swore to protect.
I am keeping this message short because public servants obviously have a problem with reading comprehension–otherwise they would understand the phrase “shall not be infringed.”
You may remember that corrupt globalist Rahm Immanuel admitted that philosophy on television. But he didn’t come up with it on his own–the left has been using crises to manipulate the masses for generations. And their solutions always result in more power for them and less freedom for us…by sheer coincidence, of course.
You can bet that the would-be oligarchs infesting our government will try to use the COVID 19 outbreak to give us more of the same, good and hard. But this post isn’t about documenting more fundamental transformation (or “frog-boiling”) by those who hate America.
The big question I have is: are you ready to start pushing back? If so, then it’s time to take advantage of the enemy’s Hegelian tactic and turn it against them.
We have a rare window of opportunity right now, that will slam shut as soon as our overlords can cram the relevant facts down the memory hole. We need to strike while the window is open.
Even normies and left-leaning sheeple are suddenly questioning the wisdom of outsourcing all our industrial capability (including the production of medicine) to a totalitarian nation that hates us and assumes that war with the USA is inevitable.
This episode of Tucker Carlson is must-watch, if you haven’t seen it already. The COVID 19 scare is so profound that even the milquetoast talking heads on Cux News are questioning our suicidal economic and foreign policies. Which means that being sold out by our leaders to Communist China is at least grazing the awareness of average people.
If there ever was a time when our alleged representatives might listen to us and at least consider putting the interests of Americans first, this is it. Call them. Write them. Email them. Demand that they put an end to our carefully manufactured dependence on China for our supply infrastructure.
After Pearl Harbor, when he was being congratulated for the wildly successful sneak attack that crippled the American Pacific Fleet, Admiral Yamamoto famously said:
“I fear we have awakened a sleeping giant, and filled him with a terrible resolve.”
No doubt part of what Yamamoto was worried about was America’s manufacturing potential. The Great Depression had shut a lot of our factories down, but we ramped up in record time and our assembly lines pumped out the weapons that crushed the Axis under the weight of overwhelming numbers. The USA became the greatest industrial powerhouse the world had ever seen, outproducing Japan, Germany, and Italy combined. Outproducing the entire world, in fact.
But what if, prior to Pearl Harbor, we had outsourced all our manufacturing capability to Japan and Germany? What if we had let them gobble up our national resources? What if they had bought our factories, oil wells, coal mines, railroads, and harbors? What if succeeding Presidents had given them our best weapons technology and strategic secrets? What if our “leaders” had engineered a situation where our enemies could control the Panama Canal? What if our enemies were allowed to raid our Patent Office and universities and steal our intellectual property, then produce our inventions at slave labor prices and put American innovators out of business? What if we were in the habit of GIVING money to the Axis as foreign aid, then BORROWING it back from them at interest? What if the Axis Powers had de facto control over our media and entertainment industry, so that most Americans would only encounter ideas that the Axis approved of? What if anybody who protested such a massive sellout was dismissed as a crackpot or demonized as a racist?
There would have been no sleeping giant to worry about–just a sleeping couch potato; the giant would have been dead.
The situation is much worse than what I described because, frankly, you wouldn’t have the patience to read through an exhaustive list of all the ways we have been sold out to the most murderous regime in recorded history. Pre-war Japan didn’t want war with America nearly as much as Red China does. But our public servants who built China into a superpower have also made us dependent on that Communist dictatorship.
What happens when they decide it’s finally time for a shooting war with us? Do you assume they’re going to keep supplying us medicine for our troops that they wound in the field, and spare parts for our military vehicles and electronic equipment? We sure as hell can’t make that stuff here anymore, unless a lot of policies change. And they have to change now (while COVID 19 is getting people’s attention by disrupting our hijacked supply chain) before the giant couch potato goes back to sleep.
I’ve blogged about Mr. Levinson a few times before. Some readers of action-adventure have called him a “trash genius”–an epithet that evidently pleases Len.
I really don’t like that label. I’ve read a lot of Len’s fiction and none of it was trash. It wasn’t Tolstoy, but it wasn’t meant to be. And here’s an important point: If Len wanted to write highbrow literary fiction, in my opinion he could easily craft a novel in a league with War and Peace.
I was fortunate enough to become an author years ago. All three of the novels (so far) in my Retreads series have been Amazon bestsellers. A pleasant surprise was a type of reaction those books got from readers: that they captured the fun and excitement of the pulp and paramilitary adventure fiction of yesteryear, but with a high caliber of prose that most of the classic men’s fiction never achieved. I was shooting for exactly that combination of excitement, realism (two attributes that seldom go together) and well-crafted writing. But the praise surprised me in that readers found it remarkable. I didn’t appreciate how rare it was, because I had read so much of Len’s work… which is action-packed, well-plotted, with realistic dialog and great characterization.
Len and I have different styles, different experiences, and different areas of interest, but anybody who likes my fiction should definitely read Len Levinson.
I am happy to share another insight into Len’s writing career, in his own words:
One day circa 1979 I was sitting in the East 50s office of paperback packager Jim Bryans. I just delivered a manuscript and we were speaking about various matters that I don’t remember. Then out of the blue he asked: “Have you ever written a World War Two novel?”
I replied that I had indeed written a World War Two novel called DOOM PLATOON by Richard Gallagher, set during the Battle of the Bulge, published by Belmont-Tower in 1978.
Jim said that a publisher contact of his was looking for someone to write a World War Two series, and asked me to bring him (Jim) a copy of DOOM PLATOON for submission to the publisher. I did so ASAP and a few weeks later Jim called to say the publisher wanted to meet me.
The publisher was Walter Zacharius who together with Roberta Grossman owned Zebra Publishing, their offices on Park Avenue South around 32nd Street. I think Jim attended the meeting but Walter and I did most of the talking. Walter told me he’d liked DOOM PLATOON and wanted me to write something similar as a series. He also said that he’d been in the Quartermaster Corps during World War Two and rose to the rank of sergeant. I distinctly remember him saying that he had participated in the liberation of Paris.
In turn I mentioned that I enlisted in the Army in 1954, served three years in the Infantry and Corps of Engineers during the Cold War, was stationed in Alaska about half of my enlistment, therefore I knew basic military life up close and personal although I’d never been in a hot war. I also said that infantry weapons during my Army years were identical to those used during World War Two, or modified somewhat, and main principles of fire and maneuver also were pretty much the same. I assured Walter that I could write about World War Two with a high degree of authenticity although I’d never been there.
I agreed to Walter’s deal, probably signed the contract then and there, walked home to my broken-down pad in Hell’s Kitchen and tried to figure whether the series should focus on one person or on a unit like a platoon. Finally I decided on one person who would be a tough sergeant similar to Sergeant Mazursky in DOOM PLATOON.
Mazursky had been based loosely on a friend named Mike, a World War Two veteran and very tough guy seven years older than I. Mike had been been ready to rumble at any moment and seemed to have no fear or caution when any conflict arose. Occasionally he threw shocking temper tantrums in public and seemed ready to punch out people. Physical intimidation was perfectly okay with him but we usually got along well and he became one of my most significant mentors, for better or worse.
Mike’s military career had not exactly been illustrious. He went AWOL numerous times during World War Two in Europe, had broken out of a stockade, and instead of fighting for his country full time, had been wheeling and dealing in black markets of France and Germany.
After mustering out, Mike attended Columbia University for a year or two, then dropped out to sell marijuana and become something of a gigolo. He got arrested at the Mexican/Texas border for smuggling marijuana and served five years in a federal prison during which he wrote for and helped edit the prison newspaper. I met him shortly after he was released in 1961, the same year I arrived in New York City.
Mike was a very complicated guy. He could be vicious or extraordinarily gentle and kind. He could insult you savagely, then take you to dinner. He could cruelly put you down, then burst into laughter as if it was all a big joke. A deeply devoted party animal, he also was a heavy drinker and doper. Cocaine was his drug of choice. He did not believe in God, had Communist inclinations, was surprisingly well read and could talk like an educated man, which he was, or growl like a gangster, which he also was.
He also was amazingly successful with women although not exceptionally good-looking in my opinion. He vaguely resembled the actor Victor Mature combined with John Garfield, Rocky Marciano and Sylvester Stallone. He always had girlfriends even after he got married.
Once I asked him the secret of his success with women. He replied that women were attracted to confident men, but mainly just wanted to be loved. He certainly was very confident and actually seemed to love all the women with whom he was involved.
Another time he said to me: “You’re the craziest person I ever met in my life, but you SEEM normal.”
Mike was a first class conversationalist, raconteur and storyteller. I often listened to him spellbound, although his wife Maggie said he never let facts get in the way of a good story.
Mike introduced me to my first wife, a Cuban immigrant whom he called Chi-Chi. Our marriage was stormy and ended in divorce after four years because we simply weren’t compatible souls. During a period of post-divorce angst, I blamed Mike for my misery. “If it hadn’t been for you, I never would have met Chi-Chi.”
Mike replied with a winsome smile, “I only introduced you to Chi-Chi. I never told you to marry her.”
Of course he was right. My bad judgement was the cause of my unhappiness. I knew that Chi-Chi and I weren’t compatible but I was dazzled by her beauty and couldn’t think clearly, as happened often during my younger days.
Mike became the basis for my new central character Sergeant Mahoney and I decided to call the series THE SERGEANT by Gordon Davis. I was very excited about writing this series because I had been interested in war since childhood, and read many novels and historical works about war. Born in 1935, I literally grew up in the atmosphere of World War Two. I remember ration books, paper and metal drives, and regular reports of casualties. Victory was by no means certain, many setbacks were reported, and an atmosphere of desperation pervaded the land. Occasionally we schoolchildren did bombing drills where we sat with our back to walls and hoped no bombers would ever come.
I thought my background growing up during World War Two, and three years in the Army, were ideal preparation for writing a World War Two land battle novel. My next big literary decision concerned when to start the action, but the answer seemed obvious. I should begin the novel with the D-Day landings in Normandy and then carry each novel forward chronologically.
What would the first plot be? I didn’t want to write about actual landings and the subsequent grinding fight for the beachhead because it had been done in movies numerous times, most notably THE LONGEST DAY. Instead I dreamed up a suspenseful commando style mission behind enemy lines to blow up a critical bridge that supported trains carrying German soldiers and equipment to the front.
I wrote in a state of deep intellectual and emotional involvement, and around six weeks later submitted the completed manuscript to Walter, certain that he’d love it. A short while later he invited me to his office, told me that in fact he did like the novel and would publish it BUT he pointed out that ordinary soldiers never went on commando missions behind enemy lines, and he wanted subsequent novels to be about ordinary soldiers engaged in standard World War Two front line battle action. I said okay and that’s what I gave him in the next eight novels in the series.
I loved the cover for the first SERGEANT. It really stood out on book store shelves. Subsequent SERGEANT covers were similar. Walter really understood marketing and that’s why Zebra was the most successful privately owned publishing company in America.
Looking back, I think THE SERGEANT series marked a turning point in my literary career. Somehow I gained a more comprehensive understanding of novel writing while working on its plots, subplots and characters. It was the second series that I created, the first being BUTLER for Belmont-Tower, but THE SERGEANT seemed of much higher quality than BUTLER. Many readers have praised THE SERGEANT in blogs and on Facebook, which has been most gratifying.
THE SERGEANT SERIES has been republished by Piccadilly as ebooks by Len Levinson and presently available from Amazon. He also wrote another gritty WWII series called The Ratbastards which I heartily recommend. In my previous post, you’ll find links to my other reviews (to date) of his Sergeant books.
Well, this is embarrassing. I began posting reviews of Len Levinson’s (writing as Gordon Davis) magnificent WWII series The Sergeant in chronological order after starting out of sequence with my first couple reviews back on The Two-Fisted Blog…and somehow, I skipped right over this book despite posting an Amazon review back on May 9 of 2017. So here it is, finally:
Master Sergeant Mahoney and Corporal Cranepool have just returned from their attachment to a French unit liberating Paris. It was supposed to be cushy duty, but only the end of it was cushy–in the arms of some French floozies in a fancy hotel.
The Sergeant and his sidekick are back just in time to meet Charlie Company’s new C.O. Captain Anderson is a young, inexperienced officer, but one of the good ones (a rare combo, in my day). They’re also just in time for one of Patton’s “recon in force” missions, to push across the Moselle and keep the pressure on the Germans.
This installment in the series could launch a character study on the sort of men who populate the officer corps of an army. Whether a commander wants to make a name for himself, or simply doesn’t want a sub-par evaluation, it is their troops who are used like cannon fodder to enhance or maintain their egos.
Mahoney himself has some moments in this book in which hedemonstrates more humanity than is normal for him. (Also, in this one we are introduced to PFC Butsko. I can’t help but notice the similarities between him and the platoon sergeant of The RatBastards–also named Butsko.)
I’m not sure when I’ll complete reviews for the final three books in the series…but I plan to. Meanwhile, you can read the remaining reviews of this series so far here and here.
Red-Blooded American Men Examine Pop-Culture and the World