Thursday, April 16, 2026

What Is Dead May Never Die: Speculative Fiction Authors and Their Afterlives

 

It’s said that when Czech author Franz Kafka was on his deathbed in 1924, he left instructions to his executor Max Brod to burn all of his unpublished writing. Brod ignored the author’s wishes and spent the next decade publishing Kafka’s works; even though some of Kafka’s works were incomplete, they were printed in their incomplete form (the Castle ended mid-sentence!). History has more-or-less exculpated Brod’s decision because thanks to him, Kafka’s name has endured and the works he preserved from instruction – including the Trial – have become much studied and adored.

Yet when authors in speculative fiction die, their unfinished works are not usually published in an incomplete format; it’s become far more common for another author in the field to assume control of the work and finesse it into a finished status. For those authors who had recurring protagonists, it’s also common to see their heroes carried on by other authors; L. Sprague de Camp and Lin Carter likely wrote more words about Conan than Robert E. Howard himself.

At last year’s WorldCon in Seattle, authors Brandon Sanderson and George R. R. Martin were asked at a panel that, as Martin wouldn’t “be around for much longer,” why not turn over his A Song of Fire and Ice series to Sanderson for completion? (The exchange was reported on Kotaku)

The question arose because Martin’s series, begun in 1996, last saw a new book published in 2011; although Martin has repeatedly promised the next book in the series the Winds of Winter will be completed (and has published excerpts to pacify his fans), this is by the far the longest gap between books in the series.


Why was Brandon Sanderson dragged into this humiliating question? After author Robert Jordan died in 2007 with his Wheel of Time series incomplete, Sanderson completed the Wheel of Time series, taking a co-author credit for the Gathering Storm (2009), Towers of Midnight (2010) and a Memory of Light (2013).

Yet it seems especially bizarre to ask Sanderson this question because Sanderson had made his thoughts known as far back as 2016 that, while he had great respect for George R. R. Martin, he not only was not interested in finishing a Song of Fire and Ice, he didn’t especially like the content: “I don't shy away from difficult material, but I prefer not to get explicit,” he wrote on Reddit. “Honestly, when I read it in George's work, I often just cringe. I don't think it fits in prose; I think it looks tacky.”

Sanderson has been singled out by many fans as the voice they want to continue a Song of Ice and Fire should Martin fail to complete it himself – not because his voice is similar to Martin’s, but simply because he’s a fellow author of speculative fiction who has finished another author’s works before. It’s the same thinking that’s seen the rise of books “written” by A.I.; it sees authors as interchangeable and undistinctive.

Truly, the culture surrounding speculative fiction has long coached fans to believe it’s both normal and expected that when one author dies, another author will continue their work.

Sometimes it’s simply been playful; Edgar Allan Poe left behind an incomplete work called the Light-House and many authors have attempted to complete it, offering their own attempt at writing in the “voice” of Poe. Some authors were personally requested to complete an incomplete work by the original author prior to their death; other authors took it on as simply a work-for-hire.

Christopher Tolkien and Guy Gavriel Kay completed the Silmarillion and published it in 1977, four years after the death of J. R. R. Tolkien. Christopher continued to edit and publish incomplete works of his father’s up until 2018 (Christopher died in 2020).

Douglas Adams’ Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy series was continued by Eoin Colfer with 2009’s And Another Thing… Adams’ also left behind an incomplete Dirk Gently novel that was published in 2002 as the Salmon of Doubt, one year after Adams’ death.

Reviewing And Another Thing…, the Guardian wrote, “Distinctive writing rises from an individual mind and life, and so asking another author to take over is as logically nonsensical as, say, for the executors of George Best to find a boy on the streets of Belfast and ask him to extend the player's career.” Despite this caveat, the reviewer concluded: “I feel that Eoin Colfer has achieved a perfectly calculated adaptation: a novel which serves as a fitting memorial but also has a life of its own.”


Alfred Bester’s Psychoshop was completed by Roger Zelazny, which was published in 1998. Bester died in 1987 and Zelazny in 1995. Greg Bear joked that when he accepted the task of writing the book’s introduction he was the only science fiction author willing to risk his life by putting his name on the book. “The book is meant to make you grin,” Bear wrote, “but with a shake of your head; laughter with an edge. Bester laid down this tempo, but it was not at all difficult for Zelazny to pick it up and draw it out. Zelazny, after all, was one of Bester’s literary children; what Bester pioneered, Zelazny made his own country.”

Publishers Weekly wrote of Psychoshop, “There’s much fun to be had here, but the book doesn’t represent either writer in top form. Bester’s style in the first part of the novel seems date, and things don’t gel until Zelazny takes over halfway through the book.”

In his Year’s Best Science Fiction, Gardner R. Dozois wrote Psychoshop “is more of interest for nostalgic value than as a successful novel on its own terms, although flashes of the vivid prose styles of both authors do shine through here and there.”

Frederick Pohl completed Arthur C. Clarke’s the Last Thorem in 2008 (Clarke had turned over the novel for Pohl to finish prior to his death). Library Journal wrote that the Last Theorem “has been panned by critics and readers alike, and with good reason. It is uneven and occasionally dull, and it struggles to blend incompatible themes.”

Tessa B. Dick completed her ex-husband Philip K. Dick’s the Owl in Daylight in 2009 (long after his 1982 death) but Philip’s estate forced her to withdraw the novel from the marketplace.

Robert A. Heinlein’s Variable Star was completed by Spider Robinson in 2006, long after Heinlein’s 1988 death. Publishers Weekly judged, “Nostalgia for Heinlein’s early work may pique interest in this posthumous collaboration, but old Heinlein hands may be disappointed that the book is incomplete, being all journey and no arrival.”

Terry Bisson completed Walter M. Miller’s Saint Leibowitz and the Wild Horse Woman in 1997 after Walter died the previous year. Booklist wrote, “The able Terry Bisson has completed but can't compensate for Miller's desultory plot.”


Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson continued the Dune series long after Frank Herbert’s death in 1986. Frank Herbert wrote six Dune novels, but what’s that compared to the seventeen (and counting) Brian and Kevin have gifted us?

Kevin J. Anderson also completed L. Ron Hubbard’s Ai! Pedrito in 1998; he collaborated with Lydia van Vogt to complete A. E. van Vogt’s Slan Hunter in 2007; he wrote a Captain Nemo novel based on Jules Verne’s character. Indeed, Kevin J. Anderson may also be recognized for the many Star Wars novels he’s written but his magnum opus is surely the novelization to the film adaptation of Alan Moore and Kevin O’Neill’s League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. He also served as the coach for Microsoft’s beloved mascot Clippy the Paperclip (“It looks like you’re writing a prequel… would you like help with that?”). Truly, he has both borrowed and given in equal measure.

These are just a few of the many works in speculative fiction where an author’s demise has not prevented new works coming out under their names. The phenomenon exists outside of speculative fiction, of course; Tom Clancy, V. C. Andrews and Robert Ludlum’s names continue to appear on books they never wrote.

As the reviews I’ve cherry-picked demonstrate, the results of one author finishing another’s work seldom satisfies audiences. Indeed, many of these works have become forgotten since their publication. Bester fans are happy to have Psychoshop, but it’s in no danger of displacing the Demolished Man or the Stars My Destination in his bibliography.

As I say, it’s easy to see why fandom believes someone else should come along and finish a Song of Ice and Fire should Martin fail to do so himself. My earnest plea is: Maybe you should reconsider?

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Radio Recap: Front Page Drama

Front Page Drama was a 15-minute program produced by the General Broadcasting Company as a supplement to the Hearst magazine publication the American Weekly, which was itself a supplement to the Heart Sunday newspapers. A supplement to a supplement! Each episode featured a brief drama inspired by an article found in the American Weekly; sometimes a single article would inspire multiple episodes. Hearst syndicated this series themselves (another Hearst program I've covered is The Club Car Special). It appears the series aired from April 27, 1933 to June 27, 1942, then again from September 3, 1950 to March 28, 1954.

The kind of stories dramatized on Front Page Drama often had a crime or mystery bend to them; there was also a lot of supernatural content, such as ghost stories. I kind of like "the Christmas Eve Ghost," (December 24, 1933) about a visit from a ghost at Christmas time; I usually listen to it every Christmas.

Many episodes circa 1935 used the piece Omphale's Spinning Wheel as the show's opening theme - soon after it was used as the theme for the Shadow. In fact, it sounds like the same recorded performance was used on both shows; perhaps a classical music scholar out there can track down the specific version?

Another odd connection to the Shadow is a public service drama heard on the April 4, 1941 episode in which the voice which tells the audience to avoid causing forest fires sounds a lot like the Shadow - my guess is they used the same microphone filter as heard on that series.

The cast usually went uncredited but I'm sure Walter Tetley played many of the children heard on the series and I think I heard Verna Felton too. The RadioGold Index credits Gale Gordon as one of the recurring performers in the 30s and Gerald Mohr in the 40s. Ralph Clarke Wentworth was the first announcer, later John Martin. In the 50s episodes, I recognized Raymond Edward Johnson's voice.

The 1950s version tends to veer more strongly into stories of romance than the show's earlier run - I have a feeling it was intended as daytime fare to compete with soap operas.

I find the show's greatest shortcoming (beyond the dodgy quality of majority of the recordings) is the reliance on dialogue with minimal sound effects, a common problem I have with 1930s radio drama. The sound effects are very slight on Front Page Drama and that makes even a 15-minute show a bit of a chore to listen to.

Still, I find the series fascinating because it's an early radio drama that we have a lot of examples of - hundreds of episodes! - yet has been barely indexed and categorized. I imagine there will be some great scholarship done on this series in the future when someone becomes interested enough to explore it.

You'll find 352 episodes of Front Page Drama at the Old Time Radio Researchers Library at this link.

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Radio Recap: Did Justice Triumph?

Did Justice Triumph? aired on Mutual from January 29, 1947 to November 3, 1947. Stories on the program were adapted from features called "True Justice Stories" that appeared in the New York Sunday News syndicate. It was directed and produced by Jock MacGregor, whose many Mutual credits included Nick Carter, Master Detective, the Mysterious Traveler, the Strange Dr. Weird, the Sealed Book and Roger Kilgore, Public Defender.

The story was something of a police procedural series, demonstrating that Jack Webb was following a post-war trend when he debuted Dragnet two years later. The crimes described on the show were often violent but, perhaps fortunately, weren't usually dramatized, instead preferring to tell its stories through the eyes of the police.

At the close of each episode, the announcer would declare "Justice did triumph!" as something of an answer to the show's title. Maybe there were episodes where the announcer stated, "Justice did not triumph," but that would be unusual for the times.

The Old Time Radio Researchers Library has just 6 episodes of Did Justice Triumph? at this link.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Joseph of Arimathea at the Marvel Appendix

I decided to observe the Easter season this year by writing a profile about Joseph of Arimathea for the Marvel Appendix. He has an interesting history to write about because as a Biblical character (with a lot of Apocrypha written on him) and a major figure in Arthurian lore (because he's supposed to be the one who brought the Holy Grail to Britain), he tends to pop up in interesting places -- even in Marvel comics!

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Creator Credits for Thunderbolts* (2025)

In short: This was better than I assumed it would be; it had precious little to do with the comics, but it took itself more seriously than most Marvel Cinematic Films.

My full list of Marvel Cinematic Universe creator credits is here. Let me know what I missed!

Jack Kirby: co-creator of the Avengers, a team of super heroes including Thor, Hulk and Iron Man, banded together as "Earth's Mightiest Heroes" (Avengers #1, 1963); of Captain America as one of the Avengers (Avengers #4, 1964); of Hawkeye as one of the Avengers (Avengers #16, 1965); of Captain America, Steve Rogers, who received the Super-Soldier Serum that made him a perfect specimen of humanity; of Captain America's red, white and blue costume with 'A' on forehead and stars and stripes on his chest; of James Buchanan "Bucky" Barnes, Steve's friend and partner who joins him in battle (Captain America Comics #1, 1941); of Captain America's mask being fastened to his costume; of Captain America's round, red and white shield with star in its center (Captain America Comics #2, 1941); of the Fantastic Four, adventurers (Fantastic Four #1, 1961); of the Hulk, large green monstrous hero; of Thaddeus Ross, an official (Incredible Hulk #1, 1962); of Thor, Norse god of thunder (Journey into Mystery #83, 1962); of S.H.I.E.L.D., an espionage agency; of Hydra, a terrorist army (Strange Tales #135, 1965); of Iron Man, armored hero (Tales of Suspense #39, 1963)

Stan Lee: co-creator of the Black Widow's red hair, black bodysuit, Widow's Bite wrist weapon and carrying explosives (Amazing Spider-Man #86, 1970); of the Avengers, a team of super heroes including Thor, Hulk and Iron Man, banded together as "Earth's Mightiest Heroes" (Avengers #1, 1963); of Captain America as one of the Avengers (Avengers #4, 1964); of Hawkeye as one of the Avengers (Avengers #16, 1965); of Sam Wilson, hero and ally of Captain America (Captain America #117, 1969); of the Fantastic Four, adventurers (Fantastic Four #1, 1961); of the Hulk, large green monstrous hero; of Thaddeus Ross, an official (Incredible Hulk #1, 1962); of Thor, Norse god of thunder (Journey into Mystery #83, 1962); of S.H.I.E.L.D., an espionage agency; of Hydra, a terrorist army (Strange Tales #135, 1965); of Iron Man, armored hero (Tales of Suspense #39, 1963); of the Black Widow, a Russian spy (Tales of Suspense #52, 1964); of Hawkeye, an archer hero (Tales of Suspense #57, 1964); of the Black Widow's Widow's Line device (Tales of Suspense #64, 1965)

Mark Gruenwald: co-creator of John Walker, a blond-haired patriot with superhuman strength who likens himself to Captain America (Captain America #323, 1986); of the US government assigning the identity of Captain America to John Walker; of John Walker background in the military (Captain America #333, 1987); of a variant Captain America costume in black and red with red stripes across the chest (Captain America #337, 1988); of John Walker's identity as Captain America as public knowledge (Captain America #341, 1988); of a variant Captain America shield with black and red stripes (Captain America #342, 1988); of John Walker losing control as Captain America and murdering his opponents (Captain America #345, 1988); of John Walker falling out of favor with the US government after committing murders as Captain America, leading to him losing the identity and shield (Captain America #350, 1989); of the U.S. Agent, John Walker's new costumed identity after losing the Captain America alias; of Walker wearing the variant Captain America costume and shield in black and red; of the U.S. Agent working for US intelligence (Captain America #354, 1989)

Kieron Dwyer: co-creator of John Walker's identity as Captain America as public knowledge (Captain America #341, 1988); of a variant Captain America shield with black and red stripes (Captain America #342, 1988); of John Walker losing control as Captain America and murdering his opponents (Captain America #345, 1988); of John Walker falling out of favor with the US government after committing murders as Captain America, leading to him losing the identity and shield (Captain America #350, 1989); of the U.S. Agent, John Walker's new costumed identity after losing the Captain America alias; of Walker wearing the variant Captain America costume and shield in black and red; of the U.S. Agent working for US intelligence (Captain America #354, 1989)

Paul Jenkins: co-creator of the Sentry, Bob Reynolds, a costumed hero with blond hair, yellow bodysuit and blue cape with large 'S' on belt; of the Sentry's massive power; of the Sentry's arch-foe the Void; of the Sentry called "the Golden Guardian of Good" and having the "power of a million exploding suns"; of Bob receiving his powers through a secret formula; of Bob forgetting about his career as the Sentry after his enemy the Void was bested (Sentry #1, 2000); of the Watchtower, the Sentry's skyscraper base (Sentry #5, 2001); of the Void revealed to be Bob's alternate personality (Sentry vs. the Void #1, 2001); of the Sentry's formula based on the Super-Soldier Serum and made by Project: Sentry (Sentry #8, 2006)

Jae Lee: co-creator of the Sentry, Bob Reynolds, a costumed hero with blond hair, yellow bodysuit and blue cape with large 'S' on belt; of the Sentry's massive power; of the Sentry's arch-foe the Void; of the Sentry called "the Golden Guardian of Good" and having the "power of a million exploding suns"; of Bob receiving his powers through a secret formula; of Bob forgetting about his career as the Sentry after his enemy the Void was bested (Sentry #1, 2000); of the Watchtower, the Sentry's skyscraper base (Sentry #5, 2001); of the Void revealed to be Bob's alternate personality (Sentry vs. the Void #1, 2001)

Joe Simon: co-creator of Captain America, Steve Rogers, who received the Super-Soldier Serum that made him a perfect specimen of humanity; of Captain America's red, white and blue costume with 'A' on forehead and stars and stripes on his chest; of James Buchanan "Bucky" Barnes, Steve's friend and partner who joins him in battle (Captain America Comics #1, 1941); of Captain America's mask being fastened to his costume; of Captain America's round, red and white shield with star in its center (Captain America Comics #2, 1941)

Brian Michael Bendis: co-creator of Bob Reynolds as a meth addict (Dark Avengers #13, 2010); of a revived Avengers team called the "New Avengers" (New Avengers #1, 2005); of Avengers Tower, the Avengers downtown Manhattan skyscraper base (New Avengers #3, 2005); of the Sentry as one of the Avengers; of Sentry's Watchtower perched atop Avengers Tower (New Avengers #10, 2005); of the Avengers forming two factions, one approved by the government, one not (New Avengers #27, 2007); of Bucky as one of the Avengers (New Avengers #48, 2009)

David Michelinie: co-creator of Sam Wilson as an Avenger (Avengers #183, 1979); of Taskmaster, a villain who wields a variety of weapons including a shield and sword, wears a skull mask (Avengers #195, 1980); of the Ghost, an anti-corporate industrial saboteur garbed in white and a hood with the power to phase through solid matter and appear invisible (Iron Man #219, 1987)

Don Heck: co-creator of the Black Widow as an Avenger (Avengers #111, 1973); of Iron Man, armored hero (Tales of Suspense #39, 1963); of the Black Widow, a Russian spy (Tales of Suspense #52, 1964); of Hawkeye, an archer hero (Tales of Suspense #57, 1964); of the Black Widow's Widow's Line device (Tales of Suspense #64, 1965)

Paul Neary: co-creator of John Walker, a blond-haired patriot with superhuman strength who likens himself to Captain America (Captain America #323, 1986); of the US government assigning the identity of Captain America to John Walker; of John Walker background in the military (Captain America #333, 1987)

Tom Morgan: co-creator of the US government assigning the identity of Captain America to John Walker; of John Walker background in the military (Captain America #333, 1987); of a variant Captain America costume in black and red with red stripes across the chest (Captain America #337, 1988)

Devin Grayson: co-creator of Yelena Belova, a blonde-haired Russian graduate of the same program as Natasha Romanoff who also serves as the Black Widow (Black Widow #1, 1999); of the Red Room, the spy program which created the Black Widow (Black Widow #2, 1999)

J. G. Jones: co-creator of of Yelena Belova, a blonde-haired Russian graduate of the same program as Natasha Romanoff who also serves as the Black Widow (Black Widow #1, 1999); the Red Room, the spy program which created the Black Widow (Black Widow #2, 1999)

Roy Thomas: co-creator of the Red Guardian, Alexei Shostakov, a Russian Cold War operative from the Black Widow's family, wears a red costume with a star in imitation of Captain America's costume (Avengers #43, 1967)

John Buscema: co-creator of the Red Guardian, Alexei Shostakov, a Russian Cold War operative from the Black Widow's family, wears a red costume with a star in imitation of Captain America's costume (Avengers #43, 1967)

Steve Epting: co-creator of the Winter Soldier, a legendary Russian assassin, has a cybernetic arm (Captain America #1, 2005); of Bucky losing his arm from an injury in World War 2 (Captain America #11, 2005)

Ed Brubaker: co-creator of the Winter Soldier, a legendary Russian assassin, has a cybernetic arm (Captain America #1, 2005); of Bucky losing his arm from an injury in World War 2 (Captain America #11, 2005)

Bob Layton: co-creator of the Ghost, an anti-corporate industrial saboteur garbed in white and a hood with the power to phase through solid matter and appear invisible (Iron Man #219, 1987)

David Finch: co-creator of a revived Avengers team called the "New Avengers" (New Avengers #1, 2005); of Avengers Tower, the Avengers downtown Manhattan skyscraper base (New Avengers #3, 2005)

Andy Diggle: co-creator of Yelena Belova and the Ghost as members of the Thunderbolts; of the Ghost wearing a round helmet (Thunderbolts #128, 2009)

Roberto de la Torre: co-creator of Yelena Belova and the Ghost as members of the Thunderbolts; of the Ghost wearing a round helmet (Thunderbolts #128, 2009)

Kurt Busiek: co-creator of the Thunderbolts, a team comprised mainly of villains who emerge after the Avengers disband (Thunderbolts #1, 1997)

Mark Bagley: co-creator of the Thunderbolts, a team comprised mainly of villains who emerge after the Avengers disband (Thunderbolts #1, 1997)

George Perez: co-creator of Taskmaster, a villain who wields a variety of weapons including a shield and sword, wears a skull mask (Avengers #195, 1980)

Steve Englehart: co-creator of the Black Widow as an Avenger (Avengers #111, 1973); of the Vault, a secure government holding facility (Avengers Annual #15, 1986)

Larry Lieber: co-creator of Thor, Norse god of thunder (Journey into Mystery #83, 1962); of Iron Man, armored hero (Tales of Suspense #39, 1963)

John Romita: co-creator of the Black Widow's red hair, black bodysuit, Widow's Bite wrist weapon and carrying explosives (Amazing Spider-Man #86, 1970)

Jeph Loeb: co-creator of the Red Hulk, a red-skinned version of the Hulk (Hulk #1, 2008); of the Red Hulk revealed to be Thaddeus Ross (Hulk #23, 2010)

Ed McGuinness: co-creator of the Red Hulk, a red-skinned version of the Hulk (Hulk #1, 2008); of the Red Hulk revealed to be Thaddeus Ross (Hulk #23, 2010)

Leinil Francis Yu: co-creator of the Avengers forming two factions, one approved by the government, one not (New Avengers #27, 2007)

Steve McNiven: co-creator of the Sentry as one of the Avengers; of Sentry's Watchtower perched atop Avengers Tower (New Avengers #10, 2005)

John Romita Jr.: co-creator of the Sentry's formula based on the Super-Soldier Serum and made by Project: Sentry (Sentry #8, 2006)

Jim Steranko: creator of Contessa Valentina Allegro de la Fontaine, a government agent (Strange Tales #159, 1967)

Bob Harras: co-creator of Valentina de Fonatine serving in the C.I.A. (Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. #1, 1989)

Bob Hall: co-creator of Valentina de Fonatine serving in the C.I.A. (Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. #1, 1989)

Bryan Hitch: co-creator of the Chitauri, an extraterrestrial army who battle the Avengers (Ultimates #8, 2002)

Mark Millar: co-creator of the Chitauri, an extraterrestrial army who battle the Avengers (Ultimates #8, 2002)

Nick Spencer: co-creator of the Winter Soldier as leader of the Thunderbolts (Avengers Standoff: Assault on Pleasant Hill Omega #1, 2016)

Daniel Acuna: co-creator of the Winter Soldier as leader of the Thunderbolts (Avengers Standoff: Assault on Pleasant Hill Omega #1, 2016)

Angel Garcia: co-creator of the Winter Soldier as leader of the Thunderbolts (Avengers Standoff: Assault on Pleasant Hill Omega #1, 2016)

Gaspar Saladino: creator of the Avengers logo with enlarged letter "A" (Avengers #96, 1972)

Steve Ditko: co-creator of the Vault, a secure government holding facility (Avengers Annual #15, 1986)

Danny Fingeroth: co-creator of the Vault, a secure government holding facility (Avengers Annual #15, 1986)

Gene Colan: co-creator of Sam Wilson, hero and ally of Captain America (Captain America #117, 1969)

Mark Waid: co-creator of Sam Wilson as Captain America (Captain America: Sentinel of Liberty #8, 1999)

Cully Hamner: co-creator of Sam Wilson as Captain America (Captain America: Sentinel of Liberty #8, 1999)

Billy Tan: co-creator of Bucky as one of the Avengers (New Avengers #48, 2009)

John Byrne: co-creator of Sam Wilson as an Avenger (Avengers #183, 1979)

Mike Deodato Jr.: co-creator of Bob Reynolds as a meth addict (Dark Avengers #13, 2010)

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Review: The Once and Future Riot

The Once and Future Riot is a recent piece of comics journalism by Joe Sacco, published last year. Sacco is best-known for his work Palestine; given his areas of interest, I think if Sacco shows up in your hometown, your hometown has got some issues.

For this book, Sacco went to Muzaffarnagar, India, where a riot erupted between Hindus and Muslims. But as Sacco finds in interviewing the people there, the precise details as to how the violence started and who suffered change depending on who's telling the story (which Sacco presents with his usual skepticism).

The moment I found most fascinating came when Sacco visited a camp of Muslim refugees who had fled after the riot and had yet to return home, despite government assurances that it was safe. One of the refugees spoke passionately about his former Hindu neighbours and the good will that had existed between them. Another refugee responded with the armor-piercing question, "Why are you here, if you have a house there?"

The book does not paint a pretty picture of India but I came away affected by many scenes such as the one I described. It's another fine piece of work by Sacco.

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Radio Recap: The Adventures of Frank Race

"Many things were changed during the war; the face of the Earth was altered and the people of the Earth changed. Before the war, Frank Race was an attorney, but he traded his law books for the cloak and dagger of the O.S.S., and when it was over, his former life was over too; adventure had become his business: The Adventures of Frank Race!"

The Adventures of Frank Race was a syndicated program that ran from May 1, 1950 to February 19, 1950. It starred Tom Collins as Frank Race and Tony Barrett as Mark Donovan, Frank's sidekick. It was written and director by Buckley Angel and Joel Murcott (writer on Suspense, Escape and Tales of the Texas Rangers). Ivan Ditmars (of Escape) supplied the music.

Post-World War II, there seemed to be a sub-genre of radio programs about men back from the service who were trying to assert their new position in society by taking on odd jobs and, inevitably, solving mysteries; Let George Do It, Box 13, I Fly Anything and the Adventures of Christopher London are all examples of this type.

In the case of Frank Race, he worked as an insurance investigator (Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar was already on the air). The sidekick, Donovan, was present to supply muscle when Frank needed, but otherwise he was written as a complete lunkhead (although he did supply Frank with someone to explain the plot to). The supporting roles were filled with familiar voices like Bill Johnstone, Jack Kruschen, Frank Lovejoy, William Conrad and Virginia Gregg.

The production quality of the Adventures of Frank Race was pretty high - they're professional and polished. Unfortunately, despite all the talent working on them, I don't find the stories memorable. It's an okay program, but given the premise and talent, it should have at least as good as, say, the Amazing Mr. Malone. So far as I'm concerned, it's just okay.

You can hear the Old Time Radio Researchers' collection of the Adventures of Frank Race episodes with the YouTube playlist below: