I started reading the Destroyer series by Sapir and Murphy back in th mid-70’s, continued with the Executioner series by Don Pendleton, then read a bit of every series out there. My favorite was the Smuggler series by Paul Petersen(the SAME Paul Petersen that played “Jeff Stone” on The Donna Reed Show, btw), but I can’t find them anywhere.
Which ones do you remember and/or collect?
Wasn’t there a series called The Butcher? About a Mafia type trying to get out of the business. When I was in Korea there was a used bookstore in the little town outside of our post. A lot of the stuff was series like that, and comic books, because, let’s admit it, the average soldier wasn’t reading Shakespeare. It was so easy to get hooked on that sort of stuff though. I kept going back to look for issues of Thor. (Hangs head in shame)
Remo Williams - The Destroyer. I got to the point where I could speed-read one of those in 45 minutes - I used to steal them off my brother and read them in the bath. About the only thing I remember now about them is the wise old Asian mentor who was addicted to soap operas. Anyone remember the movie they made of it?
Baker, your info on The Butcher is correct.
tetsusaru, there was a moving based very loosely on the first Destroyer book.
Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins
There was also a 1987 TV movie with Roddy McDowell & Jeffrey Meek as Chiun and Remo; IIRC it was intended as a pilot for a series which (unfortunately IMHO) never got picked up.
I was a Destroyer fan and used to haunt used bookstores looking for missing titles. Somewhere in my library I have a copy of The Assassin’s Handbook, supposedly written by Chiun.
Other series I remember:
The Inquisitor, a secret agent of the Vatican that had to do penance after every assassination.
The Enforcer by Andrew Sugar. He was recruited against his will, and lived from clone body to clone body.
Malko, a European millionaire count that dabbled in secret-agentry.
The Penetrator, a cross between the Destroyer and the Executioner, Mark Hardin killed Commies with machine guns and studied martial arts under an ancient Indian medicine man.
The Remo Williams TV plot only aired once, but luckily many fans happened to have a VCR warmed up that night.
For a review of that pilot, as well as one of the rewrite of the first Destroyer book, not to mention the book where Remo and Chiun meet Fu Manchu and Kato (no, really!), may I refer you to my web site:
http://community.webtv.net/drhermes/ForbiddenKnowledge
There's also reviews of the Doc Savage, Fu Manchu and Avenger series, old-time radio, cliffhanger serials, and much more, so if you like adventure series, there's likely to be something there you'l find interesting.
Oh wow, hadn’t thought about this series in years.
I just went and dug through my book boxes, I have about 40 Destroyer books, 1-20, then scattered, up to 101, somewhere along the line, Sapir and Murphy stopped writing all of them, I have some by other writers.
Have a few of the Executioners as well, haven’t touched in 15 years (no, I never get rid of books), never really got into his second career after taking out the entire American mafia :rolleyes:
Heh, and the last series of men’s adventure books I found is the really men’s adventure, Blade. The continuing series of a British secret agent deminsionally travelling to barbaric worlds and chopping up bad guys with big ole broadswords and then -ahem- graphically getting down with some lovin’
Man, just looking at these books are making feel 15 again…
I enjoyed the Endworld series, set in post-WWIII America. The heroes were all Warriors of the Family, which was sort of the inbred remnant of a population pool that was likely somewhat inbred in the first place, who survived in a compound built and planned by a very wealthy survivalist fellow. Among other things, they had an indestructible SUV with rocket launchers and flamethrowers and such.
There were an awful lot of scenes of characters about to have sex, but then not having it because they weren’t married yet, and then generally killing the hell out of something shortly afterwards. Lots of displacement anxiety going on in that series.
I’ve read a couple of the Casca series by Sgt Barry (Ballad of the Green Berets) Sadler. They’re bad. They’re very, VERY bad.
But far worse than those, (and I’m talkin’ MST3K level bad) is the Survivalist series by Jerry Aherns. What was weird, is that it was just a book about a mercenary type (IIRC) until, about halfway through the series, the character gets “Buck Rodgers”-ed into the future…very VERY weird. Did I mention that the writing was Bad?
From a handy backcover:
Really. I doubt that much could be weirder or worse.
Fenris
Wanna bet?
Gor.
Amateurs – all you need know is Mack Maloney’s Wingman series. It started as your pulp post-World War III baloney (very popular with New Order conspiracy theorists):
And is currently in 7200AD:
Does Hardy Boys count?
I conceed.
Did you know that Norman wrote a non-fiction book called Imaginative Sex? He tells you how to improve your sex-life with your wife and offers up about 75 role playing scenarios to put the spice back into your enchelada. so to speak.
They’re all VERY different too. In one case, you’re a tired camel driver and your wife/girlfriend is your caravan’s slave girl. In another, you’re a warrior, and your wife/girlfriend is your platoon’s slave girl. In a third, you’re a rich arab sheik and your wife/girlfriend is your slave girl. SO there’s quite a variety.
It gets really creepy in one of the appendixes where he talks about how to go to the Sudan, etc. to really buy a slave. How to find a slave-market, what to look for when buying, etc. As far as I can tell, he’s completely serious. Yuk.
Fenris