I’m trying to identify the title or author of a paperback thriller/mystery that was published circa 1982 (probably a paperback original). The hero was a private investigator who was a dwarf, but was definitely not George Chesbro’s character “Mongo”. I remember the cover art vividly. It showed a man leaning back and apparently screaming on a playground, while a frightened child stands in front of him and people behind them look on in shock. I recall it having greenish/purplish cover scheme, and was probably from one of the big paperback book publishers at the time.
Are you thinking of Gunther Wherthman from Stuart Kaminsky’s Toby Peters books? Peters is the actual PI; Gunther is a Swiss translator who assists him.
No, it definitely wasn’t Chesbro (although I like him, and am waiting for Game of Thrones to end so Dinklage can start the series). Thanks for trying, though. There are only 3 dwarf PIs I can think of, Harlan Ellison did one, Chesbro, and this one. Driving me crazy trying to figure it out.
Very generally crossing this topic, is anyone else aware that if Leonardo Dicaprio ever gets to his dream Travis McGee film (or films), he’s chosen Peter Dinklage to play Meyer?
If no one here comes up with an answer, I would suggest Goodreads.com. They have a section specifically for identifying half remembered books. I’ve used it several times.
My first thought was Aw, hell no, it’s just Dinklagemania - what, does he get to play King Kong next? And then I mentally reread all the McGee novels, and since then I’ve reread the good ones, and it’s both an unbelievably good fit and absolutely no contradiction to MacDonald canon. Other than the height issue, Dinklage IS Meyer… and being a wee fella answers a lot of unspoken questions about Meyer’s life and involvement in the stories.
Problem being that DiCaprio is booked solid for years and getting too old for the lead role. So it may never happen.
There was a TV Series (1986-87) called The Wizard that starred David Rappaport as the adventurous inventor. This is of course not a paperback, but perhaps it was inspired by or related to the book or might spur some thoughts. It was a great show.