The detective “team” in this story, Tommy Twotoes and Terry Bob
Rooke, known as “Soldier,” were introduced in my first two mystery
novels, Most Men Don’t Kill and Murder in Black and White, both
published by Random House in 1951. The main character, Tommy Twotoes,
was (aside from his 300-pound avoir-dupois) based upon my great good
friend, the late “Sunny Jim” Coffroth. Coffroth was without
question the greatest sports promoter of all time, and I’m not
forgetting Rickard or any of the others. He was also one of the
zaniest and most completely lovable human beings I have ever known.
Twotoes was criticized in some quarters as being on the fantastic
side. The answer to that is that I had to tone the real Coffroth down
when I depicted him as the fictional Twotoes, for I knew no editor of
fiction would accept the true-life article as being remotely possible.
As for Rooke, Tommy was crippled from alcoholic neuritis and needed a
pair of legs. I invented the Soldier to supply my hefty hero with a
means of locomotion. Rooke, I think, derived mainly out of the nowhere
into the here. He was depicted in my early novels as being a veteran
of the iron coffins (tanks) in War Number Two and as liking his
likker. In those two small respects, at least, he resembled his
creator.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781479442904
Publisert
2019
Utgiver
Vendor
Wildside Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter