- Ross H. Spencer
Ross H. Spencer (1921-1998) was a mystery author, best known for his series of comic novels that astutely satirized the private eye genre.
Early life
Spencer was born in Hughart,
West Virginia , raised in Youngstown,Ohio , and moved back to Youngstown before he died. Spencer served with the 37th Infantry Division duringWorld War II , during theBattle of New Georgia , on theUSS Bougainville , and in thePhilippines , for which he was awarded a Bronze Star. After the war, he lived for a while inChicago where he was an avid fan of theChicago Cubs . During the "Korean Emergency," he reenlisted in the military, this time in theAir Force .Writing career
Spencer did not begin writing until after he had a heart attack in his fifties, after which he read a couple of mystery novels which he found amusing. He taught himself to write his special brand of funny mystery novels, beginning with "The Dada Caper" (1978).
David Merrick optioned five of his novels for Broadway, though they never saw the stage. The Chance Purdue series spoofed the private eye genre, and was written with one sentence paragraphs and minimal punctuation, with chapters prefaced by quotes from the fictional pundit Monroe D. Underwood.Spencer was the author of fourteen novels starring hard-drinking Chicago private eye protagonists, including Lacey Lockington, Chance Purdue, Buzz Deckard, Luke Lassiter and Birch Kirby. One "New York Times" review described his writing as "including rat-tat-tat writing in which paragraphs are seldom more than one sentence... [and] the hero is a private eye who is always tailing the wrong people and hitting the wrong guys. Wild, shrewd mad and unexpectedly funny."Fact|date=November 2007 and "Ross H. Spencer has, up until now, been published only in paperback books that demonstrated a wacky humor and an equally wacky writing style. In "The Dada Caper" (1978) and "The Reggis Arms Caper" (1979), Mr. Spencer got his style down mostly to one-sentence paragraphs. The prose hurtled along. Neither book was serious, but Mr. Spencer had fun spoofing the crime genre, and he did so with unusual expertise."{cn|date=November 2007
Bibliography
Novels
*"Echoes of Zero." New York: St Martin's, 1981. ISBN 0312225520
*"The Missing Bishop." New York: Warner, 1985. ISBN 0445405333
*"Monastery Nightmare." New York: Warner, 1986. ISBN 0445405678
*"Kirby's Last Circus." New York: Donald I. Fine, 1987.
*"Death Wore Gloves." Donald I. Fine, 1988.The Chance Purdue Series
*"The Dada Caper." New York: Avon, 1987. ISBN 038001839X
*"The Reggis Arms Caper." New York: Avon, 1988. ISBN 0380470926
*"The Abu Wahab Caper." New York: Avon, 1980. ISBN 0380763567
*"The Stranger City Caper." New York: Avon, 1980. ISBN 0380750368
*"The Radish River Caper." New York: Avon, 1981. ISBN 0380772485
*"The Compleat Chance Purdue." Alexander, NC: Alexander Books. 1998. ISBN 1570900450Lacy Lockington Series
*"The Fifth Script." New York: Donald I. Fine, 1989.
*"The Devereaux File." New York: Donald I. Fine, 1990. ISBN 0792708946
*"The Fedorovich File." New York: Donald I. Fine, 1991. (1991) ISBN 1556112491ee also
*
List of mystery writers External links
* [http://www.fortunecity.com/tattooine/farmer/2/Hunting%20Lake.htm Mike Resnick on Ross Spencer]
* [http://www.novelspot.net/node/1584 "My Pal Ross" by Mike Resnick]
* [http://www.thrillingdetective.com/eyes/buzz.html "BUZZ" DECKARD]
* [http://stodg.blogspot.com/2006_09_01_stodg_archive.html Ross H. Spencer - A Writer's Writer; September 29, 2006]
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