Monday, March 7, 2016

The Marksman #11: Counter-attack (Frank Scarpetta, 1974)

I'm far from being an expert in men's adventure novels (come to think of it - I'm not an expert on any kind of novels), but I'm 100% positive that something is definitely wrong with this one. Doesn't feel like a finished product at all. It's more like a bare manuscript that the author would pitch to a publisher and then complete quickly after approval. While having a drink or two, probably.

Starts somewhat ambitiously with a complicated plot that involves five crates of heroin smuggled from Egypt (poppy fields in a fucking desert?) into America. So what's ambitious about such trivial plotting, you might ask? The thing is that these crates were intercepted by the US customs (and/or some secret UK agency) and then stolen back by Mafia before finally, our man Magellan got to them. Their content changed from heroin to marijuana to a pile of bricks and even sand during this period. All this enfolds really fast, and I admit that I lost track a bit. But to my defence, it seems like Mr Scarpetta too got a little lost, so he, fortunately, stopped fooling with this nonsense and made it clear that they indeed do contain heroin (worth $650 million) and that they indeed are in Marksman's possession.

From here on, it settles a bit, but it again goes totally wild in an abrupt ending. Only a few pages before the conclusion, another girl is introduced (and immediately forgotten), and then the final shootout happens on the very last page in no more than four (4 !!!) paragraphs.

You can, and you should read a proper and super cool review on the one and only Glorious Trash blog. I'll just abruptly finish mine with a quick summary:
  • slightly pathetic hero 
  • incredibly pathetic pair of villains. One is such a sissy that suffers a mild stroke upon receiving some bad news
  • no sex
  • let me repeat: there's no sex in this men adventure novel! The closes it gets is this: Magellan made her nakedness complete, then stood back and coolly regarded her in the dim light. The sight of her beautiful, young body kindled a pang of memory, but only briefly.
  • pathetic body count. For some reason, Marksman uses a gas grenade in the last "shoot-out" and thus spares the lives of two main villains and seven gangsters who "represented some kind of an execution squad"
  • no globe-trotting. The whole thing takes place in New Orleans
  • no "world domination" or "communist take over" grand plot
At least it's short. But it's so weird it's hardly funny.

2/5

Facts:

Hero
Philip Magellan, The Marksman - "A cruelly efficient killing machine, crazed for revenge"


Location:
New Orleans

Body count
7 (one single kill and a couple of triplets)

Object of desire: 
He had one thought! To personally wipe out the narcotic traffic here and, in process, blast open the immaculately kept secret of who masterminded the formidable crime organization whose headquarters was in New Orleans. 

Dames:
Chantal, Choisi's daughter. Her role is very mysterious and never quite explained...

Blackouts: /

Title: 
I wasn't sure about this. I thought initially that Marksman was left with some score to settle with Mafia from one of the ten preceding volumes or that he was still revenging the death of his wife and daughter. But no, the back cover informs us that "Summoning the enormous power at his command, Borghese launched a blistering counterattack to recover the smack and wipe-out The Marksman."

Edition: 
Belmont Tower Books, April 1974 

Cover
One of the mentioned triplets killing. It's cool but inaccurate because I'm sure that the Marksman did both of them disguised into a hippie outfit.

Cool lines
/

4 comments:

  1. Thanks for the link to my blog, Jure. As ever I enjoyed your review!! I need to get back to the Marksman series; seems like forever since I read a volume.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey Glorious Trasher!

      Glad you liked it and thanks for the message!

      Delete
    2. Used to read all these types of revenge/war against crime etc when I was a teen/young man. I still love to read the odd one when I can find them in old charity shops. Still read Bolan and the destroyer(older) novels. Liked Mace and the Inquisitor but hold a soft spot for The Marksman Philip Magellan. never grow up!

      Delete
  2. Need a memory Jog please. In the 70's I read the usual Kung Fu books such as Mace, Mondo etc but I read one with a hero who was a cop (I think) and he was called CAPITAN and ran somehow up and down corner walls for exercise?? Please tell me the book guys and gals

    ReplyDelete