A Real Gone Guy (1966)

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“Get undressed,” Liddell snapped at the redhead. “Or would you rather be booked for murder?”

From the back:

She called herself Denny Lyons…
and she was everything men dream of on long, lonely nights…. 

She had it all, from the white-gold hair that framed her expensive face, to the graceful, slender ankles — and all those little extras in-between….

She had everything — including big ideas. She was headed straight for the top and she through she knew just how to get there….
But she had made one mistake — and someone thought that was one too many…

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Lesbian Love

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Men wanted her — but she wanted women!
Strange Lusts in a nightmare of passion

From the back:

UNNATURAL SEX…
was the education she had received from her high school English teacher, the depraved Paula. And she had used her education well, enjoying the beautiful instructor, until the night she saw her female lover naked in the embrace of Steve Griffith. And when Griffith, mad with lust, found his opportunity to take the virgin seventeen-year old, he raped her without mercy. That started the days and nights of nightmare for Pam. Into her life came Edna, the lesbian nurse, who saw in the young girl the first full passion of her twisted life. And when Pam gave in, it was the first chapter of a tormented saga raging through–
… THE GUTTER OF LUST!

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The Living Shadow

The Shadow - April 1931 First Issue thumbnail
The Shadow Magazine April 1931 thumbnail
La Sombra 1936 April thumbnail
The Thrill Book - October 1st, 1919 thumbnail
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The Shadow - April 1931 First Issue
The Shadow Magazine April 1931
La Sombra 1936 April
The Thrill Book - October 1st, 1919
The Thrill Book v03n01 (10-01-1919) 002

This was the debut issue of The Shadow Magazine. The Shadow began in 1930 as the host/narrator of a Radio Drama anthology series, introducing stories adapted from the Street & Smith pulp magazine Detective Story. Announcer Frank Readick buried himself in the role, chilling the airwaves with his haunting laughter. Intrigued, magazine buyers began asking for “that Shadow magazine.” Not ones to pass up a profit opportunity, Street & Smith commissioned magician turned writer Walter Gibson to create the first story for their new magazine starring and named for the mysterious Shadow.

This novel, The Living Shadow, originally had no Chinese characters involved. However, Street and Smith, trying to get this first issue published as soon as possible (to capitalize on the popularity of the radio character) but also hoping to contain any possible damage should The Shadow Magazine be a failure out of the gate, recycled a Modest Stein cover from the October 1, 1919 issue of the The Thrill Book, which showed a Chinese man cowering from a menacing shadow. Walter Gibson, once he was aware of the intended cover, had to quickly rewrite his story to include a Chinese connection.

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