Thursday, September 17, 2009
'Great Lakes, Great Writers;' Authors and Creators: Day Keene (Gunnar Hjerstedt)
Web site of the Week: http://www.thrillingdetective.com/trivia/keene.html
Gunnar Hjerstedt, 1904-1969 A.K.A. Day Keene author with Dwight Vincent of Chautauqua, which later was made into the film THE TROUBLE WITH GIRLS, starring ELVIS PRESLEY
Day Keene wrote everyone. Radio, the pulps, paperback originals and even a few hardcovers. He churned out some crap, but what's amazing is how much of it was good stuff. His wry wit and sly humour characterized his best work, particularly in his short stories for Black Mask, Manhunt, and his PBOs for such publishers as Avon, Gold Medal, Graphic and even a few Ace doubles. He only created one recurring character, Hawaiian private eye Johnny Aloha, who appeared in two novels, although he had also had a hand in scripting the Kitty Keene, Inc. radio show, about a female private eye, which had a pretty decent run in the late thirties.
NOVELS
* Framed in Guilt (1949; AKA Evidence Most Blind)
* Farewell to Passion (1951; AKA The Passion Murders)
* My Flesh Is Sweet (1951)
* Love Me and Die (1951)
* To Kiss or Kill (1951)
* Hunt the Killer (1952)
* About Doctor Ferrel (1952)
* Home Is the Sailor (1952)
* If the Coffin Fits (1952)
* Naked Fury (1952)
* Wake Up to Murder 1952)
* Mrs. Homicide (1953)
* Strange Witness (1953)
* The Big Kiss-Off (1954)
* There Was A Crooked Man (1954)
* Death House Doll (1954)
* Homicidal Lady (1954)
* Joy House (1954)
* Notorious (1954)
* Sleep with the Devil (1954)
* Who Has Wilma Lathrop? (1955)
* The Dangling Carrot (1955)
* Murder on the Side (1956)
* Bring Him Back Dead (1956)
* It's a Sin to Kill 1958)
* Passage to Samoa 1958)
* Dead Dolls Don't Talk (1959)
* Dead in Bed (1959; Johnny Aloha)
* Moran's Woman (1959)
* Miami 59 (1959)
* So Dead My Lovely (1959)
* Take a Step to Murder 1959)
* Too Black for Heaven (1959)
* Too Hot to Hold (1959)
* The Brimstone Bed 1960)
* Payola (Pyramid, 1960; Johnny Aloha)
* Seed of Doubt
* Bye, Baby Bunting (1963)
* LA 46 (1964)
* Carnival of Death (1965)
* Chicago 11 (1966)
* Acapulco Gpo (1967)
SHORT STORIES
* "It Could Happen Here" (September 1940, Ace G-Man Stories)
* "Wake Up, America" (January 1941, Ace G-Man Stories)
* "Last of the Fighting Ainsleys" (September 1941, Ace G-Man Stories)
* "What So Proudly We Hail" (October 1942, Ace G-Man Stories)
* "Herr Yama From Yokohama" (February 1943, Ace G-Man Stories; 1988, The Super Feds)
* "Rhapsody in Blood" (January 1943, Dime Mystery Magazine)
* "Boy Kills Girl" (June 1944, Flynn's Detective Fiction)
* "The Bloody Tide" (1950, Black Mask; 1996, The Mammoth Book of Pulp Fiction)
* "A Better Mantrap," (Dangerous Dames)
COLLECTION
* This is Murder, Mr. Herbert, and Other Stories (1948)
NON-CRIME NOVELS
* Guns Along the Brazos (western)
* His Father's Wife (1954)
* Chautauqua, w/ Dwight Vincent (1960)
* World Without Women, w/ Leonard Pruyn (1960)
* Southern Daughter (1967)
* Live Again, Love Again (1970)
* Wild Girl (1970)
RADIO
* Kitty Keene, Inc.
(1937-41, CBS, Mutual)
Keene scripted many episodes of this radio soap, about a female private eye.
Thanks to Al Guthrie for his help on this one.
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Drop a dime. Your comments, suggestions, corrections and contributions are always welcome.
"...and I'll tell you right out that I'm a man who likes talking to a man who likes to talk."
NOVELS
* Framed in Guilt (1949; AKA Evidence Most Blind)
* Farewell to Passion (1951; AKA The Passion Murders)
* My Flesh Is Sweet (1951)
* Love Me and Die (1951)
* To Kiss or Kill (1951)
* Hunt the Killer (1952)
* About Doctor Ferrel (1952)
* Home Is the Sailor (1952)
* If the Coffin Fits (1952)
* Naked Fury (1952)
* Wake Up to Murder 1952)
* Mrs. Homicide (1953)
* Strange Witness (1953)
* The Big Kiss-Off (1954)
* There Was A Crooked Man (1954)
* Death House Doll (1954)
* Homicidal Lady (1954)
* Joy House (1954)
* Notorious (1954)
* Sleep with the Devil (1954)
* Who Has Wilma Lathrop? (1955)
* The Dangling Carrot (1955)
* Murder on the Side (1956)
* Bring Him Back Dead (1956)
* It's a Sin to Kill 1958)
* Passage to Samoa 1958)
* Dead Dolls Don't Talk (1959)
* Dead in Bed (1959; Johnny Aloha)
* Moran's Woman (1959)
* Miami 59 (1959)
* So Dead My Lovely (1959)
* Take a Step to Murder 1959)
* Too Black for Heaven (1959)
* Too Hot to Hold (1959)
* The Brimstone Bed 1960)
* Payola (Pyramid, 1960; Johnny Aloha)
* Seed of Doubt
* Bye, Baby Bunting (1963)
* LA 46 (1964)
* Carnival of Death (1965)
* Chicago 11 (1966)
* Acapulco Gpo (1967)
SHORT STORIES
* "It Could Happen Here" (September 1940, Ace G-Man Stories)
* "Wake Up, America" (January 1941, Ace G-Man Stories)
* "Last of the Fighting Ainsleys" (September 1941, Ace G-Man Stories)
* "What So Proudly We Hail" (October 1942, Ace G-Man Stories)
* "Herr Yama From Yokohama" (February 1943, Ace G-Man Stories; 1988, The Super Feds)
* "Rhapsody in Blood" (January 1943, Dime Mystery Magazine)
* "Boy Kills Girl" (June 1944, Flynn's Detective Fiction)
* "The Bloody Tide" (1950, Black Mask; 1996, The Mammoth Book of Pulp Fiction)
* "A Better Mantrap," (Dangerous Dames)
COLLECTION
* This is Murder, Mr. Herbert, and Other Stories (1948)
NON-CRIME NOVELS
* Guns Along the Brazos (western)
* His Father's Wife (1954)
* Chautauqua, w/ Dwight Vincent (1960)
* World Without Women, w/ Leonard Pruyn (1960)
* Southern Daughter (1967)
* Live Again, Love Again (1970)
* Wild Girl (1970)
RADIO
* Kitty Keene, Inc.
(1937-41, CBS, Mutual)
Keene scripted many episodes of this radio soap, about a female private eye.
Thanks to Al Guthrie for his help on this one.
| Table of Contents | Detectives A-L M-Z | Film | Radio | Television | Comics | FAQs |
| Trivia | Authors | Hall of Fame | Mystery Links | Bibliography | Glossary | Search |
| What's New: On The Site | On the Street | Fiction | Staff | The P.I. Poll |
Drop a dime. Your comments, suggestions, corrections and contributions are always welcome.
"...and I'll tell you right out that I'm a man who likes talking to a man who likes to talk."
The Trouble with Girls: (And How to Get Into It) starred Elvis Presley
href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Trouble_with_Girls
Saturday, August 29, 2009
New Maiden Names for Old: "New Maiden Names for Old by Roger Bissell
The Strange Case of Catherine Goulais Bissell Ely
by Roger Bissell
As some of you know, census records show no Bissells in Michigan before 1830 and only one Bissell (Theodore) in 1830, whose children were all shown as being under 10 years of age. Yet, big as life, there was a Catherine Bissell (sometimes referred to as Catherine Goulais), born 1817 in Michigan, mentioned in the early records of Minnesota. (I stumbled across her existence while trying to uncover the roots of my great-great-grandfather, Pierce Bissell, born 1816 or 1817, supposedly in Michigan.)
In volume 6 of Minnesota Historical Quarterly Magazine, we read that Reverend E. M. Ely married Miss Catherine Bissell of the Mackinaw Mission on August 30, 1835. Her maiden name was Goulais, and she was of mixed blood (p. 351). And in volume 8, we read that Catherine Bissell Ely was born November 25, 1817 and was educated at the Mackinac Mission (p. 247).
In volume VI, part 2 (1891) of Collections of the Minnesota Historical Society, we find that Mr. Ely of Fond du Lac (now part of Duluth) was married to Miss Bissell of Mackinaw (p. 123). And in volume IX (1900), we find that Edmund Franklin Ely (1809-1882) was a pioneer teacher and missionary at Fond du Lac who was married in 1835 to Miss Catherine Goulais, one of a group of reinforcement teachers from Mackinac (pp. 246-7).
Question: if her maiden name was Goulais, how could she be called Miss Bissell? Answer: Bissell was her maiden name, too!
As a researcher with the Mackinac Island State Park Commission told us in a letter several years ago:
For some time, I have been researching the Mackinaw Mission. Catharine Bissell is one of many interesting persons connected with the mission.
She was born on 25 November 1817 at Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. Her father was a French Canadian whose surname was Goulais. Her mother was a half-blood Chippewa Indian who drowned near Mackinac in 1827. In 1824, she entered the mission and remained until she moved to LaPointe on Madeline Island (Wisconsin) where she married Edmund F. Ely on 30 August 1835. Reverend William T. Boutwell performed the marriage. Catherine had two children: Mary Wright Ely born on 29 May 1836 and Delia Cooke Ely, born on 28 February 1838.
Catherine received the name 'Catherine Bissell' while at the Mission. It was common practice for Easterners who supported children in missions to be able to give them Anglicized names. She was named after Josiah Bissell Jr. of Rochester, New York. [emphasis added]
Aha! Now we're getting somewhere. Catherine Goulais was sort-of-adopted by Josiah Bissell Jr. of Rochester, New York.
Referring to the Jones book, we find that Josiah Bissell III (1757-1822) died in Rochester. Among his children were Richard (b. 1796) and Josiah Wolcott IV (b . 1790). One of Josiah IV's children was a daughter Catherine who was born in 1821 and died in 1822. Isn't it obvious that this is the infant daughter after whom Josiah ("Junior") IV named Catherine Goulas upon becoming her sponsor?
(As a footnote to this, I wonder if Pierce B. Bissell might have been "adopted" by the same process and was never a Bissell to begin with. There is some hint of Indian blood on Pierce's mother's side, and his older son's name was Richard, as was Josiah IV's brother! Or, perhaps he might have been Richard's son.)
Introduction to
by Roger Bissell
As some of you know, census records show no Bissells in Michigan before 1830 and only one Bissell (Theodore) in 1830, whose children were all shown as being under 10 years of age. Yet, big as life, there was a Catherine Bissell (sometimes referred to as Catherine Goulais), born 1817 in Michigan, mentioned in the early records of Minnesota. (I stumbled across her existence while trying to uncover the roots of my great-great-grandfather, Pierce Bissell, born 1816 or 1817, supposedly in Michigan.)
In volume 6 of Minnesota Historical Quarterly Magazine, we read that Reverend E. M. Ely married Miss Catherine Bissell of the Mackinaw Mission on August 30, 1835. Her maiden name was Goulais, and she was of mixed blood (p. 351). And in volume 8, we read that Catherine Bissell Ely was born November 25, 1817 and was educated at the Mackinac Mission (p. 247).
In volume VI, part 2 (1891) of Collections of the Minnesota Historical Society, we find that Mr. Ely of Fond du Lac (now part of Duluth) was married to Miss Bissell of Mackinaw (p. 123). And in volume IX (1900), we find that Edmund Franklin Ely (1809-1882) was a pioneer teacher and missionary at Fond du Lac who was married in 1835 to Miss Catherine Goulais, one of a group of reinforcement teachers from Mackinac (pp. 246-7).
Question: if her maiden name was Goulais, how could she be called Miss Bissell? Answer: Bissell was her maiden name, too!
As a researcher with the Mackinac Island State Park Commission told us in a letter several years ago:
For some time, I have been researching the Mackinaw Mission. Catharine Bissell is one of many interesting persons connected with the mission.
She was born on 25 November 1817 at Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. Her father was a French Canadian whose surname was Goulais. Her mother was a half-blood Chippewa Indian who drowned near Mackinac in 1827. In 1824, she entered the mission and remained until she moved to LaPointe on Madeline Island (Wisconsin) where she married Edmund F. Ely on 30 August 1835. Reverend William T. Boutwell performed the marriage. Catherine had two children: Mary Wright Ely born on 29 May 1836 and Delia Cooke Ely, born on 28 February 1838.
Catherine received the name 'Catherine Bissell' while at the Mission. It was common practice for Easterners who supported children in missions to be able to give them Anglicized names. She was named after Josiah Bissell Jr. of Rochester, New York. [emphasis added]
Aha! Now we're getting somewhere. Catherine Goulais was sort-of-adopted by Josiah Bissell Jr. of Rochester, New York.
Referring to the Jones book, we find that Josiah Bissell III (1757-1822) died in Rochester. Among his children were Richard (b. 1796) and Josiah Wolcott IV (b . 1790). One of Josiah IV's children was a daughter Catherine who was born in 1821 and died in 1822. Isn't it obvious that this is the infant daughter after whom Josiah ("Junior") IV named Catherine Goulas upon becoming her sponsor?
(As a footnote to this, I wonder if Pierce B. Bissell might have been "adopted" by the same process and was never a Bissell to begin with. There is some hint of Indian blood on Pierce's mother's side, and his older son's name was Richard, as was Josiah IV's brother! Or, perhaps he might have been Richard's son.)
Introduction to
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