Dan J. Marlowe
Personal Information
Description
Dan J. Marlowe was born in Lowell, Massachusetts. His mother died when he was young and he was raised by two aunts. After graduating from the Bentley School of Accounting and Finance, he worked as a County Club assistant manager and a timekeeper. For twelve years, he was the office and credit manager for a tobacco wholesaler and during this time was also was a professional gambler. When his wife died from pancreatitis in 1956, he left his life in Washington D.C., moved to New York City and started to write, publishing his first novel two years later. From 1962 on, his novels profited from the expertise of professional bank robber, Al Nussbaum. While on the run, Nussbaum, impressed by Marlowe's novel, The Name of the Game is Death - featuring a bank robber - started a correspondence with him which continued after Nussbaum's apprehension; 14 years later, Marlowe helped him get paroled. Marlowe served as city councilman and mayor pro tem of Harbor Beach, Michigan. In 1977, he was struck by a mysterious amnesia that was never fully explained. He apparently lost most of his memory of his past, but retained his writing ability. He moved in with Nussbaum, who had been paroled recently and had become a writer himself, in Los Angeles, and they collaborated on short stories as they had earlier. Marlowe managed to write several sport-themed young adult books before he died in Tarzana of heart failure. Source: fantasticfiction.co.uk
Books
The vengeance man
Collects three crime novels originally published by Gold Medal Books. The vengeance man: After Jim Wilson murders his wife and her lover in a fleabag motel, he gets off on a technicality and launches a campaign of terror against the small town he believes betrayed him. Park Avenue tramp: During one of her blackouts, Charity McAdams Farnese walks into a downtown bar named Duo's and into the life of Joe Doyle, second-rate piano player. But Charity's husband has had enough of her cheating ways. The prettiest girl I ever killed: Accidents happen, but the town of Sherman seems to have more than its fair share of the fatal kind. Someone falls into a well, another drowns, another is killed by an exploding stove. Curt Friedland comes back to town to clear his brother of murder, convinced there is more to all these deaths than mere coincidence.
Operation Drumfire
"The minute Drake saw Karl Erikson coming toward him he knew he wasn't going to get much sleep for a while. Because every time special agent Erikson has a job too dirty and dangerous for one of Uncle Sam's bona fide undercover men, he just naturally thought of Earl Drake. Drake couldn't afford to say no to Uncle Sam. His past was all too present-- in Erikson's private files. This time, though he almost did say no. Because Uncle Sam wanted Hazel, too-- Drake's great gorgeous rehaired mistress." --
