View Full Version : Mickey Spillane has died.
Lester C.
07-17-2006, 07:31 PM
May he rest in peace. Mike Hammer has been one of my favorite characters since I was a kid and both he and more importantly his creator will be terribly missed.
Super Sonic
07-17-2006, 07:42 PM
Names don't ring a bell, my thoughts go out to his family regardless, it's never good when someone dies.
Lester C.
07-17-2006, 07:43 PM
Names don't ring a bell, my thoughts go out to his family regardless, it's never good when someone dies.
There is something called a library. You know it's the place with all the books. You should go there sometime.:p
Super Sonic
07-17-2006, 07:47 PM
There is something called a library. You know it's the place with all the books. You should go there sometime.:p
Not after what I did last time, hoo-boy.
Lester C.
07-17-2006, 07:50 PM
Not after what I did last time, hoo-boy.
So I'm guessing your library, like mine, has many pictorial how to sex books. The most embarrassing conversation I had, when I was twelve, resulted from trying to check one out. :o
heystacy
07-17-2006, 07:55 PM
I remember the Mike Hammer tv show.
Lester C.
07-17-2006, 07:58 PM
Here is the cnn story about Micky's death for Super Sonic's benefit.
Mystery writer Mickey Spillane dies
'This is an income-generating job'
Monday, July 17, 2006; Posted: 6:23 p.m. EDT (22:23 GMT)
Mickey Spillane, shown here in 2001, wrote his first Mike Hammer novel 60 years ago.
Manage Alerts | What Is This? CHARLESTON, South Carolina (AP) -- Mickey Spillane, the macho mystery writer who wowed millions of readers with the shoot-'em-up sex and violence of gumshoe Mike Hammer, died Monday. He was 88.
Spillane's death was confirmed by Brad Stephens of Goldfinch Funeral Home in his hometown of Murrells Inlet. Details about his death were not immediately available.
After starting out in comic books Spillane wrote his first Mike Hammer novel, "I, the Jury," in 1946. Twelve more followed, with sales topping 100 million. Notable titles included "The Killing Man," "The Girl Hunters" and "One Lonely Night."
Many of these books were made into movies, including the classic film noir "Kiss Me, Deadly" and "The Girl Hunters," in which Spillane himself starred. Hammer stories were also featured on television in the series "Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer" and in made-for-TV movies. In the 1980s, Spillane appeared in a string of Miller Lite beer commercials.
Besides the Hammer novels, Spillane wrote a dozen other books, including some award-winning volumes for young people.
Nonetheless, by the end of the 20th century, many of his novels were out of print or hard to find. In 2001, the New American Library began reissuing them.
As a stylist Spillane was no innovator; the prose was hard-boiled boilerplate. In a typical scene, from "The Big Kill," Hammer slugs out a little punk with "pig eyes."
"I snapped the side of the rod across his jaw and laid the flesh open to the bone," Spillane wrote. "I pounded his teeth back into his mouth with the end of the barrel ... and I took my own damn time about kicking him in the face. He smashed into the door and lay there bubbling. So I kicked him again and he stopped bubbling."
Velda was a looker and burning for love
Mainstream critics had little use for Spillane, but he got his due in the mystery world, receiving lifetime achievement awards from the Mystery Writers of America and the Private Eye Writers of America.
Spillane, a bearish man who wrote on an old manual Smith Corona, always claimed he didn't care about reviews. He considered himself a "writer" as opposed to an "author," defining a writer as someone whose books sell.
"This is an income-generating job," he told The Associated Press during a 2001 interview. "Fame was never anything to me unless it afforded me a good livelihood."
Spillane was born Frank Morrison Spillane on March 9, 1918, in the New York borough of Brooklyn. He grew up in Elizabeth, New Jersey, and attended Fort Hayes State College in Kansas where he was a standout swimmer before beginning his career writing for magazines.
He had always liked police stories -- an uncle was a cop -- and in his pre-Hammer days he created a comic book detective named Mike Danger. At the time, the early 1940s, he was scribing for Batman, SubMariner and other comics.
"I wanted to get away from the flying heroes and I had the prototype cop," Spillane said.
Danger never saw print. World War II broke out and Spillane enlisted. When he came home, he needed $1,000 to buy some land and thought novels the best way to go. Within three weeks, he had completed "I, the Jury" and sent it to Dutton. The editors there doubted the writing, but not the market for it; a literary franchise began. His books helped reveal the power of the paperback market and became so popular they were parodied in movies, including the Fred Astaire musical "The Band Wagon."
He was a quintessential Cold War writer, an unconditional believer in good and evil. He was also a rare political conservative in the book world. Communists were villains in his work and liberals took some hits as well. He was not above using crude racial and sexual stereotypes.
Viewed by some as a precursor to Clint Eastwood's Dirty Harry, Spillane's Hammer was a loner contemptuous of the "tedious process" of the jury system, choosing instead to enforce the law on his own murderous terms. His novels were attacked for their violence and vigilantism-- one critic said "I, the Jury" belonged in "Gestapo training school" -- but some defended them as the most shameless kind of pleasure.
"Spillane is like eating takeout fried chicken: so much fun to consume, but you can feel those lowlife grease-induced zits rising before you've finished the first drumstick," Sally Eckhoff wrote in the liberal weekly The Village Voice.
Became a Jehovah's Witness in 1951
The Hammer novels had a couple of recurring characters: Pat, the honest, but slow-moving cop, and Velda, Mike's faithful secretary. Like so many women in Hammer's life, Velda was a looker, and burning for love.
"Velda was watching me with the tip of her tongue clenched between her teeth," Spillane wrote in "Vengeance is Mine!", an early Hammer novel.
"There wasn't any kitten-softness about her now. She was big and she was lovely, with the kind of curves that made you want to turn around and have another look. The lush fullness of her lips had tightened into the faintest kind of snarl and her eyes were the carnivorous eyes you could expect to see in the jungle watching you from behind a clump of bushes."
While the Hammer books were set in New York, Spillane was a longtime resident of Murrells Inlet, a coastal community near Myrtle Beach.
He moved to South Carolina in 1954 when the area, now jammed with motels and tourist attractions, was still predominantly tobacco and corn fields.
Spillane said he fell in love with the long stretches of deserted beaches when he first saw the area from an airplane.
The writer, who became a Jehovah's Witness in 1951 and helped build the group's Kingdom Hall in Murrells Inlet, spent his time boating and fishing when he wasn't writing. In the 1950s, he also worked as a circus performer, allowing himself to be shot out of a cannon and appearing in the circus film "Ring of Fear."
The home where he lived for 35 years was destroyed by the 135 mph winds of Hurricane Hugo in 1989.
Married three times, Spillane was the father of four children.
siuntres
07-17-2006, 08:29 PM
I the Jury ushered in the mass paperback era in publishing.
Plus how many creators have actually played their own charcters on film?
ironic that TCM just ran a Ralph Meeker/Mike Hammer film a week ago.
K'Nort
07-17-2006, 08:46 PM
I loved the tv show. ('I'll make a note....')
I also loved the books.
But I have to admit I wasn't expecting him to still be alive.
TomStillwell
07-17-2006, 09:27 PM
Stacy Keach will never work again!
RIP Mick.
Cam63
07-18-2006, 12:54 AM
Good work, Mr. Spillane.
Gilda Dent
07-18-2006, 03:46 AM
Huh. Mark this down as one of those "I thought he died ten or fifteen years ago". I have no idea why.
I've never read a Mike Hammer novel. Just never got around to it.
Gilda
Cam63
07-18-2006, 04:55 AM
He originally wrote under the pseudonym of " Jane Austin. "
Sean Walsh
07-18-2006, 06:51 AM
As I understand, he also wrote some Captain America and Human Torch stuff for Marvel, back when it was Timely Comics...
LtMarvel
07-18-2006, 10:35 AM
We'll miss ya tough guy!
I knew he also wrote Captain Marvel stories.
So, who has the rights of Mike Danger?
AndrewCrossett
07-18-2006, 10:39 AM
I mostly remember Mickey Spillane from those beer commercials in the 70's.
pennywisdom
07-18-2006, 11:34 AM
RIP. He was one of the greats and everyone who appreciates hard-boiled crime fiction will miss his talent.
I put Spillane in same echelon as David Goodis and Ross Macdonald and nearly the same echelon as Hammett and Chandler. He was brilliant will be missed.
Metronome35
07-18-2006, 05:38 PM
To me, he'll always be the bloke who's recommendation was printed on the back of the Dark knight Returns.
vBulletin® v3.6.4, Copyright ©2000-2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.