THE COMPLETE IVY FROST
By Donald Wandrei
Edited by Stephen Haffner
Haffner Press
698 pgs
We always attempt to make our reviews personal and not
cookie-cutter dissertations that simply say yea or nea. That has never been
more vital than with this review of a really unique pulp character which we not
only love but have actually written. So let’s start by getting the cold facts
out of the way. Donald A. Wandrei (20 April 1908 to 15 Oct 1987) was a writer
of science fiction, fantasy and and weird fiction. He was also an editor and
co-founder, with fellow writer August Derleth, of the popular publishing firm,
Arkham House. Ask most pulp fans and
this is the data they will recall.
Whereas only a select few know that Wandrei also wrote mysteries and ultimately created one of the most colorful detectives ever to grace the pages of Clues magazine.
Professor I.V. Frost was Wandrei’s take on Sherlock Holmes.
He was an eccentric genius who gave up teaching because it bored him and turned
to solving bizarre, intricate mysteries that baffled the police. In his first
published tale, he hired a beautiful blonde named Jean Moray to be his
assistant, ala a girl-Friday. Try imagining Basil Rathbone (Wandrei envisioned
Frost as tall, skinny, gaunt fellow ala a living scarecrow) having as as his
partner the sexy blond-bombshell, Jean Harlow.
That’s Frost and Moray. Though Jean is more than cupid lips, gray-green
eyes and an hour glass figure; she’s also a graduate of Berkeley with a Masters Degree in Physics.
And those are the qualifictions that land her job; not her looks. Though in his
own clever way, Frost often takes advantage of them when distracting others who
are attempting to stymie his investigations.
Wandrei wrote a total of eighteen I.V. Frost mysteries for
Clues. In 2000, D.H. Olson, who penned the excellent introduction here, edited
a volume published by Fedogan and Bremer collecting the first eight of Frost's
adventures. Which is where we were first introduced to these characters. A
second volume of the remaining ten tales was promised but much to our dismay never
materialized. Now, thanks to Haffner Press that has been corrected with this
truly wonderful, complete collection which arrived in 2020. For the past four
years it has sat on our bookshelf.
During the intervening years, we were approached by
Moonstone Books publisher and managing editor, Joe Gentile, asking if would be
like to write new I.V. Frost adventures. We were thrilled at the prospect and
quickly wrote not only a new prose tale, but three short comic strips. Redbud
Studio published two of those strips in the first ever I.V. Frost comic book,
while Moonstone eventually published the third as a bonus feature in a Black
Bat special. Then three years ago Joe called again wanting another prose yarn
and we happily obliged him. It appeared in a book series called Double-Shot.
When Joe reached out again to us last year, we not only agreed to once again
join Frost and Ms. Moray on a case, but realized it was high time we sat down
and read through the entire Haffner edition, finally familiarizing ourselves
with the entire cannon.
It is truly a remarkable series and Wandrei was a deft
writer comfortable with both frivolous banter ala the sexual tension between
Frost and Jean, and inventing some of the most bizarre, truly grotesque
scenarios into which to set them. Together the brainy professor and his cocky,
reckless protégé tackled twisted, complex crimes and battled the most ruthless
villains ever to appear in print. Happily, the volume is still available from
Haffner and if you are a true fan of the pulps, you need to have this book in
your library. Meanwhile, keep an out for “Recipe For Murder,” by this reviewer,
coming soon from Moonstone Books in another volume of Double-Shot. Somehow we
have a feeling; we aren’t done with Frost and Ms. Moray just yet.
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