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domingo, 25 de março de 2012

Mickey Spillane


 

Mickey Spillane
(Frank Morrison Spillane)
(1918-2006)
"Those big-shot writers could never dig the fact that there are more salted peanuts consumed than caviar."
Mickey Spillane

"Anyone who doesn't recognize Spillane's importance is an idiot."
Max Allan Collins

Frank Morrison Spillane was a Brooklyn kid, born on March 9, 1918, the only child of Catherine Anne and John Joseph Spillane, an Irish-American bartender who nicknamed him "Mickey."

He passed away July 17, 2006 at his home in Murrells Inlet, South Carolina, leaving behind a wife, a couple of ex-wives, four children, possibly as many as 200 million copies of his books in print and plenty of satisfied customers.

The most popular of those books, of course, feature Spillane's hard-boiled gumshoe/avenger Mike Hammer, the New York eye whose every case turned into a personal vendetta that -- following a suitable number of trysts with beautiful and generally willing babes and raw scenes of brutality -- inevitably ended with Hammer serving up his own kind of justice, usually out of the smoking barrel of a .45.

The critics may have sneered at Spillane's sex-and-violence-filled romps (and admittedly, sometimes it was difficult to tell where the sex ended and the violence began), and he may have been denounced in churches and at US Senate hearings, but the public ate up his books.

Spillane became, easily, the best selling private eye writer of his time and Hammer became a multi-media juggernaut, appearing on radio and in films, a daily newspaper comic strip and not one but two popular television series, as well as, of course, thirteen best-selling novels, stretching from I, the Jury in 1947 and wrapping up with Black Alley in 1996.

Spillane became something of a media star himself himself, playing the part of Hammer in the 1963 film version of The Girl Hunters and appearing as a spokesman for Miller Lite beer TV ad for almost two decades.

Spillane wrote about other memorable tough-guy characters, including super-spy Tiger Mann in a spate of novels written in the mid-1960s, Dogeron Kelly in The Erection Set (1972) and Mako Hooker, a semi-retired spy in Spillane's last novel, Something's Down There, published in 2003, when the author was 85.

But it was Hammer, and Spillane's take-no-prisoner's blend of blood and lust and vengeance that captured the imagination of Cold War audiences and influenced countless imitators.

His success also had a major impact on publishing. Although I, the Jury sold a respectable 10,000 or so copies in hardcover, it was the then-unheard sale of over two million copies of the paperback edition that got the industry's attention. Seemingly overnight, the previously neglected paperback was everywhere, appearing in spinner racks from coast to coast, as publishers rushed to tap into the public's hunger for inexpensive literary thrills, even launching entire paperbacklines such as the legendary Fawcett Gold Medal that published original novels, not reprints.

* * * * *

Spillane grew up in Brooklyn and Elizabeth, New Jersey and graduated from high school in Brooklyn right at the height of the Depression. A natural storyteller, he managed to sell a story or two to various magazines, but mostly he worked odd jobs (including a stint as a lifeguard) before enrolling at Fort Hays State College in Kansas, where he played football and swam competively.

He never graduated, though, and by 1940, he was working part-time in a New York department store during the Christmas rush. There he met another Brooklyn-born youth who introduced Spillane to his brother, Ray Gill, an editor in need of someone to churn out short pieces for his Timely Comics line (including prose in their comics allowed publishers to qualify for cheaper postal rates). Spillane proved up to the task, but left to join the U.S. Army Air Force in the wake of Pearl Harbor.

He served his time as a flight instructor in Mississippi, where he met his first wife, Mary Ann Pearce. After the war, the couple returned to Brooklyn, with dreams of buying a house and some land. Spillane hooked up with the Gill brothers again, this time in a new comic-book freelancing venture. He came up with the idea for new comic, based around a tough, hard-boiled private eye called Mike Danger.

"I wanted to get away from the flying heroes, and I had the prototype cop," Spillane explained.

Unfortunately,Danger failed to sell. Spillane then tried to sell it as a comic strip. According to Mike Benton in his The Illustrated History of Crime Comics, "In 1947, Spillane wrote a "Mike Danger"comic strip for the newspapers. Drawn by Mike Roy and offered by Jerry Iger's syndicate, the comic strip appeared briefly in New York area newspapers and disappeared. Spillane decided to leave the world of comics to become a mystery writer."

He retooled Danger, re-named him Mike Hammer and supposedly cranked out I, the Jury in three weeks. With the help of Ray Gill, he sold it to E. P. Dutton & Co, whose editors weren't apparently all that impressed with Spillane's writing, but nonetheless thought there might be a market for it. So they gave it a shot.

The rest is history. Always a fast -- if not particularly prolific -- writer, he cranked out six more novels, all bestsellers, in the next five years, including My Gun is Quick, One Lonely Night and Vengeance is Mine.

Despite his staggering success, though, in his private life Spillane lived simply. He became a Jehovah's Witness in the early 1950s and moved his family (by then he and Mary Ann had four kids) to Murrells Inlet, a quiet beach community in South Carolina, where he continued to pound away on a manual typewriter.

Unfortunately, the marriage ended in divorce. In 1964, he married an actress, Sherri Malinou, who posed nude on the cover of The Erection Set, but that marriage also ended. In 1983, Spillane married Jane Rodgers Johnson.

* * * * *

Spillane never took himself too seriously, at least publicly, spurning the moniker of "author,'' insisting he wrote simply for the money, and cheerfully admitting he represented "the chewing gum of American literature."

Certainly, Spillane was no great stylist -- his prose was, at best, blunt, direct and workmanlike, just like Hammer. But at its worst it was occasionally so overboiled as to approach parody.

As in "her breasts were laughing things"? And I'm still trying to figure out what "he took off like a herd of turtles," from I, the Jury, actually means.

He was also something of a rarity in publishing -- he was unapologetically conservative, an "unconditional believer in good and evil" who seemed to delight in rattling cages in his fiction, slamming Communists and liberals and anyone else he took exception to. He wasn't above dishing out often crude (even for the era) caricatures of independent women, homosexuals and various racial and ethnic groups (in the early novels, for example, the depiction of blacks -- almost all of whom are domestics or criminals -- still manages to make one cringe -- mostly because it seems simply so gratuitous and mean-spirited). And the virgin/whore complex Hammer had towards women and particularly in regards to his peculiar relationship with Velda, his long-suffering secretary, was nothing short of just plain twisted.

And yet, for all his ham-handed excess and unapologetic worldview that even then must have raised a few eyebrows, the best of Spillane's books, and particularly the Hammer novels, possess a fierce, driving energy and white-hot passion that cannot be denied; one that drags the reader along in its wake and keeps them turning pages.

You step into Hammer's world at your own risk, but by the end of the book, you'll know you've read something, damn it.

UNDER OATH

"I don't give a hoot about reading reviews. What I want to read is the royalty checks."
(Mickey Spillane)

"I'm actually a softie. Tough guys get killed too early... I've got a full head of hair and don't wear eye glasses... And I've kept the smoke coming out of the chimney for a very long time."
(Mickey Spillane, 2004)
.
"Spillane broke down the barriers, where sex and violence were concerned, and this pissed people off. Also, he was perceived as right-wing. The vigilante approach Hammer used turned the stomachs of many liberals... (Spillane) is number three, after Hammett and Chandler (in a list of the 10 most important detective novelists of the 20th century). Anyone who doesn't recognize Spillane's importance is an idiot. There are paperback originals because Gold Medal Books was created to fill the public's demand for Spillane-type fare. Disliking Spillane's writing is one thing -- ignoring history is another. "
(Max Allan Collins, The January Magazine Interview)

"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 , The Village Voice)
NOVELS

.........

I, the Jury (1947; Mike Hammer) ...Buy this book
My Gun Is Quick (1950; Mike Hammer) ...Buy this book
Vengeance Is Mine! (1950; Mike Hammer) ...Buy this book
The Big Kill (1951, Mike Hammer)...Buy this book
The Long Wait (1951)
One Lonely Night (1951; Mike Hammer)...Buy this book
Kiss Me, Deadly (1952; Mike Hammer)...Buy this book
The Deep (1961)
The Girl Hunters (1962; Mike Hammer)
Day of the Guns (1964; Tiger Mann)
The Snake (1964; Mike Hammer)
Bloody Sunrise (1965; Tiger Mann)
The Death Dealers (1965; Tiger Mann)
The By-Pass Control 1966; Tiger Mann)
The Twisted Thing (1966; Mike Hammer)
The Body Lovers (1967; Mike Hammer)
The Delta Factor (1967)....Buy this book
Survival Zero (1970; Mike Hammer)
The Erection Set (1972)
The Last Cop Out (1973)
The Day The Sea Rolled Back (1979; young adult)
The Ship That Never Was (1982; young adult)
The Killing Man (1989; Mike Hammer)
Black Alley (1996; Mike Hammer)...Buy this book
Something Down There (2003).. Buy this book
Dead Street (2007) ., Buy this book

Completed by Max Allan Collins
The Goliath Bone (2008; Mike Hammer)... Buy this book....Kindle it!
The Big Bang (2010; Mike Hammer)... Buy this book....Kindle it!
Kiss Her Goodbye (2011; Mike Hammer).. Buy this book
The Consummata (2012)...Buy this book. .Kindle it!
Lady, Go Die! (2012; Mike Hammer).. Buy this book
Complex 90 (2013; Mike Hammer)
King of the Weeds (2014; Mike Hammer)
SHORT STORIES

.........

"Fresh Meat for a Raider" (Winter 1941, Sub-Mariner Comics #4; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Clams Make the Man" (1942, Joker #2; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"The Sea of Grassy Death" (February 1942, Marvel Mystery Comics #28; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"The Ship In the Desert" (March 1942, Marvel Mystery Comics #29; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Jinx Heap" (March 1942, Blue Bolt, Vol. 2, #10; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Lumps of Death" (April 1942, Marvel Mystery Comics #30; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Killer's Return" (May 1942, Marvel Mystery Comics #31; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Terror in the Grass" (May 1942, Blue BoIt Vol. 2, #12; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Creature of the Deep" (May 1942, Target Comics, #27; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Trouble - Come and Get It" (Spring 1942, 4 Most Comics #2; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Tight Spot" (Spring 1942, Sub-Mariner Comics #5; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Devil Cat" (Spring 1942, Human Torch #7; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"A Case of Poison Ivy" (June 1942, Blue Bolt, Vol. 3 #1; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Last Ride" (June 1942, Marvel I Mystery Comics #32; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Jap Trap" (July 1942, Marvel Mystery Comics #33; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"The Curse of Tut Ken Amen" (August 1942, Marvel Mystery Comics #34; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"'Woodsman's Test" (Summer 1942, 4 Most Comics #3; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"The Woim Toins" (Summer 1942, All Winners Comics #5; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"The Sea Serpent" (Summer 1942, Sub-Mariner Comics #6; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Flight Over Tokyo" (Summer 1942, Human Torch #8; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"A Shot in the Dark" (August 1942, Blue Bolt, Vol. #3, #3; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Undersea Champion" (August 1942, Target Comics #30; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Satan Himself!" (September 1942, Marvel Mystery Comics #35; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Man in the Moon" (Fall 1942, All Winners #6; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Woe Is Me!" (October 1942, Marvel Mystery Comics #36; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Scram, Bugs!" (November 1942, Marvel Mystery Comics #37; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Spook Ship" (November 1942, Target Comics #33; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"Sky Busters" (December 1942, Target Comics #34; also 2004, Primal Spillane)
"The Veiled Woman" (November/December1952, Fantastic; sci-fi; ghost-written by Howard Browne, from an outline by Spillane)
"Together We Kill" (January 1953, Cavalier; also 2001, Together We Kill)
"Everybody's Watching Me" (January-April 1953, Manhunt; serialized in four issues; 2001, Pulp Masters)
"The Girl Behind the Hedge" (October 1953, Manhunt; AKA "The Lady Says Die!")
"The Night I Died" (1953; Mike Hammer; originally an unproduced radio play, tidied up and presented as a short story by Max Allan Collins in 1998's Private Eyes, edited by Spillane and Collins)
"The Pickpocket" (December 1954, Manhunt; 1984, Tomorrow I Die)
"Tonight My Love" (1954, released as 33 1/3 and 45 rpm records Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer Story)
"The Screen Test of Mike Hammer" (July 1955, Male)
"Tomorrow I Die, (February 1956, Cavalier)
"Stand Up and Die!" (June 1958, Cavalier; 1984)
"Me, Hood!" July 1959, Cavalier)
"I'll Die Tomorrow" (March 1960, Cavalier)
"The Seven Year Kill" (July 1960, Cavalier)
"Kick It or Kill" (July 1961, Cavalier; AKA "The Girl Hunters")
"The Affair with the Dragon Lady" (March 1962, Cavalier)
"Hot Cat" (April 1964, Saga)
"The Bastard Bannerman" (June 1964, Saga)
"The Flier (1964, The Flier; AKA "Hot Cat")
"Return of the Hood" (1964, Return of the Hood; 1969, Me, Hood!)
"The Seven Year Kill" (1964, The Flier)
"The Big Bang" (January 1965, Saga; AKA "Return of the Hood)
"Death of the Too-Cute Prostitute" October 1965, Man's Magazine; AKA "Man Alone")
"The Gold Fever Tapes" (1973, Stag Annual #15; 1984, Tomorrow I Die)
"The Dread Chinatown Man" (August 1975, True)
"Toys for the Man-Child" (August 1975, True)
"Sex Is My Vengeance" (1984, Tomorrow I Die)
"Trouble... Come and Get It" (1984, Tomorrow I Die).
"The Killing Man" (December 1989, Playboy; Mike Hammer)
"There's a Killer Loose!" (August 2008 EQMM; co-written by Max Allan Collins)
COLLECTIONS

Me, Hood! (1963)
Return of the Hood
Killer Mine (1968)
The Flier (1964)
The Tough Guys (1969)
Tomorrow I Die (1984)
Together We Kill: The Uncollected Stories of Mickey Spillane (2001)
Collection of "lost" stories, edited by Lynn Myers and Max Allan Collins.
The Mike Hammer Collection Volume 1 (2001)...Buy this book
Handsome paperback omnibus collection of first three Mike Hammer novels, with a new introduction by Max Allan Collins..
The Mike Hammer Collection Volume 2 (2001)...Buy this book
Second trade paperback omnibus collects "One Lonely Night," "The Big Kill" and "Kiss Me, Deadly", plus an introduction by Lawrence Block..
Primal Spillane (2004).. Order this book from Gryphon
Another collection of pulp stories, featuring hard-boiled, crime, WWII, suspense, thrillers, monster stories & even a couple of SF stories. Edited by Lynn Myers and Max Allan Collins..
Byline: Mickey Spillane! (2004)...Buy this book
Edited by Max Allan Collins and Lynn Myers. Final collection of Spillane odds and sods, including work from non-fiction articles about race cars and scuba diving from mens' magazines and a Mike Hammer comedy/fantasy short story circa the late 1950's entitled "The Duke Alexander." Also included is a script for "Tonight, My Love!" from the LP Spillane did in 1954. From Crippen & Landru.
The Mike Hammer Collection Volume 3 (2010)...Buy this book
Third big collection rounds up "The Girl Hunters," "The Snake" and "The Twisted Thing."


http://www.thrillingdetective.com/trivia/spillane.html

Mickey Spillane (1918-2006)





Mickey Spillane (1918-2006) - pseudonym of Frank Morrison Spillane


American thriller writer, master of "hard boiled" style peppered with sex and sadism. Spillane is best-known for his private detective Mike Hammer, who appeared in his first published book I, THE JURY (1947). The hardback edition did not sell well, but the paperback became a world-wide phenomenon. In the character of Hammer, the most chauvinist avenger among classical private eyes, Spillane created a dark counterpart to the knightly Philip Marlowe.

"The biggest part of the joke is the punch line, so the biggest part of a book should be the punch line, the ending. People don't read a book to get to the middle, they read a book to get to the end and hope that the ending justifies all the time they spent reading it. So what I do is, I get my ending and, knowing what my ending is going to be, then I write to the end and have the fun of knowing where I'm going but not how I'm going to get there." (Spillane in Speaking of Murder, ed. by Ed Gorman and Martin H. Greenberg, 1998)

Frank Morrison Spillane was born in Brooklyn, New York, the only child of John J. Spillane, a bartender, and Catherine A Spillane. Noteworthy, in THE TWISTED THING (1966) Mike Hammer mentions his father; he was the one who comforted him when he hurt himself. In his youth Spillane read such writers as Alexandre Dumas and Anthony Hope, and was also fascinated by comic books. He graduated in 1935 from Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn, and then attended briefly Fort Hays State College in Kansas, but dropped out, and moved back to New York. Spillane worked as a lifegueard at Breezt Point, Queens, and in the 1940s he sold ties at Gimbles department stores.

Spillane began his writing career in the mid-1930s. His first stories were published mostly in comic books and pulp magazines. He developed Mike Danger, a private detective, and wrote among others for Captain America, Captain Marvel, and The Human Torch. During WW II Spillane served as a flying instructor for the U.S. Army Air Force in Mississippi and Florida; he never got overseas. In 1945 he married his first wife, Mary Ann Pierce, in Greenwood, Mississippi. They had four children. Achieving the rank of captain by the time, he left the service, and returned in 1946 to New York.

"Spillane writes with speed, and the rough-hewn poetry of his narrator creates a fantasy city, a NewYork of myth and dream, populated by the same character types as those found in the work of Daly, Hammett, and Chandler - good girls, black widows, thugs, frustrated cops, gang lords, corrupt society leaders - but delivered with a unique fever-dream fervor." (Max Allan Collins in Mystery & Suspence Writers, vol. 2, ed. by Robin W. Winks, 1998)

I, the Jury was written in only nine days. When the manuscript was passed to Editor in Chief Nicholaus Wreden at E.P. Dutton & Co., he said: "It isn't in the best of taste, but it will sell." Spillane told that he wanted an advance of $1,000 so he could build a four-room cinderblock house in upstate New York for himself and his young wife. The house was later named Little Bohenia. As a Signet paperback, I, the Jury became such success that Spillane quickly produced six more Hammer novels, five of them published between 1950 and 1952. THE LONG WAIT (1951) sold 3 million copies in a single week in 1952. Spillane himself posed for the dust wrapper photographs of Hammer novels and starred in the film version of THE GIRL HUNTERS (1963). At home he usually wore T-shirts or tight wool sweaters and close-fitting blue jeans. He also refused to wear a necktie and boasted in the 1950s, that he still owns only one suit.

"Crime novels are a good way to make money," Spillane once stated. However, the sixth Hammer novel, THE TWISTED THING, did not appear until 1966. The friends of this ferocious detective included his secretary Velda, a dark-haired beauty, who is the tough soul mate of Mike, and Captain Pat Chambers of the New York Police Department. In the first novel Hammer investigates the brutal murder of his best friend. Eventually he discovers that his girl friend, the beautiful but bad Charlotte Manning, a lady psychiatrist, is the murderer. At the end of the story, she performs a strip tease in order to dissuade the angry Hammer from killing her. When he shoots her, Manning asks, "How c-could you?" and he replies, "It was easy" - one of the most famous last lines in popular fiction.

In VENGEANCE IS MINE! (1950) Hammer is tormented by the memory of Charlotte and vows never to kill another woman, until a murderous doppelgänger of her is revealed to be a transvestite. The theme of crime and punishment - Hammer acting as the tool of some ancient God - continued in the following novels. Hammer often hears noises in his head, sometimes like the plunging pistons in a gasolinen engine, or kettledrums, or bells. In ONE LONELY NIGHT (1952) a Judge argues that Hammer enjoys killing, which makes his as bad as those he kills. However, when it's a question of the Communist menace, Hammer swaps his .45 for a Tommy gun.

In KISS ME DEADLY (1952) a beautiful woman, Berga Torn, clad only in a trenchcoat, stops Hammer's sportscar on a lonely road. She has escaped from a sanitarium, where she was referred by Dr. Soberin. However, her chasers beat Hammer, torture and kill her. Hammer starts to investigate the case, Velda is kidnapped by the Mob but Hammer rescues her. He finds out that Lily Carver is Soberin's mistress and has used him to get a metal box containing $2 million in heroin. Hammer gets his revenge – he kills her – but is left in the end in a burning house, trying to get away from the flames. The novel started Spillane's nine-year silence as a novelist. The hiatus ended with THE DEEP, a story of a tough guy, who returns to his old neighborhood – revealing in the end of the story that he is a cop now.

"Why should one of the most popular authors of the twentieth century need defending? Easy, as Mike Hammer might say: his subject matter and his approach were so hard-hitting, so individual, that Spillane repelled the more proper and staid among the Literary Establishment (and the Establishment in general, including Dr. Frederic Wertham and Parents Magazine and other unpointed arbiters of public morality.). And it has taken time, and changing mores - plus the natural PR knack of Spillane himself, with such disarming tactics as funny self-parody beer commercials and the writing of award-winning children's books - to give him his rightful place as the living giant among mystery writers." ( 'Mecca Spillane' by Max Allan Collins, in The Big Book of Noir, 1998)

Spillane told once that he finishes his text in two weeks and do not revise anything he has written. He used a standard typewriter, and often he could go on for five or six pages without changing a single word. "Hell, I'n not an author, I'm a writer," he said. "I've got to make a living, somehow. I'm not writing just for fun. I'm not trying to educate the people. I'm just trying to entertain. If they put their money in the hat, that's all I want." Although critics tried to belittle the author's achievements from the beginning, Spillane had such defenders as Ayn Rand, who has said, that "Spillane gives me the feeling of hearing a military band in a public park." To his critics Spillane answered, "but it's good garbage." On a list complied in 1967 of all the best-selling books published in America between 1895 and 1965, seven of the top twenty-nine were written by Spillane. Especially during the height of anti-Communist paranoia, Hammer's unyielding, patriotic character comforted many American readers.

Spillane stopped writing full-length novels for many years after conversion to the Jehovah's Witnesses in 1952, and between 1973 and 1989, when he advertised Miller Lite beer. Spillane said that he was first attracted to the Witnesses by a member who proved him that Darwin's theory of the Evolution was in error. In the early 1950s Spillane became involved with a circus and did some trampoline work as well as being shot out of a cannon. Hammer was brought back with THE GIRL HUNTERS (1962), in which the hero is still haunted by the memory of Charlotte. The book was followed by four more titles. Spillane's second wife, the actress Sherri Malinou, served as the model for several of the later Hammer book covers.

Spillane's only other series character, Tiger Mann, was inspired by James Bond boom. Mann works for an espionage organization funded by a radical right-wing billionare. The character was first introduced in novel DAY OF THE GUN (1964). In his longest and most ambitious novel, THE ERECTION SET, Spillane followed in the footsteps of Harold Robbins and Irving Wallace.

In 1983 Spillane married Jane Rodgers Johnson, a former Miss South Carolina, and twenty-eight years his junior. In 1995 the Mystery Writers of America finally presented him the Grand Master award. Spillane returned to comic books in the mid-1990s by co-creating a futuristic Mike Danger. Although he did not do the script writing, Spillane has completed a draft of a Mike Danger science fiction novel. Spillane also wrote two books for children. THE DAY THE SEA ROLLED BACK (1980) earned him a Junior Literary Guild Award. Most of Spillane's short fiction was produced in the 1950s and published in Manhunt and such men's magazines as Cavalier and Male.

The unbeatable Hammer survived to the 1990s, outliving William Crane, Philip Marlowe, Mike Shayne, and Lew Archer. In BLACK ALLEY (1996) he wakes up from a coma and tracks down a missing $89 billion. Times have changed, and Spillane reveals his tough-guy's fondness for Wagner (1813-1883), the German opera composer, whose music had a strong appeal to the Nazis. Today, however, Wagner's music is almost unreservedly accepted without political overtones. In an interview at the age of 83, Spillane mentioned that he still writes and has finished a couple of adventure stories. The last novel about Hammer was under work. Spillane died in July 2006, at the age of 88.

For further reading: 'Death's Fair-haired Boy' by Richard W. Johnston, in Life (23 July, 1952); One Lonely Knight: Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer by Max Allan Collins (1984); Murder in the Millions by J. Keneth Van Dover (1984); The American Private Eye by David Geherin (1985); Speaking of Murder, ed. by Ed Gorman and Martin H. Greenberg (1998).  Films: In 1962 Spillane portrayed his own detective character Hammer in The Girl Hunters. Except his own performance, he was not satisfied with the actors playing Hammer. According to Spillane, Kiss Me Deadly "stank", and Stacey Keach is a good actor, but "he doesn't know how to wear a hat". Other films: Ring of Fear (1953), Colombo series (1973), Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer (1956-58, starring Darren McGavin, one of the scriptwriters was Bill S. Ballinger); Mickey Spillane's Margin for Murder (1981, starring Kevin Dobson), Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer: Murder Me, Murder You (1983, starring Stacy Keach), The Return of Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer (1987), The New Mike Hammer (1987). See also: "Hard-boiled" mystery writers Horace McCoy, Raymond Chandler, Jonathan Latimer, Dashiell Hammett. As a romantic hero who has taken the law in his own hand, Mike Hammer comes from the same literary tradition as Leslie Charteris' Simon Templar alias The Saint. Spillane's own model was Carroll John Daly, who started the hard-boiled school on mystery. HIs tough detective was named Race Williams. Daly was innovative writer and his use of the first-person style influenced Spillane. One of his most quoted line is, "Detective Satan Hall dropped to one knee and fired twice."
Selected bibliography:

I, THE JURY, 1947 - Minä olen tuomari (suom. Topi Leistelä, 1953) / Minä olen valamiehistö (suom. Tapio Hiisivaara, 1968) / Minä, kostaja (suom. Kari Nenonen, 1983) - Films: 1953, dir. by Harry Essex, starring Biff Elliot as Hammer, Preston Foster (Capt. Pat Chambers), Peggie Castle (Charlotte Manning), Margaret Sheridan (Velda); 1982, dir. by Richard T. Heffron, starring Armand Assante, Barbara Carrera, Laurene Landon
MY GUN IS QUICK, 1950 - Tästä alkaa kosto (suom. Risto Kalliomaa, 1953) / Liipasin on herkkä (suom. Tapio Hiisivaara, 1968) / Silmä silmästä (= Tästä alkaa kosto, suom. Risto Kalliomaa, 1953) - Film 1957, prod. Parklane Pictures Inc., dir. by Phil Victor, starring Robert Bray (Mike Hammer), Whitney Blake, Patricia Donahue, Pamela Duncan (Velda), Booth Colman (Det. Pat Chambers)
VENGEANCE IS MINE, 1950 - Velda vimmastuu (suom. Olavi Linnus, 1954) / Kosto on minun (suom. Tapio Hiisivaara, 1969) / Kosto on minun (suom. Leevi Lehto, 1992) / Kosto on suloinen (= Velda vimmastuu, suom. Olavi Linnus, 1954)
THE BIG KILL, 1951 - Nainen ilman kasvoja (suom. Risto Kalliomaa, 1955) / Mike Hammer iskee (suom. Tapio Hiisivaara, 1967) / Mike Hammer iskee (suom. Leevi Lehto, 1992) / Rakasta ja kuole (= Nainen ilman kasvoja, suom. Risto Kalliomaa, 1955)
THE LONG WAIT, 1951 - Mies ilman muistia (suom. 1954) / Yhden on kuoltava (suom. Tapio Hiisivaara, 1967) / Pitkä odotus (= Mies ilman muistia, suom. 1954) - Film 1954, prod. Parklane Pictures Inc., dir. Victor Saville, starring Anthony Quinn, Charles Coburn and Gene Evans (Mike Hammer makes no appearance!)
ONE LONELY NIGHT, 1952 - Kuolet, ellet kerro (suom. Risto Kalliomaa, 1953) / Yksin yössä (suom. Sirkka Tuominen, 1970) / Kuoleman käskyläinen (=Kuolet, ellet kerro, suom. Risto Kalliomaa, 1953)
KISS ME, DEADLY, 1952 - Suutele minua, julmuri (suom. 1955) / Mike Hammer ja mafia (suom. Tapio Hiisivaara, 1968) - Film: 1955, dir. by Robert Aldrich, starring Ralph Meeker, Albert Dekker, Paul Stevart, Maxine Cooper, Cloris Leachman, Gaby Rodgers. In the film version, Hammer is "just a punk, motivated only by a narcissistic opportunism. When his assistance is sought by the police, he can only reply, "What's in it for me?" He assaults everyone, caring little for age, gender, and nationality, and its significant that his abuse of the faithful Velda (Maxine Cooper), a caring, sensitive woman, parallels the abuse of Lily (Gaby Rogers) by Dr. Soberin (Allen Dekker)." Novels into Film by John C. Tibbetts and James M. Welsh, 1999.
THE DEEP, 1961 - Yö (suom. Arto Tuovinen, 1963) - Film 1967, Aslan yürekli kabadayi, prod. prod. Ugur Film (Turkey), dir. Memduh Ün, starring Ayhan Isik, Sevda Ferdag and Altan Günbay
THE GIRL HUNTERS, 1962 - Älä odota armoa (suom. Antero Tiusanen, 1964) / Älä odota armoa (suom. Seppo Joenmaa, 1988) - Film 1963, dir. by Ray Rowland, starring Mickey Spillane (as Mike Hammer), Shirley Eaton, Scott Peters, Guy Kingsley Poynter
ME, HOOD!, 1963
RETURN OF THE HOOD, 1964 - Taisteleva huppukaulus (suom. Seppo Pekkola, 1970)
THE FLIER, 1964 - Lentäjä & Seitsemän vuoden murha (suom. Seppo Pekkola, 1971)
DAY OF THE GUNS, 1964 - Aikamoinen nainen (suom. Arto Tuovinen, 1966)
BLOODY SUNRISE, 1965 - Verinen auringonlasku (suom. Arto Tuovinen, 1966)
THE SNAKE, 1965 - Käärme (suom. Arto Tuovinen, 1965)
KILLER MINE, 1965 (novelettes) - Sinä, tappaja (suom. Seppo Pekkola, 1970)
THE TWISTED THING, 1966 - Kiero juttu, Mike Hammer (suom. Esko Hamilo, 1968)
THE DEATH DEALERS, 1966 - Tappajain markkinat (suom. Esko Hamilo, 1967) / Kuoleman kauppiaat (suom. Reijo Kalvas, 1985)
THE DELTA FACTOR, 1967 - Hurrikaani (suom. Eero Raassina, 1970) / Tuntematon tekijä (suom. Tauno Peltola, 1985) - Film 1970, dir. Tay Garnett, starring Christopher George, Yvette Mimieux, Diane McBain, Ralph Taeger, Yvonne Carlo
THE BY-PASS CONTROL, 1967 - Lähtölaskenta, Tiger Mann (suom. Esko Hamilo, 1968) / Ohituskytkin (suom. Marja Hildén, 1986)
THE BODY LOVERS, 1967 - Ruoska (suom. Esko Hamilo, 1969) / Kerrasta poikki, Mike Hammer (suom. Reijo Kalvas, 1985)
THE TOUGH GUYS, 1969 - Kolme kovaa (suom. Heikki Kannosto, 1990)
SURVIVAL... ZERO, 1970 - Päivät ovat luetut, Mike Hammer (suom. Esko Hamilo, 1971)
THE ERECTION SET, 1972 - New York, New York (suom. Jorma-Veikko Sappinen, 1987)
THE MICKEY SPILLANE OMNIBUS, 1973
THE LAST COP OUT, 1973 - Tappajain ruletti (suom. Erkki Hakala, 1974)
VINTAGE SPILLANE, 1974
THE DAY THE SEA ROLLED BACK, 1980 (juvenile)
OH, MIKE!, 1980 (script for musical, music by Cy Coleman, prod. 1981)
THE SHIP THAT NEVER WAS, 1982 (juvenile)
MICKEY SPILLANE'S MIKE HAMMER: THE COMIC STRIP, 1982-84
TOMORROW I DIE, 1984
THE KILLING MAN, 1989 - Mike Hammer ja tappaja (suom. Leevi Lehto, 1990)
MURDER IS MY BUSINESS, 1994 (ed., with Max Allan Collins)
BLACK ALLEY, 1996 - Pimeät kujat (suom. Jorma-Veikko Sappinen, 1996)
VENGEANCE IS HERS, 1997 (ed., with Max Allan Collins)
GOLDEN AGE OF MARVEL COMICS, 1998 (ed.)
PRIVATE EYES, 1998 (ed., with Max Allan Collins)
A CENTURY OF NOIR, 2002 (ed., with Max Allan Collins)
SOMETHING'S DOWN THERE, 2003 - Vaarallinen kolmio (suom. Jorma-Veikko Sappinen, 2007)
BYLINE: MICKEY SPILLANE, 2005 (ed.  Max Allan Collins, Lynn F. Myers, Jr.)
DEAD STREET, 2007 (with Max Allan Collins)
THE GOLIATH BONE, 2009 (with Max Allan Collins)
THE BIG BANG, 2010  (with Max Allan Collins)
KISS HER GOODBYE: A MIKE HAMMER NOVEL, 2011 (with Max Allan Collins)
THE CONSUMMATA, 2011 (with Max Allan Collins)

http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/spillane.htm