Autorenbild.

Marvin H. Albert (1924–1996)

Autor von Nebel über Manhattan

88+ Werke 772 Mitglieder 24 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

Über den Autor

Hinweis zur Begriffsklärung:

(eng) Marvin Albert wrote books 1, 2, and 5 of the Soldato series using his "Al Conroy" pen name. Gil Brewer wrote books 3 and 4 of the series using the same pen name.  Because the pen name was used by different authors, it should not be combined with either Albert or Brewer's author page.

Bildnachweis: Stars Color

Reihen

Werke von Marvin H. Albert

Nebel über Manhattan (1996) 92 Exemplare
The Dark Goddess (1978) 39 Exemplare
The Untouchables (1987) 33 Exemplare
Ypsilon. Roman. (1975) 32 Exemplare
Der Schnüffler (1988) 28 Exemplare
Die Medusa - Affaire. Roman. (1982) 24 Exemplare
The Pink Panther (1964) 19 Exemplare
Einsatzkommando Nr. 7. (1974) 19 Exemplare
Stone Angel (1986) 19 Exemplare
Apache Rising (1957) 18 Exemplare
Lady im Zement (1961) 17 Exemplare
The Last Smile (1988) 17 Exemplare
Back in the Real World (1986) 17 Exemplare
Bimbo Heaven (1990) 17 Exemplare
Valley of the Assassins (1975) 16 Exemplare
Lady in Cement [1968 film] (1968) — Screenwriter — 15 Exemplare
Die Entführung. Roman. (1987) 15 Exemplare
Bettgeflüster (1959) 15 Exemplare
Operation Lila. Toulon 1942. (1983) 15 Exemplare
The Midnight Sister (1989) 15 Exemplare
Zig Zag Man (1991) 14 Exemplare
Der Boss (1987) 13 Exemplare
Skylark Mission (1973) 12 Exemplare
What's New Pussycat? (1965) 12 Exemplare
The Great Race (1965) 11 Exemplare
Driscoll's Diamonds (1973) 11 Exemplare
The Riviera Contract (1992) 11 Exemplare
My Kind of Game (1962) 10 Exemplare
Der Don ist tot. (1972) 10 Exemplare
Last Train to Bannock (1963) 10 Exemplare
Reformed Gun (1959) 9 Exemplare
Ein Pyjama für zwei (1962) 8 Exemplare
Goodbye Charlie (1964) 8 Exemplare
Flucht vor dem Boss (1961) 8 Exemplare
The Divorce (1965) 7 Exemplare
Till it Hurts (1960) 7 Exemplare
Three Rode North (1978) 7 Exemplare
Trail of a Tramp (1958) 6 Exemplare
The Hoods Come Calling (1958) (1958) 6 Exemplare
The Girl with No Place to Hide (1959) 6 Exemplare
The Long White Road (1957) 5 Exemplare
Die Waffenhändlerin. (1986) 5 Exemplare
Under the Yum Yum Tree (1963) 5 Exemplare
Broadsides & Boarders (1957) 5 Exemplare
All the Young Men (1960) 5 Exemplare
Eine zuviel im Bett (1988) 5 Exemplare
That Jane from Maine (1959) 4 Exemplare
No Chance In Hell (1960) 4 Exemplare
The Reformed Gun (1959) 4 Exemplare
Happy-End im September (1964) 3 Exemplare
LE TOTEM TUE (1961) 3 Exemplare
Un démon au paradis (2003) 3 Exemplare
Ein Appartement für drei (1965) 3 Exemplare
The Outrage (1964) 3 Exemplare
Renegade Posse (1958) 3 Exemplare
Der Dschungel. Roman. (1987) 2 Exemplare
Honeymoon Hotel (1964) 2 Exemplare
Descends à Babylone-- (1987) 2 Exemplare
Party Girl (1958) 2 Exemplare
Rhapsodie en rouge (1958) 1 Exemplar
Requiem pour un muckraker (1999) 1 Exemplar
The V.I.P.s (1963) 1 Exemplar
Fais des bulles] (1962) 1 Exemplar
INDESIRABLE (SERIE NOIRE 1) (1961) 1 Exemplar
Je reprends mes boules (1963) 1 Exemplar
The Golden Circle (1987) 1 Exemplar
Suivez-moi jeune homme (1959) 1 Exemplar
Don Ha Muerto El (1975) 1 Exemplar
El Complejo de Medusa (1982) 1 Exemplar
Le Cri du sang (1975) 1 Exemplar
Une couronne pour le don (1973) 1 Exemplar
Young Men Can Sing 1 Exemplar
Whats New Pussycat? (1965) 1 Exemplar
THE BOUNTY KILLER (1958) 1 Exemplar
The Law and Jake Wade (1969) 1 Exemplar
Posse At High Pass 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

The Law and Jake Wade [1958 film] (1958) — Original book — 9 Exemplare

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Wissenswertes

Geburtstag
1924-01-22
Todestag
1996-03-24
Geschlecht
male
Geburtsort
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Sterbeort
Menton, France
Hinweis zur Identitätsklärung
Marvin Albert wrote books 1, 2, and 5 of the Soldato series using his "Al Conroy" pen name. Gil Brewer wrote books 3 and 4 of the series using the same pen name.  Because the pen name was used by different authors, it should not be combined with either Albert or Brewer's author page.

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Unexpectedly kind of brilliant
 
Gekennzeichnet
whatmeworry | 1 weitere Rezension | Apr 9, 2022 |
As hurricane Irma approached Florida, even though I was a good distance inland, it was a bit unsettling.

Tony Rome with Frank Sinatra turned up on the broadcast TV channel Movies!, and I recorded it and watched it Saturday afternoon Sept. 10 as the storm neared Florida.

It had been a while since I'd seen it, having first learned of it in Jon Tuska's The Detective in Hollywood when I was a kid. It came in the wake of Paul Newman's Harper as part of a mini-detective cycle in the late '60s. I caught it finally on cable years after that.

I'd forgotten much of it as I re-watched the film, which was about all I could really focus on that pre-Irma afternoon with all the hurricane prep I could manage already accomplished.

Maybe the Miami setting played a small role. It was kind of relaxing watching Sinatra drive Jill St. John around in a convertible on happier and sunny Florida days.

The storm passed through in the wee hours of Sept. 11-12 , bringing us a lot of wind, but we survived and were lucky. We lost power 36 hours or so and had water and canned ravioli, so we fared OK.

I plucked the novel the movie was based on from my shelves. Somewhere along the way I picked up a tie-in edition of the 1960 book but had never read it.

I was pleasantly surprised. The novel's really deftly plotted and fairly character rich. I suspect Albert was a Raymond Chandler fan, but resemblances are really a tip of the fedora, I believe.

Anthony Rome, the hard-boiled narrator protagonist, is an ex-Miami cop with a gambling problem. He lives on a houseboat called the Straight Pass from the craps game that won it for him, and Travis McGee's Busted Flush is possibly a tip of the fedora to that even though McGee didn't wear one.

Anthony aka Tony's slightly less cool than Sinatra is in the movie. He gets rattled a little more, but the movie's fairly faithful to the novel's plot.

Rome is called on by an ex-partner to drive a missing heiress home from a seedy hotel where she's wound up at the end of a drinking binge. When he arrives at her dad's house, he's promptly hired by her businessman father, Rudy Kosterman, to find out what's troubling his daughter, his only heir from a first marriage.

By the time Tony makes it back to the Straight Pass, thugs are waiting, in search of a daisy-shaped diamond pin the daughter, Diana Pines, should have been wearing.

Tony's situation gets worse from there. That ex-partner's murdered soon after Tony asks about the missing pin, and he's off to figure out what's up as his efforts lead to word of a swindler named Nimmo and his henchman named Catleg.

From ruined-mansions to secret gambling dens and redneck shanty towns, Tony dodges bullets, outmaneuvers cops, including pal Lt. Santini, and encounters drug dealers. He finally figures out what's up with the pin and the Kosterman family as the tale winds down. It really all ties together in a tight package.

I need to look up the other Rome books including Lady in Cement, which was also adapted into a film about a year after Tony Rome. Albert moved on from Rome after three titles to craft a longer series about a hero named Pete Sawyer.
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
SidWilliams | 1 weitere Rezension | May 10, 2018 |
Scarlet Women is set in New York City during the Grant administration just as Tammany Hall is beginning to crumble. Corruption is pervasive and our hero, Harp, an ex-street urchin, has been hired by a wealthy but unscrupulous law firm, to locate the wife of a prominent merchant. She has disappeared. Several of the missing woman’s clothes have been found on the body of a prostitute killed in a warehouse, ostensibly during the course of a robbery. His investigations soon begin to lead to other bodies and a confrontation with the local precinct captain, who has predictably brutal ways of interrogating suspects and who has his own motives for wanting the murder of the prostitute solved as quickly as possible.

It’s a good mystery that captures the gulf between rich and poor and what it must have been like to live in New York City after the Civil War. It has numerous little details such as little explanations about
the two kinds of horse-drawn trolleys, and about the laborious methods for clearing snow off the trolley tracks. Teams of ten horses pulled plows that pushed the snow off the tracks. The piles were then shoveled
by cheap immigrant labor into other wagons to be dumped into the river.
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
ecw0647 | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 30, 2013 |
One of Albert's almost innumerable movie tie-ins. While I have never seen the movie, I do remember being very entertained by this book when I read it at a far too young age!
½
 
Gekennzeichnet
datrappert | Apr 28, 2013 |

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