Hardest of the Hard-Boiled: #1

SOLOMON’S VINEYARD. London: Methuen & Co. Ltd., [1941]. Octavo, pp. [1-6] [1] 2-218, publisher’s light blue cloth stamped in black. First edition. Hard-boiled mystery novel republished later as THE FIFTH GRAVE, a 1950 American paperback with drastically expurgated text. “SOLOMON’S VINEYARD is a genuine hard-boiled classic … It has everything! A private eye; a shoot-out at a roadhouse; necrophilia; a shoot-out in a steam bath; mobsters; a crooked police chief; a bizarre religious cult; a knife fight in a whorehouse; kidnapping; a mystery woman with a taste for kinky sex; human sacrifice; crypt-robbing — you name it, detective Karl Craven has to deal with it … For this book … [Latimer] indulges in his taste for Grand Guignol with evident relish. SOLOMON’S VINEYARD is clearly Latimer’s homage to the classic hard-boiled detective story … As such it is a brilliant success …” (Art Scott). Pronzini and Muller, 1001 Midnights, pp. 465-466. Owner’s inked signature at top edge of front free endpaper. A very good copy in nearly fine dust jacket priced 7/6 on the front flap. From the library of a well-known mystery writer with his library stamp on the front paste-down. Rare in dust jacket.

November 1988 IPL first print reissue

Often referred to as a lost classic, this novel was thought to be so hardboiled and unrelenting that it no American publisher would touch it. First published as a British hardcover in 1941, it was edited to align with UK spelling and slang. The first US appearance, in 1946, was a modified and edited (read ‘softened’) version entitled The Fifth Grave. That version was released as a Popular Library paperback in 1950. [cover art by Rudolph Belarski, from the November 1949 issue of Popular Detective]

Though there was a limited collector’s edition printed in 1982, this IPL paperback is the true thus US trade edition first printing of the full text of the novel.

With Paul Cain’s Fast One, Solomon’s Vineyard is considered to be the hardest of the hardboiled of the great era of crime writing. Here’s the opening paragraph as narrated by private eye Karl Craven:

“From the way her buttocks looked under the black silk dress, I knew she’d be good in bed. The silk was tight and under it the muscles worked slow and easy. I saw weight there, and control, and, brother, those are things I like in a woman. I put down my bags and went after her along the station platform.”

1953 Mercury digest/Jonathan Press abridged edition – cover art by George Salter

This classic is now available from the Stark House Press imprint Black Gat Book. Though it has Latimer’s original title, that was used for the edited version, the new edition contains the “unexpurgated text”.

cover art by Rudolph Belarski

[post updated 6/30/25]

1937 Detective Comics #7 ~ cover art by Creig Flessel

Detective Comics #7 (DC, 1937) CGC FN 6.0 Cream to off-white pages. A great mid-grade copy of a Platinum Age rarity. CGC has certified only three copies with a higher grade than this one to date, the highest being a VF- 7.5. The gritty cover is by Creig Flessel

February 1942 issue ~ cover art by Rafael DeSoto

February 1942 issue

cover art by Rafael DeSoto

better image than previously posted

~ W.T. Ballard, “The Colt and the Killer”, 26th of 27 stories with ‘Bill Lennox, troubleshooter for Consolidated Films’, 39th of 43 stories in BM

~ William E. Brandon, “Wake Up and Give!”, ‘skullduggery & a college bequest’, 4th of 7 stories in BM

~ John Lawrence, “Murder, Maestro, Please”, ‘Jamie Harrod, ‘Maestro of Swing’, 1st -person narrator, framed for murder; set in Detroit’, 11th of 14 stories in BM

~ Peter Paige, “The Night You Shot Hitler”, ’Murder of an RAF pilot in NYC’, 10th of 12 stories in BM

~ C.G. Tahney, [pseud of Charles Green, not to be confused with Charles M. Green], “And a Little Child Shall Bleed Them”, Nickie and Uncle Pat, 3rd of 5 stories in BM

©Seattle Mystery Bookshop












©Seattle Mystery Bookshop



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September 1931 issue ~ cover art by J.W. Schlaikjer

September 1931 issue

cover art by J.W. Schlaikjer

~ Carroll John Daly, “Death for Two”, 42nd of 53 with RW, Race ‘Williams pinch-hits for his friend, Sergeant O’Rourke’, reprinted in Shooting out of Turn: The Collected Hard-boiled Stories of Race Williams, v.3 (Altus, 2017), 54th of 71 appearances in BM

~ Erle Stanley Gardner, “Promise to Pay”, 37th of 73 Ed Jenkins, with Lui Sing Fong, patriarchal master of Chinatown, 2nd of 3 connected stories (7/1931 and 12/1931), 54th of 99 stories in BM

~ Nels Leroy Jorgensen, “The Sound of Guns”, 16th of 32 with Stuart “Black” Burton, ‘square-shooting gambler from the Southwest, often entangled with the law’, ‘set in NYC’, 22nd of 39 stories in BM

~ Frederick L. Nebel, “Pearls are Tears”, 6th of 15 stories with ‘tough dick Donahue of Interstate’, reprinted in Tough as Nails (2012, Altus), 34 of 67 stories in BM

~ Stewart Stirling, (‘possible pseud. of Stewart Sterling?’), “Pushover”, 4th of 8 stories with ‘Johnny Hi Gear, a.k.a. K-5, Undercover Agent’, ‘…& boxing fix’ [Sterling and Stirling were pen names of Nathaniel Prentice Winchell, 20 total stories in BM]. Reprinted in Boomerang Dice: The Complete Black Mask Cases of Johnny Hi Gear (Steeger Books, 2020).

~ Raoul [Fauconnier] Whitfield, “Red Terrace”, ‘Alan Van Cleve, wealthy sportsman, man-about-town, 2nd (of 6) segment in The Skyline Murders series; printed as separate stories rather than conventional serial’; pub. as Killer’s Carnival (1932) under pseudonym of Temple Field’,  50th of 67 stories in BM [see also 24 stories as Ramon Decolta]

©Seattle Mystery Bookshop