ALL PULP REVIEWS by Ron Fortier
COMPLEX 90
By Mickey Spillane & Max Allan Collins
Titan Books
244 pages
Available May 2013
Beginning a new year with a new Mike Hammer novel is a cause
for jubilant celebration. In his
short preface to the book, begun by the late Mickey Spillane, Collins informs
us that the setting is 1964 and “Complex 90” is in part a sequel to the 1961
Mike Hammer novel, “The Girl Hunters.”
For those of you unfamiliar with that private eye classic, a brief
summary is in order.
“The Girl Hunters” opens with our down-and-out hero
discovering that his secretary, and one true love, Velda, has returned from the
dead. Having lived in an alcoholic
haze since her disappearance seven years earlier, he learns that Velda had been
on a spy mission for the government, captured by the Russians and thrown into
one of their of their prisons where she had endured physical tortures until
managing to escape. Now back on
U.S. soil her ordeal is far from over as the Soviets send a specialized
assassin team to terminate her permanently. Instead they run into Hammer and it he who does the
exterminating. You can easily
enjoy “Complex 90” without having read “The Girl Hunters,” but why on earth
would you settle for one great Mike Hammer book when you can enjoy two?
Okay, back to this “sequel” of sorts. The cold war is still in full tilt,
even though Hammer and Velda have slowly gotten their lives back on a normal
track. Then an old colleague
recruits Hammer to assist him as a bodyguard for a controversial senator
throwing a lavish cocktail parting in his New York penthouse. Hammer sees it as an opportunity to
make a few fast bucks. In the
middle of the soiree, an assassin attempts to shoot the senator but instead
guns down Hammer’s pal. Hammer takes a slug to the leg before sending the
killer through a window eighty stories up via a hot lead tivkry from his .45
automatic. So much for an easy few
dollars.
Suffering only a flesh wound, Hammer is soon back on his
feet. Immediately he is offered a
new assignment; that of bodyguard to the senator during his fact-finding junket
to Moscow. The senator wants Hammer to replace his dead friend who was
scheduled to accompany him.
No sooner are the two in Russia then Hammer is arrested and
imprisoned by the KGB for being a spy.
Fortunately for the savvy P.I., they detain him in a city facility and
he waste no time escaping, leaving half a dozen bodies behind. By the time he makes it back to the
States, he’s left a trail of forty-five dead Russians creating an international
incident. Now the Russians are
clamoring for his hide and the State Department isn’t any too pleased with the
notorious New York private-eye.
What bothers Hammer is why he was kidnapped in the first place and why
the Commies are so hell bent on bringing him back to the U.S.S.R.
Finding the answers to those two questions is the major plot
around which this fast paced thriller revolves and like all Mike Hammer tales,
there’s plenty of two-fisted action along the journey. Collins prose never lets up for a
second propelling this reader to a slam-bang climax that had us needing a drink
when it was over. Cold war
intrigue, sexy femme fatales and in the middle of it all, one tough
son-of-bitch throwback whose conservative patriotism will not be shaken by
gun-toting foreign agents or two-faced
Washington politicians.
In a time of when America is being torn apart by a culture
war, Spillane’s Mike Hammer is a cleansing storm that makes no excuses for
loving ones country and doing whatever it takes to keep her strong. Makes us wish we had a lot more like
him.