The Shadow: The History and Mystery of the Radio Program, 1930-1954
Publisher :
OTR Publishing
Copyright :
2011, OTR Publishing
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Description |
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The Shadow -- for the consideration of those
who never heard a radio broadcast or read a pulp magazine -- was a
supernatural sleuth with a sepulchral chuckle. A detective whose success
in tracking down criminals became a popular long-running radio program
from 1937 to 1954, after beginning a number of years before as a
ghost-like voice introducing a bone-chilling murder play that concluded
with a sinister laugh.
The Shadow was originally the voice of
conscience and it was through the fear he aroused in the minds of
criminals that they exposed their own villainy or destroyed themselves.
Never committing cold-blooded murder for the sake of justice, The Shadow
suffered a harrowing existence of close calls and death-defying
challenges. His exploits were many; a career paced by chase and gun play.
Werewolves, vampires, psychotic murderers, gangsters, mad scientists --
he battled them all. Looking back on the program today, it is hard
to decipher which was more fun -- The Shadow's methods at plaguing a
guilty conscience or the variety of horrors and villains he fought
against.
The program left an impression on adults who enjoyed
reading the pulp magazines and on young children who listened to the
chillers. Radio station KQW in San Jose, California, created its own
radio advertisement to promote the station one depicting two children at
play remarking, I don t want to be Napoleon any more I want to be The
Shadow. Show More
The Shadow was
inspiration to many, famous or fan. In his autobiography, Isaac Asimov
fondly recounted filching the exciting yarns of The Shadow pulps from
his sleeping father and replacing the magazine before he woke. Dick
Ayers, creator of the Ghost Rider for the comics, admitted there was a
blending of enthusiasm in his interpretations of the Ghost Rider's
speech, influenced not by the pulp magazines, but by having been an avid
fan of the radio program. Scriptwriters for the radio program later
recycled their Shadow plots for novels and short stories -- Alfred
Bester recycled one of his Shadow plots into the 1952 novel The
Demolished Man, which won him a Hugo Award in 1953.
This 800 page
book documents the entire history of the long-running radio program,
with rare never-before-seen photos, interviews with cast and crew, and a
carefully organized presentation of the facts. Through extensive
research of original radio scripts, newspapers on microfilm and various
archives across the country, this book is sure to please both casual and
devoted fans of The Shadow. An extensive episode guide with plot
summaries and an index enhance the book's appeal.
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Praise and Reviews |
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"For those who first heard The Shadow on the air when radio was young,
this book will bring back memories. For those too young to remember the
radio show, this is a wonderful introduction. For the collector and
historian of old-time radio, there are facts here they may be seeing for
the first time. For everyone else, this is a book to treasure." --J.
Randolph Cox, Editor, Dime Novel Round-Up
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Author of more than 20 books about old-time radio, retro television and vintage movies.
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