The Serial Vigilante Blog

:"Fang & Sting" by Win Eckert (2010) in THE GREEN HORNET CHRONICLES

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All Pulp are very crafty. They give you a free sample and get you hooked. In a recent Moonstone Monday post we are given the complete text of Win Eckert's contribution to The Green Hornet Chronicles which can be read here

Go and read it I'll wait. Back? Okay.

Like all stories in this anthology, Fang and Sting is set in the 1960s Green Hornet TV series (the one starring Van Williams and Bruce Lee) Eckert gives us an exciting tale that would have been a brilliant episode of that show. Not only that but Eckert manages to explain how and why Lenore Case was able to discover that Britt Reid and The Green Hornet are the same person. Win manages to include several other pieces of Hornet Trivia into his tale such as the fact that Mike Axford first appeared in the radio shows Warner Lester Manhunter and Dr Fang and making a reference to The Evil in Pemberley House.

The Green Hornet and Kato roll to investigate the reappearance of the Mysterious Dr Fang who terrorised Detroit in the 1930s. The diabolic Doctor Fang is killing local politicians and implicating The Green Hornet as an accomplice. The fact that Kato is Asian makes the connection quite plausible in some people's eyes. Once again we see The Green Hornet as the master strategist and Kato as his swift right hand.

Eckert is true to the characters as presented in the TV show and makes a exciting tale offering a connection between Dr Fang and another villian. Eckert has indicated that the next Green Hornet Anthology will have a direct sequel to this story.

If the rest of the stories in the anthology are half as good as this story then the anthology is well worth twice the price. I've ordered my copy and as soon as I get it from Pulp Fiction. I'll review it here.

The Green Hornet (2011) starring Seth Rogen, Jay Chou and Cameron DiazCasting Call: The Evil in Pemberely House

Comments

FreeLiveFree Thursday, February 3, 2011 11:02:05 PM

Win's stories sure seem to involve Fu Manchu a lot. Not just this one but "Eye of Oran" and "The Vanishing Devil" in Tales of the Shadowmen.

Brad MengelAggressorBrad1 Friday, February 4, 2011 5:55:34 AM

I can see future scholars - "The influence of Sax Rhomer on the writings of Win Scott Eckert" I think the Devil Doctor appears in a few more of Eckert's tales - see my upcoming review of The Captain Midnight Chronicles. There is a cameo in Evil In Pemberley House.

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