
I fell in love with ACE Doubles at an early age in the Sixties. As I walked to school when I was 12 years old, I passed a local drug store with a prominently displayed spinner rack (remember them?) with plenty of paperbacks. But the ones that seduced me were ACE Doubles with their cool double covers in tête-bêche format. I bought Science Fiction ACE Doubles in those early days, but sometime in my late teens I broadened my buying to include ACE Doubles featuring mysteries and Westerns. I ended up donated dozens of ACE Doubles to the Special Collections at the State University at Buffalo as part of the 30,000 volume George Kelley Paperback and Pulp Fiction Collection.
Stark House just published THREE ACES, A Trio of ACE Books with a wonderful Introduction by Richard Krauss, editor and publisher of The Digest Enthusiast. Richard Krauss’s informative and enlightening description of ACE Doubles and Singles from that era highlights the editorial strategy and the changing public tastes of that time. Richard was kind enough to invite me to add some of my fond memories of ACE Doubles and they’re included in the Introduction, too!
The Gilded Hideaway (ACE Single S-107) by Peter Twist (a pseudonym of C. P. Hewitt) was published in 1955. Robert West has success and a wife and friends, but none of that brings him happiness. So West steals $100,000 and flees to Mexico to start a new Life. But West learns money doesn’t solve all problems especially when it comes to the beautiful woman named Mercedes. GRADE: B
In at the Kill by Emmett McDowell (aka, Robert Emmett McDowell) was half of ACE Double D-445 (the other half was McDowell’s Bloodline to Murder), published in 1960. In at the Kill concerns a scheme to locate some rare stamps, but leads to more valuable photos and blackmail. GRADE: B+
Heat Lightning (ACE Single S-74) by Wilene Shaw (pseudonym of Virgina M. Harrison), published in 1954, delivers a hot love triangle in the Kentucky hills. Holly Reed, while attracted to local bootlegger Brandy Elliot, finds herself drawn to a stranger in town: city-bred Larry Carter. Carter turns out to be a man of mystery…and violence. GRADE: A-
If you have three aces, you’re likely to win. Stark House’s Three Aces omnibus is a winner for sure! Don’t miss this one!








