"Three Gun Terry" by Carroll John Daly (Black Mask, May 15, 1923)

Carroll John Daly’s short story “Three Gun Terry” is credited as being the first hardboiled mystery. It was published in the May 15th, 1923 issue of Black Mask, several months prior to Dashiell Hammett’s first Continental Op story. I came across the story in William F. Nolan’s The Black Mask Boys: Masters in the Hard-Boiled School of Detective Fiction (William Morrow and Company, 1985), an excellent anthology that includes not only Daly, but also Hammett, Chandler, Erle Stanley Gardner, Horace McCoy, Frederick Nebel, Raoul Whitfield, and Paul Cain.

Daly’s reputation seems to have suffered the most from that original core of writers. Nolan makes no bones about his criticisms against Daly: “The writing was impossibly crude, the plotting labored and ridiculous…” Nolan’s complaints don’t end there: “His dialogue was impossibly stilted…Yet despite all this, Carroll John Daly stands, historically, as the father of the hard-boiled private eye.” In fact, the only standout praise for Daly that I can think of is from Mickey Spillane, who openly acknowledged his debt of gratitude to his pulp predecessor.

Daly’s historical importance and critical dismissal has always made me curious about him. Previously I had read The Man in the Shadows (1928), which was quite enjoyable and, while far from a masterpiece, was certainly not embarrassing. I have several other novels sitting on my shelf waiting to be read – so, in the meantime, I decided to go back to Daly’s roots and read the famed beginning of it all.

The opening of “Three Gun Terry” reads almost like a manifesto. “My life is my own, and the opinions of others don’t interest me, so don’t form any, or if you do, keep them to yourself. If you want to sneer at my tactics, why go ahead, but do it behind the pages—you’ll find that healthier.” It is as much an introduction to the main character, Terry Mack, as it is a warning to the reader.

As the story begins, business is slow, and Terry Mack is stalking the streets of New York looking for trouble – which means work for him. Purely a business man, he states his terms plainly: “Fifty dollars a day, and five hundred bonus when I deliver the goods…And for every man I croak—mind you, I ain’t a killer, but sometimes a chap’s got to turn a gun—I get two hundred dollars flat.” And when comes across several men chasing a woman down a dark street, he seems to have found his job.

Jumping onto the side of the car, he rides alongside the kidnappers all the way to the Bronx where he takes back the girl at gunpoint and returns her home. He is hired by her uncle to help find a missing scientific formula that is worth a considerable sum of money. Terry signs on, but when he shows up the next day to begin work, he finds that the formula has suddenly reappeared, and he is offered a large sum of money to forget the whole thing. Terry takes the money, of course, but he hasn’t forgotten anything - least of all the man hiding behind the curtains with a gun…

The archetypes are all set to go in this story: rogue hero neither on the side of the law nor against it, streetwise and with a strong enough reputation that he not only has connections to the underworld, but that they also know enough not to cross him. The plotting is swift, with action and violence a plenty, and even a beautiful dame thrown in the mix. All in all? It’s a solid story, one worth revisiting in the future.

Still, parts of the story don’t hold up as well as others, particularly the narration. Daly makes it painfully clear that he is speaking to “you, the reader.” It almost feels as though the narrator is bragging at a bar, emphasizing his quick draw and deadly aim. Nolan is also right that sometimes Daly’s prose can feel clumsy and imprecise. Yet at some moments, there is a ferociousness that still comes through some eighty-six years later.

I am looking forward to reading more of Carroll John Daly, and will be sure to blog about it in the near future. If you’re read Daly before, please chime in and leave a comment, I’m curious as to what other readers think of him.

Also—many thanks to Phil Stephensen-Payne and his Galactic Central site, which houses a great archive of Black Mask cover scans. Drop by and enjoying browsing!

12 comments:

  1. This was a history lesson for me. I'd never heard of Daly, and now I'm curious to read him. I had just assumed it was Hammett who got this credit.

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  2. I like Daly. I can see the flaws in his work. His dialogue sometimes sounds like something that never came out of human mouths. But his stories have an energy that I like, and I'd rather read something written in a distinctive voice, even if it's flawed, than something smoother that could have been written by anybody.

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  3. I first noticed Daly in the Big Book of Pulps and have since never passed up reading his work. The criticisms are probably accurate but when you're the first it doesn't matter. And like J.R. says there is an energy that's captivating.

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  4. You're right, James, that Daly's certainly is a distinctive voice. The one novel and several stories I've read all bear his trademark style.

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  5. I always look for him in used bookstores along with several others. Never find them.

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  6. Thanks for another great review and introduction to an unfamiliar writer. I wish I had the time to get as much reading done as you do. I look forward to your thoughts on 77 Rue Paradis.

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  7. I've got the big book of the pulps with The Third Murderer by this guy in it. Haven't read it yet but you've prompted me to do so. I'll read it before climbing into bed tonight.

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  8. i think he is very good
    the third murderer has parts that are dynamic and powerful

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  9. I first heard of Carroll John Daly on Wikepedia when I was reading up on Hammett and it listed Daly as creating the hard boiled detective before Hammett and it got me wanting to read Daly for that fact alone and the first story by Daly I read was the False Burton Combs and I loved it though the second part involving the court scene not up to the standard set by the first part but I reread part of it and it works now. I am hoping to read It's All In The Game that features a private detective before Three Gun Terry but in that story he is just a Private Detective in name only, as a cover for his vigilante justice but I want to read it. However, I can not find it anywhere so far. The only known publication of it that I know of is in Black Mask April 15, 1923. Does anyone know to get a hold of these early magazines? I heard that Satan Hall, a character created by Carroll John Daly who was introduced in Satan's Lash is the first dirty harry style cop but the only known publication I know of of that story is Street and Smith's Detective Story Magazine. I ordered Snarl of the Beast and looking forward to reading it and I ordered The Adventures of Satan Hall and it has the second story to feature that character and looking forward to that as well.

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  10. I always get a laugh when I read comments about some author's stilted or unnatural dialogue. Listen to real people talking on the street, on the tv show Cops,or on the tapes the cops make of real criminals. Would you really pay money to read THAT for several hundred pages? For my money, Daly's Race Williams or Hammett's Continental Op stories are better than reality. Reality is usually too banal to be entertaining.

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  11. I can highly recommend Them That Lives By Their Guns: The Collected Hard-Boiled Stories of Race Wiiliams Volume 1
    with 16 Race Williams stories from Black Mask 1923-26. It includes three works prior to Race W. Unfortunately not Three Gun Terry. But has The False Burton Combs in it. The book is edited and designed by Matthew Moring and is from 2015. Additionally it has a long thorough introduction by Brooksa E. Hefner.
    I look forward to Volume 2

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  12. Whoops, I meant introduction by Brooks E. Hefner.

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