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column 013 03/35 Land of Always-Night column
 

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With the fate of America hanging in the balance, Doc Savage and his fearless crew battle a hideously white-faced man named Ool who kills merely with a touch of his finger. The only clue to his diabolical power is a mysterious pair of dark goggles which brings death to whomever possesses them. The trail leads to a fabulous lost super-civilization hidden deep in the bowels of the earth, where Doc Savage and his fabulous five face their supreme challenge.




Categories:

1935 - 1935
b013 - b013
bama - bama
baumhofer - baumhofer
johnson - johnson
nanovic - nanovic
novel - novel
pulp - pulp
   
   
column Comments  column
 

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Note: Comments may contain spoilers.

Scott Kimball

You could get a firm grip on the cover of this one, tear off the remaining 138 pages and toss 'em in the trash... AND YOU WOULD STILL HAVE A GREAT BOOK! I mean just look at that cover... Doc recoiling at some unseen horror that is powerful enough to ruffle even the Bronze Man's feathers... it must be bad! And the creepy, pasty-white guys with the Black goggles pointing and leering from beneath all those giant mushrooms! This may be my favorite Doc cover... definitely in the top 5. Great story, too, kept me engrossed the whole way through with awsome descriptions that drew me right into the fast paced action and weird scenes. Read it!

- | - July 10, 2003 01:53 AM

Barry Ellis

ABSOLUTELY one of the "top-ten" Doc stories! Just so inventive and cool. The apex of the "lost civilization" stories.

- | - July 21, 2003 08:22 PM

Andrew Salmon

What's not to like about this one? Even the great Bantam cover is just so creepy and out there that I defy anyone to study it and not want to find out what the heck is going on between the covers. Doc stalking and being stalked through the inky blackness is enough to send chills up and down your spine. One of the best, pure and simple.

- | - July 23, 2003 08:47 PM

Todd Pence

In his revised edition of the biography of Doc Savage, Philip Jose Farmer dismissed this tale from his chronology as apocryphal, presumably because he found the underground civilization in this novel unrealistic. But "Murder Melody" later depicts an underground civilization even more fantastic and less believable than the one in "Always Night", yet Farmer includes it in his chronology without comment.

- | - December 17, 2003 10:07 PM

Paul Cook

This was the second Doc adventure I ever read, and I read it the week it came out in paperback . . . and loved it. I also liked Murder Melody, but by then I was eating up the Doc adventures as fast as they came out. It's a great adventure (even if it might have been partially ghosted) and the cover is a knock-out. I am of the belief that James Bama made the Doc Savage novels for Bantam a success. This cover is one of the reasons why.

- | - April 28, 2005 11:58 PM

Mark Carpenter

This just barely nudges out "The Green Death" as being the VERY BEST ghosted Doc adventure. Even though it is one of the longer books in the series, Johnson keeps the action and mystery moving briskly. I was engrossed from cover to cover. But what really makes "Land of Always-Night" so terrific is Johnson's keen attention to detail: Ool's love for chocolate creams, Doc's ingenious infiltration of the gang, the dozens of intricate ways that Watches Bowen tries to kill Doc. There were no throwaway scenes here, something that's not always true of a Dent story. Between this and "The Green Death," I have TWO ghosted Doc's in my personal top ten. YIKES!

- | - August 21, 2005 12:39 PM

Lee Dorrance

A spectacular adventure from start to finish. Johnson really nails Dent's pacing and writing style. This is one of my favorite Bama covers as well. All in all simply a great story!

- | - June 3, 2006 10:37 PM


   
   

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