The racist "Confidential" books of Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer were optioned for a series of bland film noir B-films which, gratefully, bore little resemblance to the source material.

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The racist "Confidential" books of Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer were optioned for a series of bland film noir B-films which, gratefully, bore little resemblance to the source material.

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1932 Grosset & Dunlap hardcover
“First Edition and First Photoplay Edition, illustrated with scenes from the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film directed by Charles Brabin, starring Walter Huston, Jean Harlow, and Wallace Ford. A pre-code gangster film. Adapted from the original motion picture story of W.R. Burnett.”
Seattle Mystery Bookshop
Newspaper columnists Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer wrote a series of brutally racist “confidential” paperbacks. Salacious and vicious, the books spend much of their time “exposing” the supposed evils of minorities and interracial marriage.
Put on the Spot. Jack Lait. New York: Grosset and Dunlap, (1930). True first edition. Original dust jacket by Mach Tey.
"When the police took Polack Annie, underworld beauty, and held her for the murder of Kinky King, gang leader, and legal means of getting her free failed, Goldie Gorio personally directed a carefully planned campaign of action which was climaxed by a raid on Chicago's police headquarters."