Shake Him Till He Rattles/It's Cold Out There by Malcolm Braly
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Stark House continues to republish Gold Medal paperbacks in two-in-one volumes. With Malcolm Braly's Shake Him Till He Rattles and It's Cold Out There they've picked two of the best titles from the mid-1960s.
Shake Him Till He Rattles (1963) is a quintessentially beat novel which owes a lot to a previous Gold Medal PBO, North Beach Girl (1960) by John Trinian (Zekial Marko). It uses as a backdrop the coffee house and jazz club scene of North Beach and includes a lot of the same themes, particularly lesbian relationships. But Shake Him turns out to be a whole lot more than just an etching of the whole milieu, it questions the whole beat existence and suggests that it might be as much as a dead-end treadmill as its counterpoint "square" existence.
It's Cold Out There (1966) follows the first few months of character J.D. Bing's freedom following a long incarceration. He begins to realize that in the free world a lot of people live in prisons of their own making.
If you are a fan of Gold Medal PBOs from the 50s and 60s, this volume is a must. You might also want to check out some of the other volumes available from Stark House Press.
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