Probably she was telling the truth, Dirk reflected. But how could he be sure? Or it might be a half-truth, with information still withheld. It seemed as if every woman he spoke to these days lied to him.It's been two months since we read a perverted piece of crime fiction, so after a multitude of blog posts about stories from science fiction magazines that people take seriously like Astounding and F&SF as well as some on the pulpier end like Thrilling Wonder Stories, let's descend back into the gutter! In an antique mall in Verona, Virginia--purportedly the biggest in the United States!--I spotted an old paperback with a suitably nasty title and back cover description, The Lustful Ape by Bruno Fischer, published by Gold Medal in 1959. This book has been reprinted multiple times since its initial appearance in 1950 under the pseudonym Russell Gray, so it was not difficult for me to find a digital version (full of typos, of course) for free online. Wikipedia and Robert Kenneth Jones' The Shudder Pulps tell us Fischer is a German-born socialist and journalist who produced many stories for magazines like Dime Mystery Magazine and Terror Tales characterized by their lurid violence-against-women covers, so, if The Lustful Ape tickles our fancy, there is plenty more Fischer-penned depravity for us to explore.
Dirk Hart, protagonist of The Lustful Ape, was a police detective when he married Narda, a beautiful girl with a voracious appetite for sex and for money! She convinced Dirk to quit the force and become a private eye! This doubled his income, but it wasn't enough--Narda was so horny and greedy she started banging other guys and accepting fancy gifts from them. As if that wasn't trouble enough, living in the same small house with Dirk and his whore of a wife was Dirk's Narda-hating younger sister, sexy 20-year old Lucy.
A couple of years ago Dirk finally threw Narda out. But tonight she comes right into the house, right into the bedroom, half naked, and tries to seduce Dirk with that awesome bod of hers. Dirk throws her out again, but a few hours later his old comrades at the police station call Dirk up--someone has shot Narda full of holes! Hmm, didn't Lucy go out at like 1:15 in the morning, right after Dirk tossed Narda out on her ear? So ends the first sex and violence-soaked chapter of The Lustful Ape, which consists of twenty-three such chapters.
The Lustful Ape is a story about honesty and mendacity. Early on we are told Dirk is honest to a fault, and his reputation for honesty is referred to by other characters over the course of the book. Throughout the narrative almost every one of the multitude of characters Dirk has to contend with lies and deceives, and we learn all kinds of facts about each character that each has been trying to conceal.
“Why does every damn woman have to lie to me?”
The selling point of The Lustful Ape, as we can see from the cover illustrations and text, is sex--creepy sex!--and the novel's pervasive theme is of perverted, abusive, fetishistic sex--rape, voyeurism, sexualized torture, and sexualized violence against women. Dirk slaps Narda in the face in the very first chapter, and he is supposed to be our hero, though the man called Ape performs most of the sexual abuse.
His head was so low over her that all she could see of him was his shaggy hair. She felt his fingers on the buttons of her pajamas. There was nothing she could do to stop him now, nothing she could say. She wondered if it would be a terrible beating or the thing that would be even worse. Her eyes closed.
Though a recurring motif, the sex in The Lustful Ape is not terribly explicit, more suggestive. And the rape and sexual torture scenes don't go "all the way"--the title character, again and again, is about to rape somebody but then is stopped just short of doing so, leaving the victim merely groped, though grievously psychologically scarred. Similarly, there is gruesome violence, but only rarely do we see anybody actually killed or maimed; multiple times the Ape has somebody in his clutches, having outfought a man or tied up a woman, but is prevented from killing him or crippling her. As for the fights, these are probably better described as "beatings" or "assassinations."
The Lustful Ape is also about degradation and decay; all the characters in the story become worse over the course of the story, suffering physical and psychological and reputational damage as the tale proceeds. Dirk is not only beaten up and tortured, but reduced to attempting suicide and, when that fails, begging another character to kill him! More than one minor character succeeds in killing himself. Many people are humiliated, lose their jobs, see their relationships sour--this is a depressing book!
Another theme of Fischer's novel is the unreliability of women--women just won't come through for you when you need them most--and the terrible trouble women put men to, directly or indirectly. Women deceive men (as well as other women) in pursuit of their petty goals, generally money, and men take terrible risks and make sacrifices out of a sense of duty to a woman, or because of love or lust for a woman, even when those women are less than deserving. Dirk late in the story is confronted by an apparent dilemma, thinking he has to choose between his duplicitous sister and his faithless lover, forced by the villains to preserve one by sacrificing the other, though like so much of the drama in the novel this bit of excitement peters out and both dames are gonna survive, though hardly unscathed.
The plot of The Lustful Ape is kind of what you expect. There is the murder of Narda, and then Dirk interacts with a huge cast of characters, almost all of them treacherous to one degree or another--each has something he is keeping from Dirk and many are likely to have loyalties to one or another of Dirk's adversaries. Each of these persons is a suspect in Narda's murder and/or some other misdeed, and each of them runs the risk of becoming the murderer's next victim. Dirk and his questionable allies run around town hunting up clues by interviewing people and looking through the archives. Along the way, sometimes in chapters not featuring Dirk himself, we gain insight into various ongoing sexual relationships and witness the inauguration of fresh new sexual relationships; none of these relationships is life-affirming or joyful--at best they are tragic. Additional crimes and perpetrators are uncovered and dealt with; Dirk gets beaten up, and in the final third or so of the novel Dirk and one of the story's many beautiful women spends a lot of time bound and tortured, eventually being rescued by one of Dirk's friends.Ape said: “Boss, you’re smart, but it’s my neck too. Why’d you make me take her down? Jees, if we’re gonna whip — ”
“Because I’m smart,” Sheridan snapped. “I know my man. The only way to break him is through a woman."
Then, as in so many mystery-type stories, after the climax in which the protagonist escapes death and the villains are brought to justice, we get an overly long talky section that wraps things up, in which the detective explains how he solved the case, the author ties up loose ends, and we readers get an idea of what the future holds for the surviving characters. (The original King Kong and the first Star Wars movie wisely end very soon after the big climax in which the oversized menace is laid low, but detective stories often inflict upon the audience a long denouement sequence after the climax--Hitchcock's Psycho is notorious for this.)
Did I enjoy The Lustful Ape? Can I recommend it? Fischer's novel is reasonably well written; the pace is fast and there is no real fat, no extraneous descriptions of sunlight or ripples on the water or anything like that. So the style is fine.
But The Lustful Ape is not fun. It is sordid, cynical and sad, all the characters wounded, depraved or diabolical--the best of them commit blunders that get themselves and others in serious trouble, and everybody is scarred in some way, with many turning to the bottle or suicide. Perhaps we should expect material like this from a socialist, who presumably sees the world through the lens of exploitation, and a journalist, who has probably been exposed to all kinds of crime, corruption and disaster. Burt Fischer also fails to render any of his characters likable or easy to identify with, and it is hard for the reader to care who lives or dies or who is banging who.
So The Lustful Ape is not fun, and neither is it satisfying--it signally fails to provide the reader catharsis. I've mentioned how the sex crimes and the fights are often cut off before a conclusion, either triumphant or tragic, and how the fights lack the dramatic thrust, parry and riposte of the fights you see in movies. Our protagonist Dirk does not perform feats of derring-do; instead, he gets tricked by people and outfought by the Ape--repeatedly! The Ape is incapacitated not by Dirk but by a minor character we have been primed to detest, a pretty boy who slapped Lucy early in the book, this guy with a peaches-and-cream complexion shoots Ape in the back from a place of concealment. Ape doesn't see who got him, and we haven't actually seen Ape rape or kill anybody, so the whole thing lacks power--we can't cheer on the slayer or really rejoice in the death of the slain, and all the conflicts in the novel conclude this way. Dirk doesn't dispose of the man behind the Ape, the brute's boss, either; Dirk's friend shoots that criminal mastermind while Dirk is literally tied up. It is true that Dirk does overpower Narda's killer, but through the whole book this guy has been described as feminine and childlike, so big whoop.Perhaps my biggest complaints about The Lustful Ape have to do with a major component of the plot, compromising photos taken by Narda and co-conspirators for use in blackmail. For one thing, many of the blackmail victims react to the blackmailing in a way I found a little hard to credit. But worse is the nature of the pictures. When the pictures are introduced in the third chapter, a character who should know tells Dirk that the photos are not the product of trick photography but represent a real event and indicate real psychological facts about the people depicted. But then, in Chapter Fourteen, over half way through the novel, we are told the pictures are, after all, special effects photos "any amateur" could have produced and the people in them aren't interesting eccentrics with weird fetishes but just normal people. On this score, I felt Fischer wasn't playing fair with us, and I found this plot twist, which rendered the characters and plot less interesting than we had been led to believe, pretty galling. Discovering that a person we thought was a normie is in fact a freak is compelling, but finding the opposite is deflating.
“You’re a newspaperman. You’ve had lots of experience with montages and superimposed photos.”
“I can tell you right off that these aren’t. Notice how Ape and the girl blend with the background and with each other. Notice their positions — how their attitudes and faces and expressions are aware of each other. This is real stuff, Dirkie."
I think I have to give the disappointing The Lustful Ape a thumbs down. Sad!













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