Thursday, April 21, 2011

Honey West Back in Action

I'm pleased to announce I will be editing and contributing to a brand new anthology of short stories dedicated to the '60s sexy PI chick Honey West.

Honey West began as a series of paperbacks in 1957 with This Girl For Hire, written by the husband and wife team of Gloria and Forest Fickling under the penname G.G. Fickling. The novels were a tad risque for their time and ran 10 novels through the '60s, with two more in an early '70s comeback. They became a cult favorite TV series in 1965-66, starring Anne Francis and running some 30 episodes, and while the toplessness might have been toned down for prime time, Anne was still allowed to be a slinky sexy investigator with a big pus--um, ocelot, named Bruce, at her side. She was one of the first female private eyes on television, given to quips and leopard print outfits, though the series made her a bit more like The Avengers' Emma Peel, with Judo expertise, exploding compacts and other gadgets. Unfortunately, that very tact helped contribute to her demise on TV because it was cheaper for the network to import The Avengers than to continue with the series.

Recently Moonstone began a new series of Honey West comic books, written by the much talented Trina Robbins, who is slated to pen a brand new tale for this anthology. A number of other talented scribes have been brought aboard as well, such as Elaine Lee, Will Murray, Mark Ellis, CJ Henderson and Mel Odom, along with some surprises.

It promises to to be a Honey of a book.

3 comments:

Matthew P. Mayo said...

Fantastic news! Honey West is a great antho character. I remember reading those paperbacks as a youth and diggin' them mighty ... for various reasons, ahem ahem. And the show was fab, too. Time to revisit them, methinks. The world needs more Honey!

Jenn Nixon said...

Congrats! Sounds like an interesting project!!

Wereviking said...

Sounds interesting. Is this on bookdepository?

W

Zephyr -- a superhero webcomic in prose
http://zephyr.warrenhately.com