My bookmarks drawn in 1964
The
early Saint stories reveal a different character, insouciant but deadly, compared
to the later more cynical versions. But one thing they have in common is the
desire to vanquish felons of all stripes.
This
Robin Hood of crime functions as an ordinary
detective in some stories, while in others he out-cons vanity publishers and
other rip-off artists, corrupt politicians, warmongers, greedy bosses who
exploit their workers, liars and other low life.
The
style of the stories is often tongue-in-cheek, knowing, and from the narrator’s
point of view, not necessarily the Saint’s. Yet we don’t particularly mind
Charteris demolishing the ‘fourth wall’ from time to time, because these capers
are fun – and rarely without a moral, it should be added. Some writing purists
might opine that this style of writing wouldn’t get published today; that kind
of comment is pointless. They’re written of and for their time, and can still
be enjoyed. (Indeed, Charteris toyed with rewriting the early books to bring
them up to date for modern readers – 1930s transposed to the 1960s, for example
– but decided, rightly, against it; the task would have been fraught with
pitfalls, too.)
You
have to be aware of alternative titles, too. For example, The Last Hero has been retitled The
Creeping Death, Sudden Death, The Saint Closes the Case (current in the
US), The Saint and the Last Hero.
Wikipedia (naturally) has a helpful breakdown that will help avoid duplicate
purchasing: here
In
the early novels, each chapter is headed with a sentence or two explaining what
will transpire, without giving away anything, such as ‘How Simon Templar sang a
song, and found some of it true.’
Omniscient, humorous, Charteris teases:
Meet
the Saint. His godfathers and his godmothers, at his baptism, had bestowed upon
him the name of Simon Templar; but the coincidence of initials was not the only
reason for the nickname by which he was far more widely known. One day, the
story of how he came by that nickname may be told: it is a good story, in its
way, though it goes back to the days when the Saint was nineteen, and almost as
respectable as he looked. But the name had stuck… p7, The Avenging Saint (Knight Templar, 1930)
‘Put
up your hands, Herr Saint.’
‘Bless
my soul!’ said the Saint, who was never profane on really distressing
occasions. (p120, The Avenging Saint).
‘The
art of crime,’ said Simon Templar, carefully mayonaising a section of truitea
la gelée, ‘is to be versatile. Repetition breeds contempt – and promotion for
flat-footed oafs from Scotland Yard…’
Patricia
Holm fingered the stem of her wineglass with a far-away smile. Perhaps the
smile was a trifle wistful. Perhaps it wasn’t. You never know. But she had been
the Saint’s partner in outlawry long enough to know what any such oratorical
opening as that portended; and she smiled. – (p39, The Brighter Buccaneer, 1933)
The Saint has had many partners, though none last throughout the series. For the first half until the late 1940s, the most recurrent is Patricia Holm, his girlfriend, who was introduced in the 1928 novel in which she shows herself a capable adventurer. Holm appeared erratically throughout the series, sometimes disappearing for books at a time, and vanishing completely in the late 1940s. A pity, because up to that point many readers thought that Holm was where the heart is... Templar and Holm cohabited; one wonders if the librarians felt as affronted as they showed over Tarzan and Jane (actually, the latter pair were married, though those offended never read that book).
Capture the Saint (1997), not counting a novelization of the 1997 film, The Saint, both written by Burl Barer, was the first original Simon Templar book published since 1983. It was issued by The Saint Club, a worldwide fan club for the series which Charteris established in 1936. Capture the Saint is the 52nd Saint book published since 1928 and can now be obtained as an e-book; it faithfully captures the flavour of the early Saint adventures, in style and language.
Now, in paperback and e-book format, the Saint adventures are being re-released (Mulholland books), all with stylish covers. Some books are not available until December 2013 or early 2014; still, you could start collecting now: here If you select the book/e-book from this website, a small donation (via Amazon associates program) goes to the Saint Club.
The Saint Club was founded by Charteris in 1936. Before the war it donated its profits to a London hospital; after the national health service was established, profits were donated to the Arbour Youth Centre in Stepney. Now, the tradition is continued, with donations going to the Red Cross and different children’s charities.
The Club acts as a focal point for anyone interested in the adventures of Simon Templar and the work of Leslie Charteris and offers merchandise and various Saint related publications. All profits are donated to charity. Annual subscription £3.50, lifetime £30. See the website here
*
Footnote. I’m stipulating prose here. There are plenty of superhero comic-book characters
who have bridged the decades and have become household names.
[Leon Cazador is a modern day Saint character, fighting injustice on behalf of the innocent and the weak. See him in action in Spanish Eye, on release 29 November (Paperback) here [Amazon.co.uk] (Paperback) here [Amazon.com] - Kindle links tomorrow!
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