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Paul Cain (pen name)

George Caryl Sims (May 30, 1902 – June 23, 1966), better known by his pen names Paul Cain and Peter Ruric, was an American pulp fiction author and screenwriter.[1][2] He is best known for his novel Fast One, which is considered to be a landmark of the pulp fiction genre and was called the "high point in the ultra hard-boiled manner" by Raymond Chandler.[3][4] Lee Server, author of the Encyclopedia of Pulp Fiction Writers, called Fast One "a cold-hearted, machine-gun-paced masterwork" and his other writings "gemlike, stoic and merciless vignettes that seemed to come direct from the bootlegging front lines."[5]

George Caryl Sims
Born(1902-05-30)May 30, 1902
Des Moines, Iowa
DiedJune 23, 1966(1966-06-23) (aged 64)
North Hollywood, California
Pen namePaul Cain, Peter Ruric
Occupation
  • Novelist
  • short story writer
  • screenwriter
NationalityAmerican
Genrehardboiled crime fiction, mystery fiction
Notable worksFast One (1933)
Seven Slayers (1946)

Sims enjoyed a brief career in Hollywood as a screenwriter during the 1930s and 1940s, including writing the screenplay for the Boris Karloff vehicle The Black Cat.[3]

Career edit

The events of Sims' life have been difficult for later biographers to verify,[6] in part because of his obscurity and in part because during his life, he frequently embellished his story with colorful and even outlandish statements, such as that he "wandered over South America, Europe, northern Africa and the Near East" and had published books titled Young Man Sees God, Hypersensualism: A Practical Philosophy for Acrobats and Seven Men Named Caesar, none of which is true.[7] He claimed in a letter to Black Mask editor Joseph Shaw that he had been a professional balloonist, as well as a gambler, painter, sailor, and editor.[6]

Sims was born in Des Moines, Iowa, on May 30, 1902. His father was a former police detective and drugstore owner. His mother divorced his father and moved with her son to Los Angeles, probably in 1921 (some sources say 1918),[6] joined by Sims' father several years later. Sims himself seems to have been less settled; he apparently lived in Detroit and Chicago during part of this time. He also enlisted in the U.S. Navy Reserve in 1917, but was discharged in 1921 (more than two years early) for “inaptitude.”[1]

In the mid-1920s, Sims began using the pseudonym he'd use for the rest of his life, "Peter Ruric" (beginning first as "George Ruric"). He also began his career in Hollywood, including working as an assistant on the Josef von Sternberg films The Salvation Hunters (1925) and A Woman of the Sea (1926). Actress Myrna Loy (born Myrna Williams) gave credit in her autobiography to Sims, who she apparently knew as "Peter Rurick, a wild Russian writer of free verse”, with inventing her stage name.[8] Los Angeles Review of Books editor Boris Dralyuk (who wrote the introduction to 2013's The Paul Cain Omnibus)[2] suggests that Ruric was inspired by the name of British poet Mina Loy for the actress' new name, and that his own pseudonym came from Russians Peter the Great and Rurik, founder of the Rurikid dynasty.[7]

He lived in New York circa 1930, where he had become an alcoholic in a dysfunctional relationship with actress Gertrude Michael.[1] Here, he became involved in pulp magazines such as Black Mask, for which he wrote a total of 17 stories. Editor Joseph Shaw considered him one of the magazine's strongest contributors, and a successor to Dashiell Hammett. Sims left the magazine when Shaw was fired in 1936. Additionally, Sims had stories published in Detective Fiction Weekly and Star Detective Magazine, and several articles in Gourmet.

Black Mask first published Fast One as five novelettes in 1932, "Fast One", "Lead Party", "Velvet", "The Heat", and "The Dark". He then rewrote them into a single novel, which became Fast One, published in book form by Doubleday in October 1933.[9] The story follows gangster Gerry Kells as he navigates, and instigates, a bloody gang war in Los Angeles.[10] Sims dedicated the novel to Michael, who probably inspired the character of the alcoholic girlfriend of the protagonist.[2] The 1933 Cary Grant film Gambling Ship is based on those stories.[1][11] The New York Times described it as “a ceaseless welter of bloodshed and frenzy, a sustained bedlam of killing and fiendishness, told in terse staccato style.”[12] Sims and Michael broke up in 1933. Fast One sold poorly and received mixed critical reviews, and Sims never wrote another novel. However, its reputation has grown increasingly over time, and it is now considered a classic of the genre. In 2016, The Los Angeles Review of Books called Fast One part of "a protean time for crime fiction", and praised the novel as "one hell of a twisty, tough nihilistic story set in 1932-’33 Los Angeles."[13]

Sims continued to work as a screenwriter in Hollywood under the name "Peter Ruric", contributing not only the script for 1934's The Black Cat, his most famous movie, but 1934's Affairs of a Gentleman, 1942's Grand Central Murder, and 1944's Guy de Maupassant adaptation Mademoiselle Fifi.[14]

In 1946, a paperback collection of his best stories called Seven Slayers was published by Saint Enterprises. Sims wanted to change his listed name to Ruric but the publisher insisted on sticking with the name Cain.[15]

Writing style edit

In the field of hardboiled noir fiction, a genre already known for its starkness and cynicism, Sims' writing as Paul Cain was notable for its cold, brutal nihilism. Comparing Cain with other masters of the genre such as Raymond Chandler, Boris Dralyuk said that, "Stacked pound-for-pound against Cain’s lean and war-hardened antihero Gerry Kells, Chandler’s Philip Marlowe comes off like a flabby, eccentric chatterbox." Dralyuk has also noted that Cain's work often features "fits of misogyny" and "laconic indications of buried trauma, resentment, and addiction."[1] Wall Street Journal reviewer Lee Sandlin was more negative, calling him derivative of his Black Mask predecessor Hammett: "Cain wasn't any good. His prose is pitched, page after page, at exactly the same volume: a shrill, pounding staccato that can barely spare time for conjunctions."[16] Genre historian David E. Wilt called Cain's prose "competent though not outstanding", with the exception of the five Fast One stories.[6] Nevertheless, Cain has been rediscovered and critically praised in recent years, with his complete works collected in The Paul Cain Omnibus[2][10] and reprints of Fast One[17] and Seven Slayers.[18]

Cain's protagonists were unsentimental, brooding, compulsive antiheroes capable of remarkable levels of violence. The 1933 New York Times review of Fast One called the lead character, gangster Gerry Kells, "so ferocious a hoodlum ... a sot, drug addict, two-gun deadshot."[19] Rather than traditional detectives, most Cain protagonists were gangsters or at least on the wrong side of the law. Washington Post literary critic Michael Dirda called Cain's style "lean, stripped-down prose, affectless narrative voice" leavened by touches of "wry humor". He noted that "The narrative's point of view is nearly always external: People talk, actions are starkly described, no explanations are given, and we can only guess what Kells or other characters are thinking. The prose is similar to Hemingway's, but even leaner."[10]

Cain's noir stories were among the first in the genre to be set in Los Angeles.[20] Fast One included a scene set at the iconic restaurant and writer hangout Musso & Frank Grill.[21] Several stories are set in the world of Hollywood, and feature lead characters who work in or near the movie industry.[6]

Personal life edit

Sims married Virginia Maxine Glau in 1939, changing her name to Mechel Ruric; she was nearly 20 years his junior. The marriage dissolved in 1943 due to his alcoholism. He married again in 1945 or 1946 to writer Virginia Radcliffe, with whom he collaborated on several radio scripts; that marriage lasted until about 1950. In 1955, now living in Europe and suffering from poor health, Sims married again, this time to a young Virginia woman named Peggy Gregson who was 30 years younger than him; the couple had two sons. They moved to California and then Virginia, where she stayed; he moved on to Cuba and Los Angeles again, and she remarried in 1962.[1]

He called himself Peter Ruric, rather than George Sims, for most of his life. The friend who settled his affairs after his death, in fact, did not know that his original name was George Sims.[1]

Death edit

Sims died of cancer in North Hollywood in 1966.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Boris Dralyuk (10 April 2018). "Paul Cain: An Introduction".
  2. ^ a b c d Cain, Paul (2013). The Paul Cain Omnibus: Every Crime Story and the Novel Fast One As Originally Published. Black Mask Series. Open Road Integrated Media, Incorporated. ISBN 978-1-4804-5689-1. Retrieved 2023-06-06.
  3. ^ a b Danger Is My Business: An Illustrated History of the Fabulous Pulp Magazines, by Lee Server (Chronicle Books, 1993) (p.70).
  4. ^ William Marling. . Archived from the original on 2010-01-07.
  5. ^ Server, Lee (2014). Encyclopedia of Pulp Fiction Writers. Facts on File library of American literature. Facts On File, Incorporated. ISBN 978-1-4381-0912-1. Retrieved 2023-06-08.
  6. ^ a b c d e Wilt, David E. (1991). Hardboiled in Hollywood. Bowling Green State University Popular Press. p. 98. ISBN 978-0-87972-525-9. Retrieved 2023-06-06.
  7. ^ a b Dralyuk, Boris (January 26, 2012). "The Incomplete Cain". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved 2023-06-04.
  8. ^ Loy, Myrna; Kotsilibas-Davis, James (1987). Myrna Loy: Being and Becoming. Knopf. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-394-55593-5. Retrieved 2023-06-06.
  9. ^ "Books Published Today". New York Times (Proquest Historical Newspapers). 1933-10-25.
  10. ^ a b c Dirda, Michael (2012-03-29). "'The Complete Slayers': A nod to tough crime fiction". Washington Post (Proquest Historical Newspapers).
  11. ^ Wilt, David (1991). Hardboiled in Hollywood: Five Black Mask Writers and the Movies. Bowling Green, Ohio: Bowling Green State University Popular Press. ISBN 978-0-879-72525-9.
  12. ^ "Latest Works of Fiction: Gangsters Gone Mad; FAST ONE. By Paul Cain. 304 pp. New York: Doubleday. $2." Archived via the TimesMachine,The New York Times, October 29, 1933.
  13. ^ Phillips, Gary (April 25, 2016). "The Unacknowledged: Black Crime Fiction, the Roaring '20s to the 1930s". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved 2023-06-04.
  14. ^ Penzler, Otto, ed. (2008). The Black Lizard Big Book of Pulps: The Best Crime Stories from the Pulps During Their Golden Age--The '20s, '30s & '40s. Vintage Crime/Black Lizard. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-307-49416-0. Retrieved 2023-06-06.
  15. ^ Nolan, William F. (1985). The Black Mask Boys: Masters in the Hard-Boiled School of Detective Fiction. New York: Mystery Press. ISBN 978-0-892-96931-9.
  16. ^ Sandlin, Lee (2012-03-24). "Books: The Grace of a Shadowy Street". Wall Street Journal (Proquest Historical Newspapers).
  17. ^ Cain, Paul (2013). Fast One. Gutter Books classic crime. Gutter Books LLC. ISBN 978-0-9826887-8-6. Retrieved 2023-06-06.
  18. ^ Cain, Paul (2018). Seven Slayers (in German). Black Curtain Press. ISBN 978-1-5154-2565-6. Retrieved 2023-06-06.
  19. ^ "Latest Works of Fiction: Gangsters Gone Mad". New York Times (Proquest Historical Newspapers). 1933-10-29.
  20. ^ Ulin, David L. (2006-09-06). "You know it's noir ... If desperation and desire are the fuel". Los Angeles Times (Proquest Historical Newspapers). Los Angeles.
  21. ^ Nolan, Tom (1933-10-29). "Martinis & Mythology". Los Angeles Times (Proquest Historical Newspapers). Los Angeles.

External links edit

  • on detnovel.com
  • IMDb listing for "Peter Ruric"
  • Paul Cain bibliography at HARD-BOILED site (Comprehensive Bibliographies by Vladimir)
  • Paul Cain: An Introduction Boris Dralyuk's extensive introduction to Cain, which includes a wealth of newly discovered biographical material; published in PAUL CAIN: THE COMPLETE STORIES and THE PAUL CAIN OMNIBUS (Mysterious Press/Open Road Media/Black Mask Library), 2013.
  • Boris Dralyuk's review article on The Complete Slayers (Centipede Press, 2012) at the Los Angeles Review of Books.


paul, cain, name, george, caryl, sims, 1902, june, 1966, better, known, names, paul, cain, peter, ruric, american, pulp, fiction, author, screenwriter, best, known, novel, fast, which, considered, landmark, pulp, fiction, genre, called, high, point, ultra, har. George Caryl Sims May 30 1902 June 23 1966 better known by his pen names Paul Cain and Peter Ruric was an American pulp fiction author and screenwriter 1 2 He is best known for his novel Fast One which is considered to be a landmark of the pulp fiction genre and was called the high point in the ultra hard boiled manner by Raymond Chandler 3 4 Lee Server author of the Encyclopedia of Pulp Fiction Writers called Fast One a cold hearted machine gun paced masterwork and his other writings gemlike stoic and merciless vignettes that seemed to come direct from the bootlegging front lines 5 George Caryl SimsBorn 1902 05 30 May 30 1902Des Moines IowaDiedJune 23 1966 1966 06 23 aged 64 North Hollywood CaliforniaPen namePaul Cain Peter RuricOccupationNovelist short story writer screenwriterNationalityAmericanGenrehardboiled crime fiction mystery fictionNotable worksFast One 1933 Seven Slayers 1946 Sims enjoyed a brief career in Hollywood as a screenwriter during the 1930s and 1940s including writing the screenplay for the Boris Karloff vehicle The Black Cat 3 Contents 1 Career 2 Writing style 3 Personal life 4 Death 5 References 6 External linksCareer editThe events of Sims life have been difficult for later biographers to verify 6 in part because of his obscurity and in part because during his life he frequently embellished his story with colorful and even outlandish statements such as that he wandered over South America Europe northern Africa and the Near East and had published books titled Young Man Sees God Hypersensualism A Practical Philosophy for Acrobats and Seven Men Named Caesar none of which is true 7 He claimed in a letter to Black Mask editor Joseph Shaw that he had been a professional balloonist as well as a gambler painter sailor and editor 6 Sims was born in Des Moines Iowa on May 30 1902 His father was a former police detective and drugstore owner His mother divorced his father and moved with her son to Los Angeles probably in 1921 some sources say 1918 6 joined by Sims father several years later Sims himself seems to have been less settled he apparently lived in Detroit and Chicago during part of this time He also enlisted in the U S Navy Reserve in 1917 but was discharged in 1921 more than two years early for inaptitude 1 In the mid 1920s Sims began using the pseudonym he d use for the rest of his life Peter Ruric beginning first as George Ruric He also began his career in Hollywood including working as an assistant on the Josef von Sternberg films The Salvation Hunters 1925 and A Woman of the Sea 1926 Actress Myrna Loy born Myrna Williams gave credit in her autobiography to Sims who she apparently knew as Peter Rurick a wild Russian writer of free verse with inventing her stage name 8 Los Angeles Review of Books editor Boris Dralyuk who wrote the introduction to 2013 s The Paul Cain Omnibus 2 suggests that Ruric was inspired by the name of British poet Mina Loy for the actress new name and that his own pseudonym came from Russians Peter the Great and Rurik founder of the Rurikid dynasty 7 He lived in New York circa 1930 where he had become an alcoholic in a dysfunctional relationship with actress Gertrude Michael 1 Here he became involved in pulp magazines such as Black Mask for which he wrote a total of 17 stories Editor Joseph Shaw considered him one of the magazine s strongest contributors and a successor to Dashiell Hammett Sims left the magazine when Shaw was fired in 1936 Additionally Sims had stories published in Detective Fiction Weekly and Star Detective Magazine and several articles in Gourmet Black Mask first published Fast One as five novelettes in 1932 Fast One Lead Party Velvet The Heat and The Dark He then rewrote them into a single novel which became Fast One published in book form by Doubleday in October 1933 9 The story follows gangster Gerry Kells as he navigates and instigates a bloody gang war in Los Angeles 10 Sims dedicated the novel to Michael who probably inspired the character of the alcoholic girlfriend of the protagonist 2 The 1933 Cary Grant film Gambling Ship is based on those stories 1 11 The New York Times described it as a ceaseless welter of bloodshed and frenzy a sustained bedlam of killing and fiendishness told in terse staccato style 12 Sims and Michael broke up in 1933 Fast One sold poorly and received mixed critical reviews and Sims never wrote another novel However its reputation has grown increasingly over time and it is now considered a classic of the genre In 2016 The Los Angeles Review of Books called Fast One part of a protean time for crime fiction and praised the novel as one hell of a twisty tough nihilistic story set in 1932 33 Los Angeles 13 Sims continued to work as a screenwriter in Hollywood under the name Peter Ruric contributing not only the script for 1934 s The Black Cat his most famous movie but 1934 s Affairs of a Gentleman 1942 s Grand Central Murder and 1944 s Guy de Maupassant adaptation Mademoiselle Fifi 14 In 1946 a paperback collection of his best stories called Seven Slayers was published by Saint Enterprises Sims wanted to change his listed name to Ruric but the publisher insisted on sticking with the name Cain 15 Writing style editIn the field of hardboiled noir fiction a genre already known for its starkness and cynicism Sims writing as Paul Cain was notable for its cold brutal nihilism Comparing Cain with other masters of the genre such as Raymond Chandler Boris Dralyuk said that Stacked pound for pound against Cain s lean and war hardened antihero Gerry Kells Chandler s Philip Marlowe comes off like a flabby eccentric chatterbox Dralyuk has also noted that Cain s work often features fits of misogyny and laconic indications of buried trauma resentment and addiction 1 Wall Street Journal reviewer Lee Sandlin was more negative calling him derivative of his Black Mask predecessor Hammett Cain wasn t any good His prose is pitched page after page at exactly the same volume a shrill pounding staccato that can barely spare time for conjunctions 16 Genre historian David E Wilt called Cain s prose competent though not outstanding with the exception of the five Fast One stories 6 Nevertheless Cain has been rediscovered and critically praised in recent years with his complete works collected in The Paul Cain Omnibus 2 10 and reprints of Fast One 17 and Seven Slayers 18 Cain s protagonists were unsentimental brooding compulsive antiheroes capable of remarkable levels of violence The 1933 New York Times review of Fast One called the lead character gangster Gerry Kells so ferocious a hoodlum a sot drug addict two gun deadshot 19 Rather than traditional detectives most Cain protagonists were gangsters or at least on the wrong side of the law Washington Post literary critic Michael Dirda called Cain s style lean stripped down prose affectless narrative voice leavened by touches of wry humor He noted that The narrative s point of view is nearly always external People talk actions are starkly described no explanations are given and we can only guess what Kells or other characters are thinking The prose is similar to Hemingway s but even leaner 10 Cain s noir stories were among the first in the genre to be set in Los Angeles 20 Fast One included a scene set at the iconic restaurant and writer hangout Musso amp Frank Grill 21 Several stories are set in the world of Hollywood and feature lead characters who work in or near the movie industry 6 Personal life editSims married Virginia Maxine Glau in 1939 changing her name to Mechel Ruric she was nearly 20 years his junior The marriage dissolved in 1943 due to his alcoholism He married again in 1945 or 1946 to writer Virginia Radcliffe with whom he collaborated on several radio scripts that marriage lasted until about 1950 In 1955 now living in Europe and suffering from poor health Sims married again this time to a young Virginia woman named Peggy Gregson who was 30 years younger than him the couple had two sons They moved to California and then Virginia where she stayed he moved on to Cuba and Los Angeles again and she remarried in 1962 1 He called himself Peter Ruric rather than George Sims for most of his life The friend who settled his affairs after his death in fact did not know that his original name was George Sims 1 Death editSims died of cancer in North Hollywood in 1966 1 References edit a b c d e f g h Boris Dralyuk 10 April 2018 Paul Cain An Introduction a b c d Cain Paul 2013 The Paul Cain Omnibus Every Crime Story and the Novel Fast One As Originally Published Black Mask Series Open Road Integrated Media Incorporated ISBN 978 1 4804 5689 1 Retrieved 2023 06 06 a b Danger Is My Business An Illustrated History of the Fabulous Pulp Magazines by Lee Server Chronicle Books 1993 p 70 William Marling Paul Cain Archived from the original on 2010 01 07 Server Lee 2014 Encyclopedia of Pulp Fiction Writers Facts on File library of American literature Facts On File Incorporated ISBN 978 1 4381 0912 1 Retrieved 2023 06 08 a b c d e Wilt David E 1991 Hardboiled in Hollywood Bowling Green State University Popular Press p 98 ISBN 978 0 87972 525 9 Retrieved 2023 06 06 a b Dralyuk Boris January 26 2012 The Incomplete Cain Los Angeles Review of Books Retrieved 2023 06 04 Loy Myrna Kotsilibas Davis James 1987 Myrna Loy Being and Becoming Knopf p 42 ISBN 978 0 394 55593 5 Retrieved 2023 06 06 Books Published Today New York Times Proquest Historical Newspapers 1933 10 25 a b c Dirda Michael 2012 03 29 The Complete Slayers A nod to tough crime fiction Washington Post Proquest Historical Newspapers Wilt David 1991 Hardboiled in Hollywood Five Black Mask Writers and the Movies Bowling Green Ohio Bowling Green State University Popular Press ISBN 978 0 879 72525 9 Latest Works of Fiction Gangsters Gone Mad FAST ONE By Paul Cain 304 pp New York Doubleday 2 Archived via the TimesMachine The New York Times October 29 1933 Phillips Gary April 25 2016 The Unacknowledged Black Crime Fiction the Roaring 20s to the 1930s Los Angeles Review of Books Retrieved 2023 06 04 Penzler Otto ed 2008 The Black Lizard Big Book of Pulps The Best Crime Stories from the Pulps During Their Golden Age The 20s 30s amp 40s Vintage Crime Black Lizard Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 307 49416 0 Retrieved 2023 06 06 Nolan William F 1985 The Black Mask Boys Masters in the Hard Boiled School of Detective Fiction New York Mystery Press ISBN 978 0 892 96931 9 Sandlin Lee 2012 03 24 Books The Grace of a Shadowy Street Wall Street Journal Proquest Historical Newspapers Cain Paul 2013 Fast One Gutter Books classic crime Gutter Books LLC ISBN 978 0 9826887 8 6 Retrieved 2023 06 06 Cain Paul 2018 Seven Slayers in German Black Curtain Press ISBN 978 1 5154 2565 6 Retrieved 2023 06 06 Latest Works of Fiction Gangsters Gone Mad New York Times Proquest Historical Newspapers 1933 10 29 Ulin David L 2006 09 06 You know it s noir If desperation and desire are the fuel Los Angeles Times Proquest Historical Newspapers Los Angeles Nolan Tom 1933 10 29 Martinis amp Mythology Los Angeles Times Proquest Historical Newspapers Los Angeles External links editEssay about Paul Cain on detnovel com IMDb listing for Peter Ruric Paul Cain bibliography at HARD BOILED site Comprehensive Bibliographies by Vladimir Paul Cain An Introduction Boris Dralyuk s extensive introduction to Cain which includes a wealth of newly discovered biographical material published in PAUL CAIN THE COMPLETE STORIES and THE PAUL CAIN OMNIBUS Mysterious Press Open Road Media Black Mask Library 2013 Boris Dralyuk s review article on The Complete Slayers Centipede Press 2012 at the Los Angeles Review of Books nbsp nbsp nbsp This article about an American short story writer is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte nbsp nbsp nbsp This article about an American screenwriter born in the 1900s is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paul Cain pen name amp oldid 1204824883, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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