
Autograph Hound Saturday. Courtesy Brian Leno, today let’s spotlight a favorite writer here on These Mean Streets.
“Some good news,” Brian reports, “I picked up a signed Eugene Cunningham’s Texas Sheriff for 20 bucks. No dj but it supposedly has a long inscription with a drawing. Bought it sight unseen but couldn’t pass it by for 20 smackers.”
The inscription mentions Chihuahua Joe, one of Cunningham’s best characters, who sometimes drops into the action mid-novel and always adds some firepower to the fun. It also features the “brand mark” EC on the flank of the galloping steer. The brand is featured on the front boards of the early Cunningham Westerns.
Brian got a great deal on this 1934 novel — of course, now he’ll have to pony up more loot to get a copy with a nice dustjacket he can marry to his copy. Still, cheaper than the usual $300 or so for an inscribed Cunningham first in dustjacket. In my experience, I can’t remember Gene just flat-signing a book. He always lays out the wordage and the flourishes.
A couple of years ago Brian thought I landed a great deal on Cunningham’s Texas Triggers, the 1938 Houghton Mifflin first edition in dustjacket, for about $130. Inscribed full page on the ffe and signed “Gene” — also with his full autograph and brand mark on first half-title. On front pastedown Gene made the note “San Francisco — Along in February, ’38”.
Aside from the fact that I like his word-slinging, Cunningham hits several sweet spots for me.
First: San Francisco. He obviously passed through a few times, and finally bought a home overlooking Cliff House and lived his last years here — I detail it in The Literary World of San Francisco.
Second: Dashiell Hammett — and thus connected to San Francisco. Gene was one of the earliest critics to hail Hammett’s work, in the El Paso Times, I think it was — and before The Maltese Falcon. He also sold stories to the pulp Black Mask, and was one of the first to show the explosive influence of Hammett’s 1929 Red Harvest in his Western Riders of the Night in 1932. For the next several novels, if you enjoy high body-counts. . . .
Third: Robert E. Howard. In his personal library the prolific Texan Robert E. Howard, creator of Conan and Bran Mak Morn, had a copy of Gene’s non-fiction history of Wild West gunfighters — Triggernometry.
























