Captured by the monstrous genius known as Mr. Computer, Dick Tracy must fight his way out and untangle the mysterious activities of the masterminds who cause people to lose entire days in their lives
William Johnston joined the Navy in 1942 and served in the Pacific. He worked as a disc jockey, advertising executive, magazine editor, and PR man before his writing career took off in 1960 with The Marriage Cage, a comic mystery that earned him a Best First Novel Edgar Award nomination from the Mystery Writers of America. He followed that book with a slew of pulp titles for Monarch Books, ranging from light comedy (The Power of Positive Loving) to medical romance (the Doctor Starr trilogy) to soft-core erotica (Save Her for Loving, Teen Age Tramp, Girls on the Wing).
Johnston’s medical novels dovetailed with his first tie-in assignments -- original novels based on the TV series The Nurses, Doctor Kildare and Ben Casey. Those books, published between 1962 and 1964, were so successful that his next original medical romance, Two Loves Has Nurse Powell, was presented as “From the author of Ben Casey.”
In 1965, Johnston wrote an original novel based on the TV comedy Get Smart. The book was a huge success, leading to nine more novels over the show’s five-season history and making him the “go-to” guy for sitcom-based tie-ins. He wrote books based on Captain Nice, Room 222, Happy Days, Welcome Back Kotter, The Flying Nun, The Brady Bunch, Nanny and the Professor, The Munsters, Gilligan’s Island, Bewitched, The Monkees and F-Troop, among others.
But his TV tie-in work extended far beyond sitcom adaptations. He wrote books based on Ironside, Dick Tracy, The Young Rebels, The Iron Horse, Then Came Bronson, and Rod Serling’s The New People, to name a few. He even adapted the cartoon characters Magilla Gorilla and Snagglepuss into books for children.
Johnston also penned many novelizations, including the pilots for the 1930s-era private eye series Banyon and the high school drama Sons and Daughters. His feature film novelizations include Klute, The Swinger, Echoes of a Summer, The New Interns, The Priest’s Wife, Lt. Robin Crusoe USN and his final tie-in project, Gore Vidal’s Caligula (under the pseudonym “William Howard”).
After retiring from fiction writing, he opened his own bar, which he operated for many years. He resided in San Jose, California prior to his death in 2010.
A fun novel about a villain with a computer-like mind using an experimental drug to steal important knowledge with the goal of eventually taking over society.
Tracy doggedly battles the bad guy, getting captured several times (a staple situation from the comic strip) and eventually taking out Mr. Computer's henchmen. But to catch Mr. Computer himself, Tracy has to use the experimental drug to alter his own thought patterns and do something the villain can't predict in advance.
The plot is a little silly, but it's all played straight and is very entertaining. William Johnston was a master of tie-in novels and he uses straightforward prose and logical plot development to tell a strong story about the toughest cop on the comics page.
My husband and I do "buddy reads" of old books. That's the only reason why I found myself reading a Dick Tracy book written in 1970. It's a bit of a silly book that doesn't hold up well. The villain is a human with a brain like a computer. In fact, he calls himself "Computer." He's basically an over-the-top Bond villain. I just couldn't help rolling my eyes at the plot and characters. It's all quite one-dimensional and often reads like bad science fiction.