EV Cunningham is a pseudonym used by author: Howard Fast, and under that name he wrote 21 mystery novels plus two others, one under his own name and one using another pseudonym Walter Ericson.
He was educated at George Washington High School, graduating in 1931. He attended the National Academy of Design in New York before serving with the Office of War Information between 1942 and 1943 and the Army Film Project in 1944.
He became war correspondent in the Far East for 'Esquire' and 'Coronet' magazines in 1945. And after the war he taught at Indiana University, Bloomington, in the summer of 1947, a year in which he was imprisoned for contempt of Congress, concerning his communistic views.
He became the owner of the Blue Heron Press in New York in 1952, a position he held until 1957. And he was the founder of the World Peace Movement and a member of the World Peace Council from 1950 to 1955 and was later a member of the Fellowship for Reconciliation. In 1952 he was an American Labour Party candidate for Congress for the 23rd District of New York.
He received a great many awards between 1933 and 1967.
He married Bette Cohen in 1937 and they had one son and one daughter.
Under his own name he wrote 35 works of fiction plus a variety of history and critical works, short stories, plays and a screenplay, 'The Hessian' (1971) plus a book of verse with William Gropper.
He died died at his home in Old Greenwich, Connecticut, on 12 March 2003.
I was disappointed in this last of the seven Masao Masuto mysteries. The plot is as twisty and complicated as its possible to be, and although it's more or less resolved by the end, I found the conclusion entirely unsatisfying. What was missing was what I treasure most in these books, which is the way Masuto uses his intuition to suss out exactly what's going on. Here, Masuto seems able to divine how things will play out, but he doesn't seem to know the answers; a subtle distinction, I guess, but one that really bothered me.
Author Howard Fast is bitterer and angrier about the state of the world than I've seen him in other books. There's no idealism and no optimism here (as is certainly found in his early books); instead there is just despair at rampant corruption. He's not even upset about the class issues that distinguish the earlier Masuto books; he's just furious with amoral governments, war, destruction, greed. I don't blame him at all--but it makes for a less fun read that we've gotten in the other Masuto mysteries.
I really hoped for closure with this book, and that doesn't come at all, which is in some ways the saddest aspect of the book. Glad to have finished the series and glad there aren't more to come. I think I prefer younger Howard Fast to this angered older version.
One final point: I have glimpsed a few clues that Fast is homophobic in some of his other works: gays seem to be the one group whose dignity and rights he's not interested in protecting or defending (which is really sad). There's a fairly lengthy scene of homophobia here, kind of disguised as policemen verbally abusing a suspect; still disappointing and unnecessary.
Howard Fast, author of Spartacus, was fairly prolific, and under the alias of E.V. Cunningham wrote a mystery series featuring a Nisei detective named Masao Masuto, a member of the Beverly Hills Police. I wouldn't describe these brief books as mysteries but rather as literary canapes. Masao is US-born and thus a citizen, but retains much of his Japanese heritage. For the most part people are surprised to learn the B.H.P.D. hires "Chinese", and expect him to be another Charlie Chan. In this particular case, he and his Jewish partner foil a KGB operation. The charm of these stories lies in his Zen approach to solving cases.