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To ten million men Zelda Roxane was the supreme symbol of sophisticated sex. But to the general who masterminded a Latin American revolution . . . the ex-Nazi turned millionaire industrialist . . . the racing car driver who indulged in dubious pleasures . . . the has-been producer about to pull the biggest deal of his life . . . the lecherous press agent whose advances she'd scorned . . . Zelda Roxane meant disgrace . . . ruin . . . death!

125 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1961

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About the author

Carter Brown

556 books52 followers
Carter Brown was the pseudonym of Alan Geoffrey Yates (1923-1985), who was born in London and educated in Essex.

He married Denise Mackellar and worked as a sound engineer for Gaumont-British films before moving to Australia and taking up work in public relations.

In 1953 he became a full-time writer and produced nearly 200 novels between then and his retirement in 1981.

He also wrote as Tex Conrad and Caroline Farr.

His series heroes were Larry Baker, Danny Boyd, Paul Donavan, Rick Holman, Andy Kane, Randy Roberts, Mavis Siedlitz and Al Wheeler.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Dave.
3,666 reviews451 followers
August 14, 2020
Zelda, a 1961 paperback, is one of the earliest of the 26 or so Rick Holman novels put out by Alan Geoffrey Yates writing as Carter Brown. Carter Brown novels are highly prized by paperback collectors for their lurid covers and tantalizing titles. A whole lot of them were sold in the Sixties and Seventies, but there's not much to them beyond the cover. Here, Holman, detective and bodyguard to the stars, finds himself embroiled in a sort of murder mystery in a mansion with Roxane Zelda, the obvious suspect. Light, quick reading.
Profile Image for Benjamin Thomas.
2,003 reviews372 followers
October 18, 2016
Earlier this year I was able to acquire a bunch of Carter Brown paperbacks for a fantastically cheap price. To be honest I was mostly interested in the cover art by Robert McGinnis which have become collectibles all on their own. But I happen to be one of those people who can’t stand to have an unread book in their house (which is a real problem considering my TBR shelves currently top 1600 books…owned but not yet read…) so I went ahead and plunged into this one, a random selection from the bunch.

This is reportedly the first of the Rick Holman series, although I have seen references to it being number two. It was published in 1961, an era I’ve been reading quite a lot of recently although not necessarily by design. Rick Holman is a Hollywood PI, a cool cat who tends to know more about what is happening than he lets on. He is hired by one of Hollywood’s hottest glamour queens, Ms. Zelda Roxane to be a sort of keeper of the peace/bodyguard during a weekend retreat at her house where she has invited five men, including three ex-husbands to a blackmailing party. Seems Zelda is short of cash and…well, it seemed like a good idea at the time. One of the five men gets murdered and it is up to Rick Holman to solve the case.

Parts of this novel were exactly what I expected: a good mix of characters, some innocent, some dumb, some downright slimy, lots of titillating tease scenes, and oozing 1960’s culture. At first it seemed to be a straight-forward crime story but then it morphed into almost a Hercule Poirot locked-room mystery story with Rick Holman even spilling the results of his investigation to the room full of suspects. But in the end it morphed one more time into a twist ending that I didn’t see coming but endeared the character of Rick Holman to me quite nicely.

Happily, I still have about 20 more of these Carter Brown novels with McGinnis cover art to make my way through and I shall look forward to them for quick reads when the mood strikes me.
Profile Image for Scott.
616 reviews
October 30, 2019
I'd been hearing about Carter Brown in the men's fiction groups I'm in and it sounded like something I'd like. I got what I wanted: a tightly-plotted, no-filler, gratuitously sexy and delightfully politically incorrect (bless you, Mr. Yates) pulp mystery with an extra twist at the end. The cover by Robert McGinnis, an artist I've also been turned onto recently, is the cherry on top.
Profile Image for Josh.
1,732 reviews175 followers
March 7, 2022
Zelda is every man's desire, a famous starlet with the world at her feat. However, behind the gloss and glamour lies trouble - Zelda needs cash quick to finance her latest project and the only way she can get is to blackmail her three ex-husbands, former best friend, and some shady criminals. To keep her safe during the blackmail negotiation she hires Rick Holman to keep the peace - however, as per every one of these kinds of books, the peace isn't kept for long!

Whilst Zelda got all the headlines, it was her dutiful 'Girl Friday' Jan Kelly who steals the show with her comedic bit part and endearing qualities. Her interactions with Rick Holman are a highlight of the book.

ZELDA is Rick Holman as I've never read him; portrayed as a ruthless and vengeful hard man, the distinctly noir flavour to his character in this outing is great which really sets this apart from other books in the series.
Profile Image for Michael.
1,609 reviews210 followers
January 26, 2014
"Zelda. She was Hollywood´s goddess of love: provocative, passionnate, excitingly alive. Five men wanted her...dead."

Hollywood-Star Zelda lädt ihre drei Ex-Ehemänner ein, ihre ehemalige "beste Freundin" und einen lateinamerikanischen Revolutionär, eine wahrhaft illustre Runde: ein Ex-Nazi, inzwischen erfolgreicher Industrieller; ein ehemals erfolgreicher Rennfahrer mit einer Neigung zu jungen Männern; ein betrügerischer Filmproduzent; ein Handlanger eines Diktators und ein Hollywoodsternchen mit düsterer Vergangenheit. Diese fünf sollen Geld für einen Film geben, den Zelda plant. Richtiger, sie sollen Geld dafür geben, dass Zelda den Film nicht macht. Uncharmant könnte man von Erpressung sprechen, denn Zelda weiß so einiges über sie alle zu berichten, was in ihrem Film Gegenstand sein könnte.
Enter Rick Holman, hier in seinem ersten Abenteuer. Ein all-american Mr. Fixit of Filmland, ein Hollywood-Troubleshooter, der von Zelda angeheuert wird, damit es in der Villa, in der die "Verhandlungen" zum geplanten Film stattfinden, nicht zu Handgreiflichkeiten kommt.
Aber dann gibt es doch eine Leiche...

Carter Brown führt seinen künftigen Serienhelden Rick Holman (es werden noch über 30 Romane mit ihm folgen im Laufe der 60iger Jahre) ohne großes Federlesen ein, er fällt mit der Tür ins Haus, als sei er schon immer dagewesen.
Erzählt wird schnell und gradlinig, die Dialoge sind genretypisch zynisch und schnoddrig. Wer ein Bühnenstück aus diesem Roman machen wollte, müßte nicht allzu viel umschreiben. Brown verliert sich nicht in tiefgreifende Betrachtungen oder Gedanken. Szene plus Dialog, mehr braucht es nicht. Die Männer interessieren sich für Alkohol, Sex und Geld, die Frauen für Sex, Geld und Alkohol. Der großen Klappe der - teils möchtegerne - männlichen Helden setzen die Damen ihre eigenen Reize entgegen:
"Her body brushed against mine with a nice implication of an intimate understanding between the two of us that transcended words. It didn´t exist of course - but at the moment of contact who cared?".

Ein typischer Pulp-Krimi mit dem dazu passenden Cover vom großartigen Robert McGinnis, das alleine schon den Kauf rechtfertigt.

Und leider bleibt das Cover am Ende auch das Beste an diesem Krimi.
Zwar bietet Carter Brown einen bunten Reigen an Tatverdächtigen an, aber letztlich bleiben alle als Personen so farblos, dass jeder als Täter in Betracht kommt und der Leser sich nicht die Mühe machen muss, selbst Theorien zu entwickeln.
Über längere Passagen erinnert ZELDA fast einen einen Agatha Christi-Krimi, wenn Holman mit allen Tatverdächtigen in einem Raum sitzt und schwadronierend zu ergründen versucht, wer der Täter ist. Dabei ist die Beweislage extrem dünn und jeder Verdacht ist gleich unbegründet und könnte auch auf einen anderen Anwesenden fallen, denn Motive zum Mord hatte jeder. Schließlich gibt es einen Plottwist, der mich allerdings auch nicht zufrieden gestellt habt, aber zum Ende hin noch einmal für etwas Action sorgt und dem Krimi einen Noir-Touch gibt.

Was ich diesem Roman nachsehen kann sind Zynismus, Sexismus, Chauvinismus, loses Mundwerk und der omnipräsente Drink, eben klassische Zutaten eines Pulp-Krimis.
Was ich nicht nachsehen kann: ausschließlich stereotype Charaktere und Handlungen ohne Überraschungspotential, so dass es mir als Leser zunehmend total egal war, wer letztendlich den Mord begangen hat; vor allem aber: zu wenig Spannung - und gerade dieses Manko darf ein Krimi nicht haben.

2 1/2 Sterne, die in diesem Fall von mir nicht auf- sondern abgerundet werden.
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