Sergeant Mack Bolan, a sniper with 95 confirmed kills, returns home from his stint in Vietnam to find that his entire family is dead. The local mafiosi is to blame. Upon further research, Bolan discovers that the mafia has ruined a lot of local families, destroyed a lot of lives, is responsible for many unnecessary deaths. Bolan thought the war—-for him—-was over. He now knows that it’s just getting started.
Don Pendleton wrote “War Against the Mafia” in 1969. It was the first of nearly forty books in his series featuring Mack “The Executioner” Bolan. In all of them, Bolan wages a one-man war against all domestic enemies: mafia, drug dealers, pimps, crooked cops, deranged hippies, militant feminists, overzealous environmentalists. (Okay, I just made those last three up, but Pendleton’s political vibes seem to lean to the Right, so I’m guessing that those could be viable enemies.)
If this sounds familiar, especially to comic book fans, it’s because Frank Castle, a.k.a. The Punisher, was a blatant rip-off of Pendleton’s long-running paperback hero. (The Punisher’s first appearance in “The Amazing Spider-Man” #129 was 1974.) The creators really didn’t hide the fact that it was a blatant rip-off, either. One of the co-creators, Gerry Conway, has admitted to the fact numerous times in interviews. Pendleton himself was even interviewed in an issue of the comic book series, clearly indicating that he seemed to be okay with it.
“The Executioner” series ran for almost fifty years, ending in 2020. After Pendleton wrote the first 39 books, a team of writers took over the series. Bolan himself changed from a vigilante outlaw to being recruited by the government to fight the Russkies and Muslim terrorists. Apparently, it pays to be a vengeful psychopath.
Despite its questionable morality, Pendleton’s series is actually pretty damn entertaining, which could explain its fifty-year popularity. Strangely enough, a Mack Bolan movie has never been made, despite several attempts over the past half-century. Actors like Steve McQueen, Sylvester Stallone, Clint Eastwood, Vin Diesel, and Bradley Cooper have all come close to making a Hollywood adaptation but nothing ever got green-lighted.
As men’s action-adventure, this is pretty boilerplate. Bolan himself is somewhat lacking in personality. He’s humorless and, other than a few rolls in the hay, doesn’t seem to have normal masculine needs. He’s obsessed with guns.
I’ll probably read more of these, but I much prefer the other long-running men’s action-adventure series, “Longarm”, a western series featuring a much more likable U.S. Marshall who spends more time bedding the ladies than shooting bad guys. I’ll take the happy horn-dog over the clinically-depressed gun nut any day.