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Don Pendleton
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==Writings== ===Executioner series (1969β1980)=== {{Main|The Executioner (book series)}} The best-selling ''Executioner'' series made the men's action-adventure genre popular in the late 1960s and 1970s, and Pendleton was known as "the father of action adventure", a term he coined. Pendleton's novels revolved around Sergeant Mack Bolan's one-man war against the [[American Mafia|Mafia]], beginning with ''War Against the Mafia'' (1969) and ending with ''Satan's Sabbath'' (1980), after which Pendleton licensed the rights to his ''Executioner'' characters to the [[Harlequin Enterprises|Harlequin]] publishing group.<ref name="Markert2016" /> In the [[Pulp magazines|pulp]] tradition, Pendleton's Mack Bolan, a former [[United States Army]] [[Sergeant#United States|sergeant]] and [[Vietnam War]] veteran, was larger than life, responsible for killing hundreds of mobsters over the course of Pendleton's 38 novels. Like many pulp characters, Bolan left a trademark "[[Calling card (crime)|calling card]]" β in his case, a [[Marksmanship Badges (United States)|marksman's medal]]. After 15 Executioner novels, Pendleton became involved in a legal battle with the publisher, [[Kensington Books|Pinnacle Books]], over ownership of the series. Pinnacle had the next entry, ''The Executioner #16: Sicilian Slaughter,'' written by William Crawford under the pseudonym "Jim Peterson".<ref>Kenney, Joe. Glorious Trash. "A Study of Action-Adventure Fiction: The Executioner and Mack Bolan by William H. Young." Nov. 7, 2011</ref> Pendleton ignored "Sicilian Slaughter" and wrote The Executioner #17: ''Jersey Guns,'' as a sequel to #15, ''Panic in Philly,'' under a contract with [[New American Library]]. The contract was ultimately voided by the terms of his settlement with Pinnacle<ref>{{cite news|author=Kraft, David Anthony|author-link=David Anthony Kraft|title=The Executioner Speaks Out! |work=[[Marvel Preview]]|number=2|date= 1975|publisher= [[Marvel Comics]]}}</ref> and he returned to Pinnacle for 21 more novels.<ref name="Mengel2009">{{cite book|last=Mengel|first=Bradley|title=Serial Vigilantes of Paperback Fiction: An Encyclopedia from Able Team to Z-Comm|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xIPw0F6QWlYC&pg=PA66|date=16 September 2009|publisher=McFarland Press|location=Jefferson, NC|isbn=978-0-7864-5475-4|pages=66β67}}</ref> ====Spin-offs (1980βpresent)==== Since 1980, ''The Executioner, Mack Bolan'' books and spinoffs - [[Able Team]], [[Phoenix Force (novel)|Phoenix Force]], [[Stony Man]], and [[Mack Bolan]] - have been written by [[Harlequin Books|Harlequin]]'s team of writers. The Harlequin Gold Eagle books moved Bolan into a fight against [[terrorism]], in whose course he was given the cover identity of "Colonel John Macklin Phoenix." Since 1980, Harlequin has produced new novels, and the writer's name is mentioned on the copyright page as a provider of "a contribution" to the work, pushing the number of ''Mack Bolan'' novels into the hundreds; all of them bear the byline, ''Don Pendleton's Mack Bolan.''<ref name="Markert2016">{{cite book|last=Markert|first=John|title=Publishing Romance: The History of an Industry, 1940s to the Present|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yV_TCwAAQBAJ&pg=PT177|date=26 February 2016|publisher=McFarland|isbn=978-1-4766-2124-1|pages=177β178|location=Jefferson, NC}}</ref> ===Joe Copp, Private Eye series (1987β1992) === Pendleton's other enduring series was the Joe Copp, Private Eye novels, told in the [[First-person narrative|first person]] by 6'3", 260 lb. Joe Copp, a [[private investigator]].<ref name="Server2014">{{cite book|last=Server|first=Lee|title=Encyclopedia of Pulp Fiction Writers|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=k54nLojgIrwC&pg=PA211|date=14 May 2014|publisher=[[Infobase Publishing]]|isbn=978-1-4381-0912-1|page=211}}</ref> The novels were [[Formula fiction|formulaic]] [[hardboiled]] [[detective fiction]], always opening in the middle of the story, with Copp pursuing a variety of criminals, with the story then [[Flashback (narrative)|flashing back]] to the beginning to describe how Copp got into his current predicament.{{citation needed|date=May 2015}} The Joe Copp series of six hardcover novels often had over-the-top action moments reminiscent to those found of [[Mickey Spillane]]'s [[Mike Hammer (character)|Mike Hammer]].<ref name="SarverMarkus1997">{{cite book|last1=Sarver|first1=Linda|last2=Markus|first2=Tom|title=A Novel Approach to Theatre: From Adams to Zola|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=w2sjmtm6q4QC&pg=PA167|year=1997|publisher=[[Scarecrow Press]]|isbn=978-0-8108-3251-0|page=167}}</ref> The books were first published in hardcover by [[Donald I. Fine]] and then released in paperback by [[Harper & Row|Harper]]. ===Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective series (1986β1988)=== The first book of Don Pendleton's Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective series, ''Ashes to Ashes'', was published in 1986 by [[Warner Books]]. The Ashton Ford character is a former naval officer and spy, skilled in [[cryptology]] and able to see into the future.
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