Wednesday, July 15, 2026

QUICK SHOTS: Nick Carter Killmaster #1: Run, Spy, Run by Nick (Michael Avallone) Carter

I'm back on my side-quest to read the number #1's in various long running series with the first Nick Carter Killmaster. I have never reviewed a Nick Carter on the blog. I have like a whole bookshelf full of them, a lot of them purchased cheap from a thrift store next to the local Airforce base. I guess Nick had fans there. But I rarely read a Nick Carter, in fact a lot of the time I sorta forget of the series as a whole when thinking of Men's adventure books, when the series was one of the longest running. Am I not a fan?

The books were a Lyle Kenyon Engel produced joint, and he seemingly tried to recreate the success of these with a dozen other series like Aquanauts, Hot Line, The Baroness, Chopper Cop, etc. etc. but Nick Carter was his biggest action series. The whole thing was a throwback to begin with, a "reboot" of Nick Carter, Detective from the pulps, movies and radio. Seems like we've always recycled ideas. Here, Nick is switched from a gumshoe to a secret agent to keep up with Mr. Bond. He works for an agency called AXE and packs a Luger and a dagger along with other gadgets. I think this is one of the reasons I rarely think about 'ol Nick. I love the ideas behind a lot of Engel's produced series. An underwater troubleshooter with his own submarine? An undercover 70s cop on a motorcycle? A spy who poses as a race car driver? All those sounds awesome, but since it's all for hire work through a middleman to the publisher, it all sort feels a little bland a lot of the time. Too many of the edges have been sanded off. 

Engel hired one of my favorite writers ever Michael Avallone to pen the first couple adventures of this new Nick Carter. Avallone had written a fair number of mysteries in his Ed Noon series by then and would go on to write a lot of swinging spy stories with The Man from UNCLE, The Girl from UNCLE, The Coxeman, The Butcher, and even Ed Noon soon took spy missions from the president. I've covered one of his own super spy characters (that I wish got a series) David Seven here and a bunch of his other work on the site before. I'm a fan.

And this is one of the few #1's I have read before, but it was so long ago that I remembered nothing of it. Run, Spy, Run is the well-designed #1 for a series. It introduces the new set-up and the side-characters. Nick's gear and the swinging spy vibe that the series would carry on. Avallone is tamped down here (more on that later) and playing it fairly "straight." He's a kooky writer, full of exuberance that flowed onto the page. Here we have a competent piece of genre fiction that does what it sets out to do: sell more books. 

Engel didn't seem to like Avallone's draft of the book and in Avallone's own words, said it was "heavily edited," by Valrie Moolman and that's clear. Occasionally a Avallone line will appear, and I do think all the stuff with Nick Carter's pistol, knife, and gadgets all having nicknames was probably Avallone's idea. That's a major throwback to the pulps. Something like The Avenger's "Mike and Ike" gun and knife. Avallone loved the pulps. 

Run, Spy, Run isn't a bad book, it's just not super remarkable. Even #13 or #19 of the Ed Noon books are remarkable, so I blame it on the editing. Avallone couldn't help writing like Avallone, take a look the review for his novelization of Friday the 13th: 3-D and see how he could make most anything come out like his. 

Here in #1, we set up Nick's Blofeld, Judas with his plot to blow up planes with politicians on it. The rest is the trappings of the Bond-era of spy fiction, with secret bases, sexy ladies, travel and action. Though the action isn't dwelled upon and seems a little lifeless. It's almost like it was rewritten too much...hmm...weird, right? The whole thing just makes me want to take an Ed Noon of the shelf and get a proper jolt of Avallone's style.

My copy of Run, Spy, Run is a bundle-up with Nick Cater #100 packaged with, well, #100: Dr. Death and The Preposterous Theft, a pulp Nick Carter tale. It's a dandy little package. This wasn't my favorite Nick Carter, that would be John Messman's Sea Trap or Manning Lee Stokes's Spy Castle. Theses used to haunt used bookstores, but I see less and less in the wild anymore which is a shame, but they can still be found pretty cheap online in big lots. 



And my now traditional sign-off, my first novel Gunpowder Breath is available on Amazon as an eBook!

1 comment:

  1. I just added Gunpowder Breath to my Kindle. There's my bedtime reading this weekend.

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