CBR Live! Archive
Friday's Quest
This is a house of illness this week, I'm afraid, so there's not much in the way of a column. However, I do have one little nugget from the odds-and-sods pile I'm going to go ahead and put up, because it's too good not to share.
On one of our thrift-shop bookscouting expeditions that I occasionally chronicle in this space, I stumbled across an interesting little oddity.
Ever wonder what Fran Striker did after creating The Lone Ranger and The Green Hornet for radio in the 1940's? Probably not, but God help me, it's the sort of thing that crosses my mind, and I just found out. Apparently he went on to create Tom Quest.

This was a short-lived boy's adventure series published by Grosset & Dunlap from 1947 to 1952 or thereabouts.

Then in 1955 the series was reprinted in super-cheap hardcover by Clover Books, designed to be sold on drugstore racks alongside Whitman's Big Little Books and Trixie Belden and so on. Clover also put out new seventh and eighth books in the series along with reprinting the original six.

I discovered all this myself just today after a little research ... I do carry a lot of crap in my head but I'm not that good. I'm indebted to Bob Finnian, who maintains the Tom Quest Unofficial Homepage, for most of this info.
Anyway, poking around in one of our local thrift stores, I scored the last of the Clovers, number eight-- Mystery of the Timber Giant.

Thanks to some first-rate scholarship from Fred Woodworth in the article reprinted on Finnian's page, we know this is actually a rewrite of an earlier licensed Gene Autry novel, Gene Autry and the Redwood Pirates, which also featured an unscrupulous lumber baron as the villain.

But here's a fun fact that neither Mr. Finnian nor Mr. Wordworth mentions.
First let me catch you up on the series premise. Tom Quest is the son of a famous scientist and explorer, and goes on his adventures with wisecracking newspaperman Whiz Walton and a huge Texan guy named Gulliver. In the first book, Tom discovers that his father, long believed dead, may still be alive, and, in the second novel Tom, Whiz, and Gulliver travel to Central America in search of him. They do, eventually, find Quest senior (sorry, I guess that was a SPOILER!!)
In later books Tom's scientist father takes Tom with him on his expeditions and though Tom is nominally the hero of these adventures, really it's tough guy Gulliver that gets most of the action.
Sound familiar? It should.

Because according to the Wold Newton mythology, Tom later started going by his middle name, Benton, and became a scientist himself.

And his son Jonny Quest would go on to have even more fantastic adventures.
What I love about this supposed connection is the certainty that it was completely unplanned by anyone working on any of these properties ...and yet it's so perfect.
More is revealed in this vastly entertaining series of articles here.
As for me, I'm taking some more flu medicine and stumbling off to bed. See you next week.
- Posted on February 6, 2009 @ 06:00 PM






9 Comments
SanctumSanctorumComix
February 6, 2009 at 7:11 pm
Awesome find!
I love Johnny Quest (have since I was a kid, lo many decades ago)!
This kind of behind-the-scenes, built-in history is the stuff of nerd-dreams.
~P~
SanctumSanctorumComix
February 6, 2009 at 7:12 pm
Oh!
And... feel better soon!
~P~
Derek J. Goodman
February 6, 2009 at 8:26 pm
Whenever I see you say something like "on one of our bookscouting expeditions..." before the fold, that's when I get really excited to read your column. I love when you write about this stuff.
Greg Hatcher
February 6, 2009 at 9:28 pm
Woke up and got to thinking... the Lone Ranger novels were ghosted for Striker by Gaylord DuBois. Were these Tom Quest books ghosted as well?
Answer: probably. At least mine was. Because the author of Gene Autry and the Redwood Pirates as well as several others, was a gent named Bob Hamilton.... and I rooted out another Autry juvenile, Gene Autry and the Big Valley Grab, that we already had here (wondering if I'd somehow missed seeing Fran Striker's name on it) and that one's written by W.H. Hutchinson.
So now I'm wondering what the hell Fran Striker did actually write. He sure was a genius at getting his name on stuff other people did.
Sijo
February 6, 2009 at 10:31 pm
So we are supposed to believe the Tom Quest novels had *no* connection to the development of the Johnny Quest series? That's hard to swallow. At the very least, the GENRE itself had to have influenced their ideas.
Still, fun topic. Where I live (Puerto Rico) this kind of books were not available on newstands; I discovered (some of) them only at my high school library. But only a few; names like the Hardy Boys or Nancy Drew were unknown to me until later, sadly.
Here's hoping you feel better soon, Greg!
Oinkman
February 6, 2009 at 10:49 pm
So I really hope Doc Samson knew about this connection when creating the Venture Bros. It would have been even more parallelism in it....It is even harder to swallow that both Benton Quest and Rusty Venture were second generation scientist/boy adventurers without Doc knowing.
Greg Hatcher
February 6, 2009 at 11:32 pm
Well, in the sense that they all kind of started with "Jack Armstrong, the All-American Boy," sure. In fact that's Jonny Quest's most direct ancestor; the show originally started as a Jack Armstrong pilot. Another of Jonny's influences was alleged to be the Rick Brant series of books, which in turn has been suggested as being the success that Tom Quest was trying to emulate.
Honestly, this is a genre where it's really hard to pin down where influence stops and plagiarism begins. These are formula series books and they almost always are designed from the get-go as "let's do a teen book series based on...." something else more successful. Christopher Cool and Geronimo Johnson were clearly designed as teenage versions of U.N.C.L.E.'s Napoleon Solo and Illya Kuryakin, but is that actually theft? When does Jonny Quest turn into its own thing and stop being, say, a sci-fi version of Terry and the Pirates? And so on.
Dunc
February 9, 2009 at 3:28 am
It would have entertained me if Gaylord DuBois had published The Lone Ranger books under his own name.
Jack Ripper
February 19, 2009 at 5:05 pm
"Bob Hamilton" is a pseudonym of Fran Striker. And from what I gather, only the first Lone Ranger book was written by Dubois, which appeared in different editions under each of their names (and later only as by Striker). Supposedly, Striker revised the book prior to print & wrote the rest himself.