Carroll John Daly(1889-1958)
- Writer
With a single screen writing credit to his name, Carroll John Daly is
an unlikely mention as being the originator of the private eye... but
he just might be. And he was, by contemporary accounts, a strange guy;
born in Yonkers, New York in 1889, he most certainly was neurotic,
agoraphobic and had a severe fear of dentists. These considerable
obstacles to a conventional career were fortuitously offset by the
genetic good fortune of having a sympathetic wealthy uncle who
encouraged his writing efforts. Daly began to make a name for himself
in the nickel and dime pulps in the early 1920s. He was 33 when he
managed to get published in the fledgling Black Mask. His character
Terry Mack is significant as the first tough-talking private eye
(debuting in May, 1923) ever to appear in the pulp genre. Daly's
characterization was pretty crudely drawn and he quickly created
another character in the same vein, the twin-toting .45 gumshoe Race
Williams. Black Mask hired a visionary editor, Joe "Cap" Shaw in 1926,
who almost immediately took an intense dislike to Daly's
one-dimensional writing style. Shaw conceded to his popularity for the
time being, while methodically building up a stable of far greater
writing talent. Criticism aside, Daly's 'The Snarl of the Beast' (1927)
has the distinction as being acknowledged as the first private eye
novel ever published. As Joe Shaw groomed other writers, contemporary
critics began to condemn Daly, accusing him of subverting the morals of
society and bemoaning the quality of his writing. The mind-numbing void
the Race Williams character filled in Black Mask became less important
in the early 1930s as the magazine featured vastly superior stories
written by the likes of Raoul Fauconnier Whitfield and John K. Butler.
Daly and Shaw argued continually over the quality of Daly's writing,
and to a lesser extent money and to the delight of Joe Shaw, Daly
walked off the magazine in late 1934. Daly would sporadically reappear
in Black Mask after Shaw left the publication in 1936, but would fade
into obscurity, ending his writing career ignobly by writing comic book
dialog. He died in 1958, unappreciated and virtually forgotten by those
working in the genre he largely helped create.