Introduction
The late American author Anatole Baskin only ever published one book under his own name: a how-to manual for the installation of automatic dishwashers, which went out of print in 1964. But, under a plethora of pen names, Mr. Baskin, one of the 20th century's busiest pulp writers, produced several hundred works, many of which remain the objects fervent popular affection. For example, Baskin's
The Loneliest Poodle
, presented as the creation of a fictional retired nurse named Daniella Purifoy, has sold twenty million copies, has been translated into thirty-seven languages, was the source material for an animated film and a stage musical, and was the inspiration for a ride at the Happywood Acres amusement park. Meanwhile, writing under the
nom-de-plume
Dexter Morrow, Baskin put out a series of detective novels featuring the one-eyed private eye Roscoe Chilton, a character that will of course be familiar to anyone who saw the Seventies TV series
Here Comes Chilt!
. And, those of us who read
Rocket Story
magazine as a kid can easily recall the thrilling space adventures of Rex Carson and Belinda Milestone as penned by one "Franklyn Senter", who was in truth none other than Anatole Baskin in yet another guise.
No one is certain why Baskin chose to hide his identity behind all these masks. His biographer, Uta Langella, suggests various psychological causes, some of which relate to an unhappy childhood and several unhappy marriages. But, it is equally possible that Baskin was simply trying to avoid his creditors, of whom, due to an expensive lifestyle and a lifelong addiction to rare liqueurs, he had many. It is known, for instance, that he attempted to hide his substantial
Poodle
royalties in a phony bank account under the Purifoy pseudonym. Unfortunately for Baskin, his creditors hired a detective who had long studied the detection methods of Roscoe Chilton, and the
Poodle
money scheme was discovered. Still, Langella believes that the ultra-prolific author managed to squirrel away about ten million dollars in various secret accounts over the span of his lengthy career. Money, by the way, which has since become the subject of several lawsuits among Baskin's numerous and contentious heirs.
In any case, scholars have yet to unearth all the work Baskin produced in the course of his eighty-seven years. So far, we know of about 400 books, 800 short stories, 17 volumes of party jokes and toasts, and the scripts for about 1300 television shows. Among the most famous revelations: Baskin wrote 97 Harlequin romances, including
Passionate Moisture
, which was made into the Broadway play
Oh, Toronto!
; Baskin, and not Vurl Vurlesson, is the actual author of
Trousers of Sod
, an epic poem about Viking life in Greenland; Baskin also found time to pen the underground sci-fi classic
Pussykat X-1
, the basis of the infamous unfinished Elvis movie (this was the film which was shut down by the studio when they saw that Elvis's spaceship strongly resembled a gigantic dildo).
Meanwhile, an English professor at Dewlap College has recently claimed to have established that Baskin was the real author of the S&M novels of "Charlotte Dormabella", a pseudonym which had long been attributed to the "Queen of Gothic Horror", Anya Basmati. (The reader will no doubt recall that Basmati's novels in the "Viscount Diabolus" cycle reinvigorated vampire literature, inaugurating a new "Crimson Age", much to the delight of booksellers everywhere.) Of course, this claim implies that Basmati herself was yet another of Baskin's inventions. In this respect, it is interesting to note that, last year, it was revealed that the woman who presented herself as Basmati on book tours and at conventions was actually a female impersonator named Clint Bradshaw. Mr. Bradshaw, it turns out, was hired by a literary agent to fill in for the "real Basmati", who allegedly suffered from extreme shyness.
Although the jury is still out on the Baskin/Basmati question, Uta Langella presents some tantalizing evidence of a connection in her recent article in
X-Press
magazine. Following the death of Baskin's widow (his sixth wife, Lornette), Ms. Langella gained access to a hitherto unknown cache of Baskin's papers and memorabilia. Among a large collection of manuscripts, she discovered the draft for the fourth chapter of a novel entitled "Mistress of the Scarlet Fang". Ms. Langella could find no other chapters of this work, though she did locate a sheet of paper headed "For Red Tooth", which was covered over with scribbled notes about characters and possible plot developments. What's interesting is, the character names closely parallel those found in Basmati's fiction, and are in some cases exactly the same (for example, "Madelyn Lilywhite", "Ondine Chalfont" and "Ivor Bogeymann"). Also, it is worth mentioning that, as Basmati fans know, her first vampire story, published in