Publisher's Synopsis
"Until Death Do Us Part," She Promised -- With Murder in her Heart and Larceny on Her Mind
Johnny Babcock was the name on the life insurance policy for $100,000. Johnny Babcock was the name on all the identification found on the crumpled, burnt body found at the bottom of a ravine. Johnny Babcock's grieving widow gratefully accepted the cashier's check from the insurance company. And all the while, Johnny Babcock lived on Skid Row, doubled-crossed by the wife he loved...and facing murder charges if he ever revealed his true identify. Is there a way out for Johnny that doesn't put him in the grave...or behind bars?
"Packs plenty of punch...you will thrill to this master of mystery."Brooklyn Record
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Elmer Merle Parsons was born in Pittsburgh, PA in 1926. In 1949, when he was 23 years old, he was convicted of burglary and grand theft for stealing a car from a Phoenix used car lot and leading police on a wild chase that ended in a crash. He served three years in Chino State Prison...but didn't stay free for long. In 1955, he was arrested in Pasadena, CA for passing 22 stolen checks, which he told the court he needed to "tide him over" while awaiting money for a script he claimed he'd sold and because he couldn't get a job due to his prison record. He was sentenced to five years in prison, which he served at San Quentin, where he became editor of the prison newspaper and sold his first novel, "Self Made Widow," to Fawcett for $3500 advance under the pen-name "Philip Race." He wrote wrote & published two more novels, "Killer Take All" and "Johnny Come Deadly," under his pen name. After his release in 1960, he wrote one novel ("Dark of Summer") and several westerns under his own name and also contributed scripts for many TV series, including Sea Hunt, Cheyenne, Ripcord, Bonanza, The Dakotas, The Virginian and Flipper.