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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hank_JansonHank Janson - Wikipedia

    Hank Janson is both a fictional character and a pseudonym created by the English author Stephen Daniel Frances who died in 1989. Frances wrote a series of thrillers by, and often featuring, Hank Janson, beginning with When Dames Get Tough (1946).

  2. Hank Janson was basically an umbrella name under which several authors operated using the same series character. Stephen D. Francis was the originator, born England 1917, the subsequent huge sales brought him success and fame.

    Title
    Publisher
    Date
    Issue Points - Notes
    When Dames Get Tough
    Ward & Hitchon
    1946
    Not in the English Catalogue of Books nor ...
    Gun Moll for Hire
    Frances
    1948
    RH
    This Woman Is Death
    Frances
    1948
    RH
    Lady, Mind That Corpse
    Frances
    1948
    RH
  3. Mar 1, 2012 · He took the name Hank because it rhymed with Yank, although Stephen Frances himself never set foot in America. As far as readers were concerned, Hank Janson was the author and, as crime reporter for the Chicago Chronicle, the hero. Frances almost seemed to believe his own publicity. In his rare interviews, he appeared as Janson with a hat and a ...

  4. Jan 30, 2024 · Although marketed as archetypal American hard-bitten private eye stories, Janson was the pen mane of a string of British writers, beginning with Stephen D Frances, who bore the flame from 1946 to 1953, but then shared between Frances, D F Crawley, Harry Hobson and Victor Norwood until the series ran out of steam in 1968.

  5. Mar 21, 2020 · Somebody call the thought police! HANK JANSON wasn’t so much a “tough Chicago reporter” (or even, later in his career, a hard-boiled private eye) as a publishing phenomenon. In the years following World War II, there were over thirteen million Hank Janson paperbacks sold, mostly in the U.K.

  6. May 24, 2013 · Hank Janson was the creation of Stephen Frances, though after about 1953 other authors wrote under the name.

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  8. A pseudonym used by Stephen Frances and Victor Norwood. Hank Janson was the most popular and successful of British pulp fiction authors of the 1940s and 1950s. It was estimated that over five million of the author's books had been sold by 1954.

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