This recent collection of some old pulp adventure novelettes, "The Python Pit: The Return of Singapore Sam" was published in 2014 with four classic tales originally published in the Argosy adventure magazine between 1931-1934. Let's look at each!
Sapphires and Suckers:
"Run up alongside that bank, under the sala. Take the kid and the girl aboard."
"You know what that means, redhead?"
"Sure! Your decks will be pumped full of lead. We both may get shot. I thought you liked a fight!"
"Sapphires and Suckers" was originally published with the title "Singapore Sammy" in 1931. It starts in a late-night drunken tavern interaction between the vengeance-seeking Sam Shay and a beautiful woman named Dolores de Silva. Sam possesses a priceless blue pearl that he knows Dolores is enamored with, but with his sense of romantic adventure he semi-pursues her interest anyway.
Sam Shay is Singapore Sammy, an American whose stepfather ran off with his mother's wealth and with the will of his grandfather that named Sam the inheritor of a million dollars. This lowdown stepfather character Bill Shay is a sneaky scam artist disguised as a Buddhist monk in Southeast Asia and Sam is on his trail when he comes across Dolores and her fiance Bruce McCoy, who has been swindled by Dolores' father in a sapphire mine deal.
Verdict: A fun but clunky adventure tale with an awesome finale that is just fantastic.
Jeff's Rating: 4 / 5 (Very Good)
movie rating if made into a movie: PG
The Python Pit:
Sam Shay, aka Singapore Sammy, and his friend Lucky Jones get into a New Year's Eve barroom brawl with eight cutthroats at the start of "The Python Pit." Sam and Lucky lose their stakes but Sam is able to beat a confession out of one of the troublemakers who gives him a tip as to where his inheritance-stealing stepfather is now hiding - a remote, cannibal-filled jungle nightmare of an island called Konga.
"The Python Pit" (1933) is my third attempt at a George Worts / aka Loring Brent authored story. His protagonist here, Singapore Sammy, has a number of adventures in the South Seas while he seeks his scoundrel of a stepfather, a piece of garbage named Bill Shay who stole his mother's fortune and his own inheritance.
This story is included in the Otto Penzler-edited "the Big Book of Adventure Stories" that I recently finished and reviewed.
Verdict: An absolutely great short South Seas adventure replete with tavern brawls, beautiful conniving women, brains-eating cannibals, gold, guns, pearls, sharks, dynamite, sea chases and nighttime alley pursuits, a teasingly confident villain, a driven protagonist who will never give up, a buddy combo adventure, and yes, a pit full of pythons.
Jeff's Rating: 5 / 5 (Excellent)
movie rating if made into a movie: PG
The Isle of the Meteor:
Singapore Sammy hears the dying words of an old sailing Captain in the South Seas, telling him of a hidden island where a meteor passed by sixty years prior. A group of white American communists settled this island in the meanwhile, enslaved the local Malay population, and with the meteor's leftovers are regularly churning out copper and gold that this Captain has been trading supplies for at inflated prices. The Captain regrets his choices in life and wants Sammy, who he knows is an honest character, to take the proceeds from this current shipload of supplies and set up the Captain's granddaughter with a lifetime inheritance.
Verdict: "The Isle of the Meteor" (1933) is a fun adventure, notable in its interesting return of the femme fatale love interest Sally Lavender and a daring island escape.
Jeff's Rating: 3 / 5 (Good)
movie rating if made into a movie: PG-13
A Whisker of Buddha:
Sammy gets hammered and awakens with a world-class hangover to discover that his money roll and his blue pearl and his ship have been stolen by his on-again off-again love/hate interest Sally Lavender. Sammy finds his friend Lucky Jones in a similar spot and, to get some working cash, they accept a job offer from a young Buddhist woman to steal a priceless artifact from a local temple that had stolen it from another.
Verdict: "A Whisker of Buddha" (1934) has a great Indiana Jones Temple of Doom style feel to it as Sammy finds other gangs of thieves are also out for this artifact while the local poor are being sacrificed at this temple and he is gonna do his best to 1) beat the bad guys, 2) steal the whisker, 3) stop these senseless killings, 4) get back at Sally Lavender and 5) get back on the trail of his long-sought evil stepfather.
Jeff's Rating: 4 / 5 (Very Good)
movie rating if made into a movie: PG-13
Averaging out the ratings, I'd put this collection at a 4 / 5 (Very Good)