Al Fray is Pig Latin for “Ralph” and also the pseudonym of Californian Ralph Salaway (1913-1991) who authored five stand-alone crime-fiction novels between 1955 and 1960, including Come Back For More, released as a Dell paperback original in 1958.
Our story takes place in River City, population 60,000, and our narrator is a drifter named Swede Anderson. He wasn’t always a migratory worker. He used to be a bank teller in River City four years ago before he hopped on a freight train and began his new life as a hobo.
Before Swede’s abrupt departure, the bank was robbed at gunpoint by a five-man heist crew. The robbery went sideways and a bank guard was murdered at the scene. Swede witnessed a relevant piece of identifying information and was threatened by the robbery crew to forget what he saw.
In the face of threats from the Syndicate, Swede did the right thing and told the truth, resulting in the conviction of one of the bank robbers. This, of course, put Swede in the mob’s crosshairs causing him to hop a train and leave his cushy bank job and River City.
But that was four years ago and now Swede is back in River City. He’s no longer a pudgy banker but instead a muscled, hard-bodied laborer. His new facial scars, a broken nose, the weight loss and the passage of four years was every bit as good as plastic surgery for making Swede unrecognizable to the thugs in River City who want him dead.
“I knew why I was here. I knew what had to be done,” Swede informs the reader. Settle in for a violent man vs. mafia vendetta novel? I wish. Swede takes a job as a truck driver in River City and is pleased to find that no one who once knew him as Swede the banker recognizes him in his new persona and fake name.
Swede’s path into the underworld is through the trucking industry and the local Teamsters who apparently are completely mobbed up. The ins and outs of the trucking business take center stage in the novel and this is where the story slows down and becomes bogged down in the trucking drama details. Add to that a romantic interest with a single mother who has a baseball-loving little boy in search of a father figure and we are getting pretty far afield from the action novel you are craving.
You’ll need to suspend your disbelief that no one who knew Swede his entire life recognizes him after a weight loss and broken nose. If you can make that leap of faith, you’re in for a fairly decent read. It wasn’t exactly the violent war against the mafia I was hoping, but the author delivered a serviceable crime novel nonetheless.
Don’t spend a fortune acquiring this one, but if you have a copy yellowing on your shelf, you could do a lot worse. Buy a copy of this book HERE
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