Legion Pulp: Desert Ambush

This month’s short story appeared in the 15 July 1931 issue of Adventure.  The author, Georges Surdez, writes that it’s based on factual events of an incident that occurred in 1928 in Algeria, close to the Moroccan border.  Colonel Amédée Clavery, commander of the Ain-Sefra Territory, decides to travel in a three vehicle convoy from the French base at Beni-Abbès to Colomb-Bechar (234 miles –a three hour trip today on the N6B highway) while disregarding reports of raiding bands from the Tafilalet in the area. The small party—three military vehicles carrying officers, legionnaires, and a few others—sets out under a blazing Saharan sun into an ambush.  The lead Fiat truck breaks down in a narrow, dangerous ravine in the Jebel Arlal hills and are attacked as they attempt repairs. The second and third vehicles arrive in turn, oblivious to the attack and several men are killed in the action including Colonel Clavery.  The story, recounted to the author by survivors shortly afterward, highlights the tragic consequences of underestimating the desert’s dangers and the raiders’ skill and audacity.

Desert Ambush

Colonel Clavery (above from – https://www.facebook.com/Coatcoz/posts/8-d%C3%A9cembre-1928meurtre-du-g%C3%A9n%C3%A9ral-de-brigade-clavery-%C3%A0-menouarar-%C3%A0-60-km-au-sud-/844233498236227/)

UPDATE: A friendly reader, John, tipped me off to the location of the ambush and gave me a geo link.  It was just at the point where the trail was exiting the foothills down to flatter terrain about 70km south of Colomb-Bechar and 26km north of Taghit at the Maghzen Pass.  Also there is a monument (monument du général clavery) established in honor of the General.  More information can be found here.

Sorry this is a day late–we got pummeled with three waves of snow these last two day.  Wet heavy stuff for the first two then some fluffy stuff for Mother Nature to blow around with gusts up to 50mph.  About 15″ or more total.

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Legion Pulp: Stripes of Yellow

This story comes from one of the last published issues of Short Stories (Volume 220 #1, February 1958).  Only six more issues of this venerable pulp fiction title would follow to complete a remarkable 69 year run (1,110 magazine) from October 1890 to August 1959.  Stripes of Yellow originally appeared in the 25 June 1934 issueThe author, Robert (Bob) Coleman Du Soe, was Born in Los Angeles in 1892. He was educated at Columbia University, was a newspaperman on the Hawaiian Islands and a naval aviator in WWI before returning to California and a writing career.  His pulp fiction work ran from 1926 to 1937 and he also published one hard-boiled novel called The Devil Thumbed a Ride (1938).  While he worked in Hollywood he co-wrote the script for a 1940 western–20 Mule Team.  He passed away the same year this was published (1958).

The story depicts a clash of wills between a tried and tested outpost garrison of Bataillon d’Afrique (Bat d’Af, —a penal/infantry unit for French military convicts, deserters, and troublemakers) led by Sergeant Raoust and a relief force of the Foreign Legion led by the arrogant officer, Lt. Aubert.

Stripes of Yellow

You can download the full issue in .pdf here.  The .cbr/.cbz file is here.

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Legion Pulp: An Eye for an Eye

The first post of 2026 is from the 18 January 1930 issue of Argosy.  It features the second story by Theodore Roscoe in his Thibaut Corday series which consisted of 21 stories that ran in Argosy magazine from 1929 to 1939.  They usually begin in a cafe or bar of sorts with the old veteran Legionnaire spinning tall tales of his days in the Foreign Legion to a bunch of open mouthed worldly gentlemen who indignantly huff in disbelief at some of the crazy parts of those tales.

This story features two rival cousins Hyacinth LaDu (the black haired one) and “La Carotte” (red hair) who are cadets at France’s St. Cyr military academy. They are rivals in every sort of way, especially since their Uncle dangled a cash award to the nephew who got the highest rankings. Carrot seemed to be doing much better than Hyacinth and it’s a classic Goofus vs. Gallant conflict.  Then a woman comes into the picture and this precipitates a duel by sabres between the two. Hyacinth puts out Carrot’s eye. Years later, the two men meet again in the Foreign Legion in the jungles of Dahomey where Carotts’s long plotted revenge comes to fruition.

An Eye for an Eye

If you enjoy the Thibaut Corday series you can find the entire collection at Steeger Books.  It is published in four volumes in paperback, hardcover and as an eBook.  There is also a deluxe edition containing all 21 stories in a hard cover.

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Merry Christmas!

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to everyone! Joyeux Noël! Fröhliche Weihnachten!

Wishing all my followers and random passersby a wonderful Holiday Season.

…and very sincere Merry Christmas wishes to the Legionnaires, Soldiers, Marines, Airmen, Sailors, Law Enforcement and Fire & Emergency response forces of all nations out there on the front lines keeping the world safe and secure but MOST especially to the Ukrainian soldiers and fighters out there defending the shining lights of democracy, freedom and liberty from Putin’s criminal hoards.  God bless you, keep you safe and may you soon prevail in your good fight.

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Books for 2025

Iceland has a nice Christmas tradition of giving books to your family and folks on your gift list, especially on Christmas Eve when people can get started on the first chapters. They call it Jólabókaflóð, or the “Christmas Book Flood,”.  Here are some of the newer books on the Foreign Legion that I took notice of this year.  It might be too late for buying these for Christmas unless you get the digital versions.

1. Tamanrasset: Crossroads of the Nomad by Edward Parr.  Tamanrasset was brought to my attention by the author several weeks ago.  I started it, but even though I’m not yet finished, I can highly recommend it.  If this was a mass market paperback it would be “James Michener Novel” size. I always consider the period from about 1890-1914 to be the time of the “Classical Foreign Legion” and this book captures all the nuances and feel for the North African desert and the “society”, military, native and civilian, at that time.  It’s very descriptive of the settings and presents a parade of believable characters in fine detail.  The author also has a trilogy of historical fiction books on World War One that looks very interesting.  It’s available on Amazon here.  The author’s page here.

Version 1.0.0

2. Collecting French Foreign Legion Badges: Volume V The insignia of the 5th Foreign Regiment by Andrew Mitchell.  If you’re not following’s “Collecting Foreign Legion Badges” on Facebook you are missing out.  This is how I find out about his new books on Foreign Legion History and his fine series on collecting Foreign Legion badges and insignia of which Volume V is the latest installment (which is actually his sixth book on the topic).  You can order print on demand copies via “Blurb” or purchase and download a digital .pdf version here.  Also released earlier this year was his Collecting French Foreign Legion Badges: Volume IV The insignia of the 2nd Foreign Engineer Regiment.  Information on that book his here.

Also, while you’re looking over those books, don’t forget Andrew’s three volume series (so far) on the Foreign Legion in Indochina.

Who Will Count Our Dead And Remember Us? The French Foreign Legion in Indochina 1884 – 1945 (link)

You Grow Old Quickly Here: The French Foreign Legion in Indochina 1884 – 1946 (link)

Bright Moon and Sweet Hope: The Epic History of the French Foreign Legion in Indochina 1884 -1945 Volume III (link)

3. British Experiences in the French Foreign Legion during the Interwar Period: Myths and Realities by Frédéric Barthet.  This book looks very interesting as the author seems to address something I noticed about books written in the inter-war years by British veterans concerning their service in the Foreign Legion.  Did they write accurate accounts or more embellished and often fictional memoirs?  It’s priced pretty high but I’m going to keep my eyes on it for a price drop (or add it to my next Christmas list).  The best deal is directly from Bloomsbury Books although it’s also available on Amazon.  The table of contents is quite tempting…

1. The Lure of the Legion: A Siren’s song or L’appel du vide
2. The Sad Reality of the Legion: A Monotonous life
3. The Horror of the Legion: Violent company, colonial wars, and retribution
4. Myth over Reality: The writing of a Legion memoir5. When Fiction sells better than Myth or RealityConclusionBibliographyIndex

4. Foreign Legion Novels (Series) by Jenő Rejtő.   Four more Foreign Legion stories written by Jenő Rejtő have made it to Amazon.  Rejtő (29 March 1905 – 1 January 1943) was a Hungarian journalist, pulp fiction writer and playwright who wrote several adventure books set in the French Foreign Legion in Africa during in the interwar period.  I first posted about the first six stories in this series this time last December.  I did finish one of these books (The Bone Brigade).  It was good. Rough and full of violence but there seems to have been something lost in translation here and there IIRC.  It felt like a lower budget 1960’s Spaghetti Western.  Here’s the covers of new stories.

Hell’s Soldier  (link)

The Fourteen-Carat Roadster (link)

The Invisible Legion (link)

The Frontier Garrison (link)

5. Sahara Adventure Series by Meiring Fouché (Books 1 to 40).  Not sure what to say about this series.  The author is listed as Meiring Fouché, which was a pseudonym used by South African author F. A. Venter (27 November 1916 – 8 July 1997) for his adventure/detective fiction writing. Venter ultimately wrote ninety softcover books and more than forty hardcover books as well as short stories for various SA magazines and newspapers.  Republishing these lost stories is Pieter Haasbroek, who has been “reviving and republishing classic stories from world-renowned authors, originally penned in the 1950s, for a contemporary (Afrikaans and English reading) audience.”  There are about 40 books in the Sahara Adventure Series that (mostly) feature a South African Legionnaire who joins the Foreign Legion seeking revenge for his aviator brother who was murdered by desert Arabs during WW2.  I initially thought these were AI generated but I suppose you shouldn’t judge a book by it’s AI cover.  (I really wish AI can do historically accurate images).  Haasbroek has a website selling a ton of ebooks by Fouché and other forgotten authors for those interested.  I’ll be trying a couple stories out soon and will let you know how they are.  Who knows?  This might be a great series of thrilling Foreign Legion stories. Here’s the first book in the series on Amazon.  

 

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Legion Pulp: Beyond Courage

This month’s Foreign Legion story novelette by Georges Surdez is a long read–an early Christmas present suitable for a Sunday afternoon on a cold winter’s day when you’re sick of football, Christmas shopping and world events and crave an hour or so of escapist reading.  Beyond Courage appeared in the 01 August 1930 issue of Adventure.

The story takes place in the Rif Mountains of northern Morocco and begins with a detailed description of a counter-ambush in support of a supply convoy.  Young Lt. Fortier, although new to the Legion, is solid in the field and flawlessly executes his part of the plan.  But, as always, there is friction in war and good men get killed and then there are some officers who take themselves too seriously and vent petty frustrations out on the rank and file NCO’s and junior officers.  Surdez creates and presents his well developed characters and places them in personal conflict with the others, often in a test of will and/or stubbornness until something gives, someone gets killed or the tides of war render the conflict irrelevant. These inter-personal conflicts he portrays in the Legion and French commanders always seems to get resolved in the crucible of battle, as is the case here.  It’s a good story and the action could have been ripped right from the pages of actual memoirs of Foreign Legion fighters in the Rif Conflict (such as those of Prince Aage or Zinovi Pechkov).

Beyond Courage

You can find the full issue (not my scan, thank the up-loader and the original scanners and editors (“The Ibis Rebellion” and “_sas_” ) at the Internet Archive here.

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Legion Pulp: And the Ants Came

This month’s pulp fiction story is another Panther paperback from their 1950’s Foreign Legion Series. This one is “And the Ants Came” by Ralph L. Finn and was published in 1955.  Finn was a popular writer for Panther books and other UK publishers who wrote in many genres including romance, science fiction and short stories and nonfiction subjects such as soccer.  An interesting page was found in the back that listed the books in the (up to this point in 1955).

The story takes place after WW2 in the Algerian Sahara.  British Legionnaire Roger Trant is staked out in the desert as some twisted form of punishment meted out by the Sergeant Kaufmann, a former German Nazi and sadistic French Foreign Legion NCO who despises Trant mainly for being English.  Trant is to be a feast for relentless, flesh-eating ants drawn by spilled wine and sweat.  However, as the insects begin to swarm , hope arrives in the form of Hameshadah—the feisty, red-haired daughter of Abdul-el-Harij, leader of the proud Marooz tribe. Rescuing Trant from certain death, Hameshadah brings him into a web of tribal intrigue, romance under desert moons, and brutal vengeance. After framing Trant’s desertion and thinking him dead, Kaufmann stirs the pot further by leading raids, abducting tribal women and carelessly sparking a tribal rebellion against French forces.  Trant and Hameshadah’s forbidden love clashes with tribal loyalties, culminating in a climactic showdown between the Legion, Trant, Kaufmann and the tribesmen.

Here is the .pdf of this book below.  Also a .cbr version can be found here.

Ralph L. Finn – And the Ants Came (Panther 1955)

 

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Legion Pulp: High and Wide

Here’s probably one of Robert Carse’s oddest stories about the Foreign Legion.  This one appeared in Short Stories from 25 June 1939.  It concerns a Swiss legionnaire called Hans Tims who arrives one day at a remote Foreign Legion blockhouse in the Sahara with a group of replacements.  Tims is known for his crazy tall tales and bold lies but is actually a decent man, perhaps not the best soldier.  He also has slight amnesia from an old injury that might be the cause for him talking too much.  Unfortunately he catches the ire of Sergeant Dorkel and his habit for telling lies gets him in trouble with a fellow legionnaire over money and things begin to spiral out of control for him.  Before he can face severe punishment, the post is attacked Senussi warriors. Tims saves the day in a uniquely Swiss way.  

Carse usually does a better job in establishing the setting and breathing some life into his characters.  This story–not so much.  I felt his Tims character was pretty unconvincing and the story had a comedic undertone that one often finds in the pulps. I didn’t mind the story, it read well, but I was hoping for something more hard-boiled and gritty.

High and Wide

You can download the full Short Stories issue in .cbr format here.  It’s a big file!

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Legion Pulp: Doty of the Legion

I’ve written plenty about the Foreign Legion exploits of Bennett Doty.  So did he in his 1926 book Legion of the Damned. Eleven years later his story gets a condensed version written by the prolific pulp author Jack Kofoed.  This one appeared in the December 1937 issue of Thrilling Adventures.  It’s basically a more spicy synopsis of Doty’s adventure in the Legion fighting in Syria and then his misadventures when he unsuccessfully tried to desert.  Perhaps it might persuade readers to read Doty’s very good and exciting book.  You can download my poor copy at the first link or from the Internet Archive.  You can also read the entire pulp magazine by downloading it (.cbr format) here.

Doty of the Legion

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Legion Pulp: Boast of the Legion

It’s always enjoyable the rare times that I come across a Foreign Legion pulp story that is NOT written by the usual authors like Surdez, Newsom, Carse, Bedford Jones, Du Soe or Roscoe.  This one is written by Kenneth Keith Colvin, a pulp writer who was fairly prolific from 1927 to 1935, writing adventure, western and war stories that mostly appeared in the pulp magazines Complete Stories, Cowboy Stories and Outdoor Stories.  This one was published in the November 1929 issue of Over the Top, a hard to find war/military themed pulp.

Boast of the Legion is a well developed story that pits a hard-boiled Legion Company and it’s American commander against a couple of political careerists of the regular French Army during the second year of the Great War.  When a carefully contrived plot to disgrace the Legionnaires ultimately ends in a devastating German counter-attack the entire Allied offensive hinges on defending one sector and road for the time needed to rush reinforcements to the collapsing French lines.  That job is given to the only available unit–the reconstituted 2nd Company of the Legion led by Lieutenant Knoles.  Colvin knows his stuff and gives us an action packed battle story.  (My only quibble is with his somewhat odd descriptions of frontages–i.e. no way a unit of 120 men could defend a mile wide sector.)   But anyways, it’s a good read–the illustration is Lt. Knoles throwing a glass of wine into the ear of the conniving Captain Huot.

If you want to download the entire magazine you can find it on the Internet Archive here.  The usual black and white file is below.

Boast of the Legion

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