E-Reads™ is
...a trail-blazing reprinter of out-of-print genre and general fiction and nonfiction by leading authors. Our books are available in all e-book formats and paperback. Read the latest publishing news and provocative blogs by top commentators in the traditional and digital publishing fields.

Empress of Light
James C. Glass
In this sequel to SHANJI, Kati has used the light of creation to win a war bringing her to the throne as Empress of her planet, and she has forged new alliances with former enemies. Her daughter Yesui is born w...


Hôtel Transylvania
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
Since 1978, Chelsea Quinn Yarbro has produced about two dozen novels and numerous short stories detailing the life of a character first introduced to the reading world as Le Comte de Saint-Germain. We first mee...

Mother's Choice
Elizabeth Mansfield
It's a Mother's Duty To Protect Her Daughter
Cassandra Beringer would never allow her daughter Cicely to repeat her mistake and marry a man twenty years her senior--even if he is the handsome Viscount Inge...


Pock's World
Dave Duncan
In this thrilling story of adventure and suspense by master storyteller Dave Duncan, five flawed individuals must decide the fate of an entire world.
On the outskirts of the Ayne Sector sits Pock’s Worl...

Time Slave
John Norman
Dr. Brenda Hamilton--a Ph.D. mathematician from Cal Tech--is beautiful, though she does not know her true beauty. She is a woman, though she does not know her true womanhood. Deep within herself she is sensu...


Sunday in Hell: Pearl Harbor Minute by Minute
Bill McWilliams
Using long established historical records and contemporary journals as well as recently-released war-time documents, Bill McWilliams has created a brand-new minute-by-minute narrative of the Day that Will ...

Lord of the Fire Lands
Dave Duncan
Raider and Wasp have spent five years at Ironhall studying to become Blades, expert swordsmen whose talents stand unmatched. Magic both enhances the Blades' fighting skills and binds them in lifelong duty....


Miscalculations
Elizabeth Mansfield
His Woman Of Affairs
Jane Douglas had a sharp wit, a brilliant mind, and an extraordinary knack for numbers. As financial advisor to Lady Martha Kettering, she was able to provide for herself, her sister ...

The Girl With the Persian Shawl
Elizabeth Mansfield
An Arrogant Spinster, a Dashing Rake, and an Unsigned Painting
The Girl With Persian Shawl was a strangely bewitching masterpiece that had hung in the Rendell household for generations. Kate Rendell graci...


A Thousand Deaths
George Alec Effinger
While George Alec Effinger’s Budayeen novel WHEN GRAVITY FAILS is perhaps his most famous work, his lesser known novel THE WOLVES OF MEMORY remained his favorite. In it, he introduced readers to Sandor Couran...
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The Reaver Road
Dave Duncan
Omar is the finest storyteller the world has ever known, captivating audiences everywhere, from the campfires of soldier camps to the plush residences of nobility. In times of turmoil, people can still apprec...

Christmas Moon
Elizabeth Lane
Anything can happen under a Christmas Moon...
Pregnant, unwed and down on her luck, history teacher Emma Carlyle is facing the worst Christmas of her life. Needing some research for her master’s thesis...


The Road to Victory
David Colley
The Red Ball Operation, the vital train of supplies improvised by American troops during the invasion of Europe, was one of the GIs' bravest exploits, without which World War II would have dragged on at a ter...

Blood in the Ashes
William W. Johnstone
A bloodthirsty religious cult called the Ninth Order is spreading a doctrine of hate across the land. They're soulless and sadistic, and they're sending their armies of fanatics against Raines and his Rebels ...


Highland Conqueror
Hannah Howell
Lady Jolene Gerard is running out of time--each moment she remains within the walls of Drumwich Castle she is in jeopardy. Her only chance lies with a prisoner chained to the dungeon walls, a Scotsman who, in ...

The Prince of Midnight
Laura Kinsale
A tarnished legend driven into exile deep within the depths of a crumbling French castle was once the Prince of Midnight. Now he is just a forgotten shadow. She is seeking the hero but finds herself weary o...


The Stone Mage & the Sea
Sean Williams
The Stone Mages rule the huge deserts of red sand. The vast coastlines are ruled by Sky Wardens. Magic is everywhere but not all have the power to control and direct it. Any child found to have magical abi...

Highland Groom
Hannah Howell
Sir Diarmot MacEnroy, deciding his illegitimate children need a mother and his keep needs a proper lady, now stands before the altar with a gentle bride he hopes is too shy to disrupt his life or break his h...


Imaginative Sex
John Norman
With 53 Detailed Scenarios for Sensual Fantasies and a Revolutionary New Guide to Male-Female Relations.
In 1974, the author of the controversial and popular
Gor novels revealed his vision for ...

People of the Sky
Clare Bell
Old technology survives and even thrives on the challenges of a new planet populated by ancient human spirits.
Kesbe Temiya, a freelance flyer, accepts a commission to deliver an ancient-but-restored C-47 ...


Kampus
James Gunn
The college of the future has just one purpose: endless battle. Political organizations urge ruthless combat with an invisible opponent and each student is challenged to be more extreme than the rest. One ma...

Demon Knight
Dave Duncan
The Scottish outlaw Toby Strangerson, known as Longdirk, has used gramarye, dark magic, to defeat the Fiend and save Europe from abject slavery--but he has also made himself the most feared and envied man ...
E-Reads spoke to Maggie Davis about her novel Stage Door Canteen in February 2004.
E-Reads: Many readers of romance are familiar with you as Katherine Deauxville, but over your career you’ve stepped out a few times from behind the pen name as Maggie Davis. Did you know from the outset that this would be one of those projects that would defy the Romance fiction category?
Maggie: Well, it was hard to think of Stage Door Canteen as a romance, even though it does have at least three “love stories.” But WW2 has often been dealt with romantically, even sentimentally. The men and women in many recent films and books about the era often seem candy-coated, as if writers are afraid readers don’t want to see us as we really were then. I wanted to take a different, more realistic approach.
Of course there’s a lot of passion – and sentiment, too – in Stage Door Canteen. Some is even pretty raw and unvarnished. I tried to handle the action scenes the same way. To do this, I went straight to the men and women who were actually there. Thank God there are still many of them around. They told me themselves what it was like. I owe a great deal to them, as they helped me re-create the dark days in New York in the winter of 1942-43, when the electric lights were turned off and people were genuinely afraid of an enemy attack like the one that had happened a bare year before at Pearl Harbor. Our country was at war; there was no telling where the next blow would fall. Today is very reminiscent.
The backstage production for the Broadway musical Oklahoma! figures prominently in your story. What drew you to this as a story line?
Every biography or autobiogrpaphy of people like Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein, Agnes de Mille and others connected with the original production tell the turbulent but true story of the problems involved in getting Oklahoma! (originally called “Away We Go”) to Broadway. Most of the critics and newspaper columnists were betting Rodgers and Hammerstein’s first effort as a team would never open. The director and choreographer hated each other, the lead dancer had a drinking problem and the ballet girls were ugly. Worse, in spite of heroic efforts, no backers were willing to invest money in what was definitely an oddball project by then-current standards!
The Stage Door Canteen, just off Broadway in the basement of the Forty-Fourth Street Theater building was staffed by volunteers from the New York theater (including, in the story, members of the Oklahoma! cast). Famous stars donated their time to fix food, wipe off tables and wield a mop, while pretty actresses danced with servicemen and generally kept things lively.
Oklahoma! when it finally opened, became an icon of World War Two. To everyone’s amazement – except the people who were connected to it – America and the whole world fell in love with this bouncy, poignant story of cowboys and their girlfriends and frontier life in the American West.
Right away critics recognized Oklahoma! as unique, even though Walter Winchell had scoffed that Agnes de Mille’s ballets were “cowboys in toe shoes” The music was wonderful. “People Will Say We’re In Love” and “Surrey With The Fringe On Top” went around the world to troops everywhere via radio. The songs are standard hits today, sixty years later.
SDC was a real club in New York during the forties and became widely publicized, even resulting in a classic movie. How were you inspired to bring that special ambience back to life?
The Stage Door Canteen was famous from the moment it opened because so many theater and movie stars were connected with it – Katherine Hepburn, Ray Bolger (the Scarecrow in The Wizard of Oz) Tallulah Bankhead, Ava Gardner. And on and on. A weekly show featuring dramas written around the Canteen ran on radio, and in 1943 a movie called Stage Door Canteen (1943) began filming on the premises. In the past few years the old black and white movie has become very popular on video and DVD. Over the last two decades I’ve seen the movie Stage Door Canteen (1943) many times, but I’ve always had a feeling a bigger, more comprehensive story could be told. There are spots that make modern day viewers like me wince, such as the awful Gracie Field song and that endless, rather sappy love story.
When I started doing research for Stage Door Canteen, I found my hunch was right. There were many more stories – moving and authentic – about the Stage Door Canteen and New York City in that fateful wartime winter of 1942-43. I am grateful, now, to be able to put them into my book.
Thank you, Maggie.