I just read through a Brady Bunch novel from 1972 and, just for kicks, thought I'd look up the author, Jack Matcha, and see what other kind of work he'd done. I was surprised to learn that Matcha had quite an interesting (and often sleazy) career - not something I expected from an author of a Tiger Beat Publication!I was surprised to learn that Matcha's early work was with 'Kozy Books', a publishing firm which specialised in pulp sleaze novels. His first Kozy Books novel was called The Love Seekers (1961). I wasn't able to find the cover to this particular book, but Kozy covers are everywhere... and hilariously bad.


My understanding is that Matcha published several sleazy novels under various pseudonyms like:
The Killer Came Naked under the pseudonym John Tanner.
and Ask for Lois under the pseudonym John Barclay.
During Matcha's tenure aboard the sleaze publishing express, I guess he teamed up with another pulp sleaze author Charles Fritch, who'd also written under pseudonyms like Christophyer Sly (ex. 7 Deadly Sinners). Together they started the successful Frimac publications (a combination of the first three letters in their last names; fri + mac) which published various genres of fiction, including porn under the their publication branch Carousel Books.One good thing that came out of the Fritch-Matcha team up was the science fiction magazine, Gamma. Together with William F. Nolan (the guy behind Logan's Run) they produced this pretty experimental sci-fi mag which is highly regarded today. However, it made very little profit and subsequently didn't last long (1963–1965, 5 issues).
Perhaps Matcha's most successful work was A Rogue's Guide to Europe (1965) - a must-have for any pleasure seeking playboy bachelor of the sixties. Check out the book's ribald description:
"Dedicated to high life, libertines and the happiness of pursuit...a witty, hip, outrageous tour through the sin bins and hot spots of Europe. From nude women wrestling in mud to a stage show watched from a bathtub built for two, from Munich's telephone clubs (from table to table, bachelor to girl, with no limit on message units) to London's lively but lethal Soho, from the bare-flesh beaches of the Riviera (and the Ile du Levant where even a Bikini makes a girl overdressed) to the madhouse anything-goes merriment of Fasching-time in Munich, this is the first way-out, no-holds-barred guide to the wildest, warmest, girliest places in Europe."
Well, I'm not sure what ultimately became of Matcha. I know he continued to write sleaze under pseudonyms in the early seventies, and also wrote a couple more Brady Bunch novels. Otherwise, it seems he receded into anonymity. If anyone knows any more about this colorful author/publisher, please comment - or correct me where my so-called "research" has erred.
"Dedicated to high life, libertines and the happiness of pursuit...a witty, hip, outrageous tour through the sin bins and hot spots of Europe. From nude women wrestling in mud to a stage show watched from a bathtub built for two, from Munich's telephone clubs (from table to table, bachelor to girl, with no limit on message units) to London's lively but lethal Soho, from the bare-flesh beaches of the Riviera (and the Ile du Levant where even a Bikini makes a girl overdressed) to the madhouse anything-goes merriment of Fasching-time in Munich, this is the first way-out, no-holds-barred guide to the wildest, warmest, girliest places in Europe."
Well, I'm not sure what ultimately became of Matcha. I know he continued to write sleaze under pseudonyms in the early seventies, and also wrote a couple more Brady Bunch novels. Otherwise, it seems he receded into anonymity. If anyone knows any more about this colorful author/publisher, please comment - or correct me where my so-called "research" has erred.
