Certain publications are … being imported into Australia, which have no literary or intellectual value and are obviously published in order to cater for those seeking to satisfy depraved tastes for morbidity, sadism, sensuality, etc. These books are usually printed in luridly attractive covers … [and] are retailed at prices ranging as low as 3d. or 4d. a copy.
– Acting Customs Minister John Perkins, 11 May 1938

Mickey Spillane, Vengeance is Mine [1951], Corgi Books, London, 1960.
Banned circa 1950s.
NAA: C3059, Vengeance is Mine
In the 1940s and 1950s, crime and detective thrillers were an especially popular pulp fiction genre. With themes of both sex and violence, novels by bestselling authors like Mickey Spillane and ‘Darcy Glinto’ (Harold Kelly) were frequently banned by Customs. Featuring bold covers designed to attract readership, many pulp fiction titles are now considered a collector’s item.
Adult magazines were often subject to blanket prohibitions lasting years. Popular American men’s magazine Playboy was banned in Australia from 1955 to 1960. Considered obviously obscene by the censor, adult magazines and other pornographic material were also criticised by feminist anti-pornography groups which argued that these publications objectify women.
Below is a selection of racy titles and the reasons they were banned by Customs.

‘Darcy Glinto’ (Harold Kelly), Road Floozie [1941], Robin Hood Press, London, 1953.
NAA: C3059, Road Floozie
British author Harold Ernest Kelly penned at least 15 novels under the pseudonym ‘Darcy Glinto’. The Hangman is a Woman and She Gave Me Hell and… were also banned by Customs.

Donald Henderson Clarke, The Housekeeper’s Daughter [1938], Avon, New York, 1953.
NAA: C3059, The Housekeeper’s Daughter
In my opinion this book is rubbish. It has no merit as literature & contains many passages which are quite gratuitously obscene. I would ban, though even placing a ban upon it is showing considerably more consideration than it deserves.
The Chairman agreed, describing it as a ‘trashy novel’ that is ‘obvisously written for pornographic purposes’.
‘Worthless – & I shd call it indecent’, is how one member of the Literature Censorship Board described Ruth Lyons’ Hotel Wife. Banned on 5 July 1935, the novel was a prohibited import for nearly 30 years.
Fifty copies of popular American detective pulp magazine Black Mask Detective (also known as Black Mask) were seized at Port Adelaide in 1938. Noting that the magazine was ‘not yet on the prohibited list’ but was ‘on a par with other similar magazines which have been prohibited’, the Collector of Customs, South Australia, recommended prohibition. This copy was probably confiscated in the early 1950s and kept for reference purposes.
Check out our Books page for information about other prohibited pulp, including links to digitised documents in the National Archives’ collection.

