Growing up in Greenwood, Wells was a childhood friend of Mary Ann Pearce, who would later marry Mickey Spillane. Wells, Spillane, and fellow Spillane protégé
Earle Basinsky met while Spillane was stationed in Greenwood while serving in the Army. In the early 1950s, when Spillane himself had semi-retired from writing, As he did with several other young writers, Spillane supported Wells' work with advice, encouragement, and cover blurbs praising Wells on both of his novels. Wells himself freely acknowledged Spillane's influence, writing in
The Last Kill that "it was Mickey himself who showed me how to pack guts, gore and hot, suspenseful action into a mystery yarn."
Let the Night Cry, published in 1953, is a crime thriller about an ex-convict set in
New Orleans, An Oakland Tribune reviewer described the book as "crime, love and dope in a chili-hot potpourri in New Orleans' picturesque and wicked Latin Quarter." The book sold more than 400,000 copies.
The Last Kill, published in 1955, is set in
Memphis, Tennessee and follows a private eye who is trying to solve the murder of a friend who was involved in a million-dollar bank heist. The original cover illustrations of Wells' novels, both done by artist
Robert Maguire, have been called some of "the most evocative and memorable of the period" by Lee Server, author of the
Encyclopedia of Pulp Fiction Writers. The
New York Times Book Review called the hero of
The Last Kill "the year's most incompetent private detective" but said the book would appeal to "addicts of Spillane." Even Wells' publisher had mixed feelings about his literary quality, if not his marketability: New American Library owner
Victor Weybright overturned the original rejection of the novel, but in the same letter authorizing its publication, he called the book "God-awful trash, without Spillane's vibration and without plausible motivation, but abounding in retribution, lust, violence, booze, in the lower depths of New York and environs." Wells did not publish again after
The Last Kill. Server states that "apparently even Mickey lost track of him." ==References==