Steven A. Westlake is the editor of the revitalized National Police Gazette. The son of Donald E. Westlake, he studied creative writing at the University of Miami and worked as a reporter and businessman before founding the reborn Police Gazette in 2006. Dedicated to preserving the lurid legacy of the legendary publication, Westlake’s magazine is published by his alter ego, William A. Mays, and continues to reprint the best material from the pioneering tabloid, as well as cover modern-day news in the irresistible Police Gazette style.
“[The Police Gazette uncovered] the low life that existed just
slightly below the veneer of Victorian respectability.” - Tom
Wolfe
“The most popular magazine in the country . . . [the
Police Gazette] was what the sweaty, grimy, wash-on-Saturday-night
type of a guy used to read, and it called a spade a spade.” - Gene
Smith, editor of the collected Police Gazette
“The Bible of the barbershop.” - The New York Times
“Lewd and lascivious.” - Frank C. Walker, United States Postmaster
General (1940–45)
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