My review of Margin Call is up on Crimespree Cinema.
REMINDER: LAST FRIDAY IN NOVEMBER IS CANADIAN BOOKS DAY. Although someone should have reminded me that I will be away. Todd Mason has graciously offered to pick up the links so let him know if you are an irregular reviewer.
Summary will probably go up tomorrow.
LONESOME ROAD
Ed Gorman is the author of Bad Moon Rising and Stranglehold. You can find him here.
Lemons Never Lie, Donald Westlake
There are so many twists, turns, starts and stops in Lemons Never Lie by Donald E. Westlake as Richard Stark that the novel becomes a kind of crime picaresque filled with mugs, thugs, killers, victims and Parker's redoutable thespian friend, Alan Grofiled. There's also a lot of notably brutal violence.
The book begins with Grofield visiting Vegas to partake of a robbery that will give him the money to survive one more season in his summer theater. Grofield, in case you didn't know, is a "purist" when it comes to acting, his chosen profession. No movies or television for him. Stage only. But it takes his other profession, robbery, to support his theater. Only his long-supportive wife understands how hard he works at both careers.
A man named Myers has set up a robbery plan and has called in amateurs to help him. With the exception of a man named Caithcart and a dangerous man named Dan Leach, the group is a zero. As is Myers. Now Myers, who speaks with a boarding school accent, is one of the great villains in Westlake's world. He is a true sociopathic murderer; a serial killer of a kind. Grofield and Leach decide against working with him.
This is the set-up. There's an early twist that lets us know just how nasty Myers is. And then the various adventures start. Grofield resembles his friend (and fellow robber) Parker only occasionally. For instance, he loves chit-chat, feels sorry even for a guy who tries to kill him and lets another live that (as reader) you know should be killed on the spot, slowly and joyously.
There's also a lot of witty humor. Grofield gets into the damnedest conversations with people. Once in a while you may even forget you're reading a crime novel. Westlake has a great time riffing on all the cliche exchanges you read in most crime fiction. At a couple of point Grofield starts sounding like a TV shrink.
Lemons Never Lie is Westlake at his very best. While there's a screwball comedy-feel to some of the misadventures, the unrelenting violence reminds readers that the Richard Stark is the master of the hardboiled. The masterful plotting, the wry way the genre cliches are turned inside out, and the earnestness and humanity of Alan Grofield make this a pleasure from page one to the unexpected ending.
Bill Crider
Scott Cupp
Martin Edwards
Elizabeth Foxwell
Jerry House
Randy Johnson
George Kelley
Margot Kinberg
Rob Kitchin
B.V. Lawson
Doug Levin
Evan Lewis
Steve Lewis/Ray O'Leary
Todd Mason
J.V. Norris
Richard Pangburn
David Rachels
James Reasoner
Richard Robinson
Gerald Saylor
Ron Scheer
Kerrie Smith
Kevin Tipple
TomCat
9 comments:
Wow - I never heard of George Harsh or his book but it is indeed an amazing story. I can't believe no one has filmed it.
Of course I've read LEMONS NEVER LIE and every other book Westlake wrote as Richard Stark. I always thought Grofield was a very odd fit with the very different Parker.
Jeff M.
Barry Ergang offers "OH, MURDERER MINE" by Norbert Davis today on my blog.
Kevin
http://kevintipplescorner.blogspot.com/
Even though I get a kick out of Kiny Friedman's songs, I really disliked the one book of his I forced myself to read, ELIV, JESUS and COCA COLA. It is probably a minority view but...just not for me.
Jeff M.
Harsh's story about crime and punishment invites all manner of interpretations. It's the stuff of a great novel because it touches on such deep human issues, guilt and exoneration among them. A film would never do it justice.
Albert, this was a stellar book review and you're right: if Harsh's life story was fiction, it would be laughed off as soap opera. Thanks for bring this book (as well as George Harsh) back from the ranks of the forgotten.
Elaine Ash
I liked the Harsh review so much I won't make any jokes about catalogers.
Yeah, well, Patti just ratted you out, Gerard. You cataloger, you.
:-)
Thanks for the comments, all.
Patti - Thank you so much for including my post in this noble company!
Late again. My entry for today's forgotten book is here:
http://trackofthecat.blogspot.com/2011/11/fridays-forgotten-book-cry-me-river-by.html
T. R. Pearson's CRY ME A RIVER
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