Monday, September 24, 2012
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Book Review: Richard Stark, Ask the Parrot (2006)
I resented the beginning of this novel, was bored by the
ending, and was thoroughly entertained in between. Ask the Parrot begins exactly where Nobody Runs Forever ends, with Parker in dire straits, and the
defusion of the situation is totally, lazily deus ex machina. The end of the
novel dissolves into a gun battle, which I always find to be a particularly
anticlimactic way for a Parker novel to wind down, especially given my
confidence that Parker is not going to die. In between, which is most of the book,
Parker plans a heist while trapped in the middle of a Parker-seeking manhunt,
which is, of course, great fun. Grade: B
Monday, September 17, 2012
Pulp Poem of the Week
a single piece of junk. I found it all
on the street. You’d be surprised
what you find once you look.
Pennies, nickels, dimes,
safety pins, jacks, dice, mirrors,
small bottles, dresser handles,
screws, wire, cord,
mothballs, cigarette packs,
pens that say different things on them,
bullets.
Franz Lidz
Ghosty Men
2003
Friday, September 14, 2012
Book Review: Richard Stark, Nobody Runs Forever (2004)
The later Parker novels are busier than the earlier ones. The prose remains tight, but the plots have more moving parts, as if Starklake has become an increasingly skilled juggler over the years, and he wants to show off. In Firebreak (two books previous), this busyness felt a bit forced, but in Nobody Runs Forever, this busyness feels much more organic. Of course, Parker is an idiot to see this armored-car job through to its lemony end, but that's true of his jobs more often than not. With only two Parkers to go, I had planned to wait a while before the penultimate (Ask the Parrot), but that may not be possible. Grade: A-
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Book Review: Richard Stark, Breakout (2002)
Spoiler Alert! The following review reveals something very, very important that happens on page 6 of this book. Now, having said that, you may not think that spoiling page 6 can be spoiling much, but I found the image of (spoiler alert!) Parker putting his hands on top of his head and meekly submitting to arrest to be stunning (even though, given the title Breakout, I thought it might be coming). Taken collectively, the first 20 Parker novels (Breakout is the 21st) give the lie to the idea that Parker is good at his job. In fact, what they show is that Parker is extraordinarily lucky. Though Parker is portrayed as a smart, cautious thief, he takes so many outlandish chances in so many treacherous situations that he ought to get arrested every 1.5 books or so. (Indeed, it seems likely that it is impossible to be good at Parker’s job if “good” means “skilled enough to make a career out of it without ever going to jail”). But never mind that. It was oddly thrilling to see it finally happen, and then pleasantly surprising to discover that Breakout entails a series of breakouts—at least three, possibly more depending on what you think qualifies. My only regret about this book is that Starklake feels the need to have his characters joke about the fact the first (jail)breakout has simply created situations for further breakouts. Readers could have been trusted to catch on to that. Grade: A
Monday, September 10, 2012
Pulp Poem of the Week
From her eyes
wrinkles ran down
to the corners
of her mouth,
the scars of
ancient tears.
Norman Klein
No! No! The Woman!
1932
Saturday, September 8, 2012
Contents: Gil Brewer, Redheads Die Quickly and Other Stories (2012)
Redheads Die Quickly and Other Stories (ORDER NOW!) collects the best stories from Gil Brewer’s glory decade of the 1950s:
With This Gun— (Detective Tales, March 1951)
It’s Always Too Late (Detective Fiction, April 1951)
Moonshine (Manhunt, March 1955)
My Lady Is a Tramp (Pursuit, May 1955)
Red Twilight (Hunted, October 1955)
Don’t Do That (Hunted, December 1955)
Die, Darling, Die (Justice, January 1956)
The Black Suitcase (Hunted, February 1956)
Shot (Manhunt, February 1956)
The Gesture (The Saint Detective Magazine, March 1956)
Home (Accused, March 1956)
Home-Again Blues (Pursuit, March 1956)
Mow the Green Grass (Pursuit, March 1956)
Come Across (Manhunt, April 1956)
Cut Bait (Pursuit, May 1956)
Matinee (Manhunt, October 1956)
The Axe Is Ready (Trapped, December 1956)
On a Sunday Afternoon (Manhunt, January 1957)
Prowler! (Manhunt, May 1957)
Bothered (Manhunt, July 1957)
Smelling Like a Rose (Mr., July 1957)
Death of a Prowler (Trapped, April 1958)
Getaway Money (Guilty, November 1958)
Redheads Die Quickly (Mystery Tales, April 1959)
Harlot House (Mystery Tales, August 1959)
25 stories in all!
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Book Review: Richard Stark, Firebreak (2001)
Firebreak begins
with two plot threads—Parker planning a heist, Parker trying to figure out who
wants him dead—that Starklake soon ties together. The heist, involving stolen
art secreted away in an isloated mansion, is a good one, and just when you
think the plot has stablized, complications invariably arise. My only complaint
about Firebreak is that the
jack-in-the-box appearances of some complications feel artless. In particular,
the inclusion two men on the job—Harry Corbett and Bob Dolan—desperate for money
so that they can skip on bail only distracts from a solid entry in the Parker series. Grade: B
Monday, September 3, 2012
Pulp Poem of the Week
SHIRLEY LOCKS! SHIRLEY LOCKS
WILT THOU BE MINE?
THOU SHALT NOT SCREEM
NOR YET FEE THE LINE
BUT LAY ON CUSHION
AND THINK OF ME AND DEATH
AND HOW ITS GOING TO BE.
B.T.K. (Dennis Rader)
“Shirley Locks”
1978
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)