I blogged about it recently, but as I finished it since then, I thought I could have it as today 's reading suggestion. I am talking of course about The Gutter and the Grave, by Ed McBain.
Surprisingly it does not feature the detectives of the 87th Precinct,
but ex private eye turned drunkard and bum Matt Cordell, who lost his
license and everything else, including himself, when he beat up the
lover of his wife. Narrated by Cordell himself, the story uses many
tropes, some would say clichés, of hard-boiled crime fiction: an
investigation on a minor crime (someone stealing from a cashier) quickly leads to one on a murder, then a second murder,
there are femmes fatales a plenty and a good deal of shady characters,
an oppressive heatwave, violence of all kinds. What makes the novel
stand above other similar ones is the strength of McBain's writing:
vivid imagery, sharp dialogues, genuine characters behind their
archetypes. One cannot go wrong with Ed McBain.
Tropes make the world go round!
ReplyDeleteYou're such a bad influence on me, Guillaume. I just bought a copy of this on my Kindle. I'm off to read it now, tropes and all!
ReplyDeleteAnd I just finished it! It was a good read.
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