Showing posts with label Donald Westlake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Donald Westlake. Show all posts

Friday, February 17, 2012

FFBL The Dancing Aztec’s by Donald Westlake

 The Dancing Aztec’s by Donald Westlake

I wrote previously about Westlakes Dancing Aztec’s here… but on this eve of the release of what by all accounts is his last unpublished work I think it’s worth revisiting. Set in late 70s NYC, the Dancing Aztec tells the tale of the theft and re-theft of a statue called…. Yep the Dancing Aztec. It’s a disco era farce where people get caught up in the story of the statue and who has it.

I read the Dancing Aztec because one of my high school English teachers recommend it when I posted about Westlake on facebook a couple of years back. She was an important teacher to me, because she could seemed understand me better than the other teachers. I recall running into her own day at Borders books (the original one on State Street in Ann Arbor) in the mystery section when I was still in high school. I seem to recall she had a short conversation about Robert Parker’s Senser books.  I hope that she’s going to get a chance to read this last Westlake and enjoy it… and sometime soon I hope to make my way back to the Dancing Aztec.

James Reasoner also covered it for a FFB HERE

Friday, January 6, 2012

FFB rewind: Murder Among Children by Tucker Coe (Donald Westlake)


1/6
In the past I did a couple of FFB entries that were inspired by others entries. I read some of the recommended books and gave them my own review. I only managed to write two of those, but I want to make sure that in 2012 I spend more time writing fiction and less blogging… to that end I plan to high light the FFBs post that others have written. I am going to try and keep them short and sweet and to the point…. And our first second look is…..

Murder Among Children by Tucker Coe (Donald Westlake) covered by Ed Gorman

I had already read the first of the Westlake Tucker Coe books when Ed covered the second one, Murder Among Children, which prompted me to check out the book for myself. I liked it a lot and especially think that there is a cultural element to the book that has only deepened as time has passed. As a member of the silent generation Westlake explores the generational conflict between the silents and the boomers.

Ed’s review here and my follow up here


http://restlesskind.blogspot.com/2010/08/ffb-echo-murder-among-children-by.html

Thursday, November 18, 2010

FFB: The Green Eagle Score by Richard Stark

As has been noted by many Friday Forgotten Book posts in the past, Richard Stark (a.k.a. Donald Westlake) is hardly forgotten.... at least by us, and assorted comic book fans who are currently discovering the world of Parker via the Darwyn Cooke graphic novel versions of the Parker series. The latest installment The Outfit just hit shelves and while I have my copy I haven't read it yet. I even mentioned Parker in my last FFB post..


Today's book, The Green Eagle Score, isn't even out of print, the copy that I am reading right now is from the The University of Chicago Press reprint series of the Parker books..... but what I am seeing as I read it is the kid. Yep the kid, one of the main characters Ellen has a 3 year old daughter who plays in the yard while Parker and his crew plan their heist of an Air Force Payroll. What strikes me is the simple question where is she now? The book was written in 1967 and so it's safe to assume it's set during that time period, so now in 2010, that little girl (assuming she has survived) would be pushing 45 years old. What's her story, she as a jail bird heist man father in Parkers crew member Marty, and a mother who seems to keep taking up with guys who have a taste for the life--- so what kind of life did Pam have? what was her world like at 18 years old. 1982 is a year I recall, but I have no clue what it was like for a 18 year old girl. Was she a punk, a criminal, a druggie? did she end up with some weird cult or a disco queen? I don't know, but it's one of those loose ends that will have me up all night thinking about the possibilities. Is she Parker from the show Leverage... or Parker's mother?

I know, I know, it's just a crime story. One of the Stark books with the Plotting and the heist and all of the Parker being Parker, but also being psycho-analysed by proxy. That's right a head shrinker is hearing about Parker and the wheels are turning, as I am sure from the point of view of a Shrink, Parker has to be a hell of a lot more interesting than a bunch of house wives and spoiled kids.

At this point I have to point out that as I type this I am 92 pages into the 173 page book and the well, thing that's going down.... I saw it coming-- but I am along for the ride, it's a Parker novel, I have yet to find one that isn't worth the ride, that isn't worth seeing how it all plays out.

Anyway, it's not one of those Parker books that people talk about as being their favorites, or a turning point for the Stark storytelling or anything like that. What I can say is that it's solid, and it's sparked my interest in the long term story or Parker and his crew. Where do these guys end up? What and who are they in 2010 and what have they left in their wake?

Since writing the first draft of this post I have finished the book, and it's good to see that Pam survived (not that I am going to get into the rest of the stories payoff...) and I am still wondering where is she now? And not just her, where are the rest of the characters that Parker came into contact with back in the day, the kids, the women, the motel clerks and the weirdo's who sold him guns and put up the money for the heists??? The truth has a way of coming out--- often enough, I am thinking there had to be one of those Unsolved Mystery segments from the 1980s that were looking for a man known only as Parker.


You can find all kinds of Parker stuff over at The Violent World of Parker

More Forgotten Friday Books over at Patti Abbott's blog

Also of note is the SFF Audio podcast episode 082 which features a discussion of the Westlake book Memory.

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Donald Westlake: More thoughts

I see that I have had a lot more traffic on my last post than I usual get, and figure it was because of Donald Westlake. I feel a bit sheepish for not saying more about the my year exploring his work, so I figured I should at least say a few more words.

I first heard of Westlake when I was a teen or in my early 20s when my mother tried to push a copy of The Spy in the Ointment on me-- I wasn't interested and later sold off that copy as part of the great purge of 2002. I didn't think about Westlake (or honestly most crime fiction) again until I discovered the Hard Case Crime series in 2008.


When Westlake passed away on New Years Eve of 2008, I had only read a couple of his books, but the Richard Stark Hard Case Crime reprint of Lemons Never Lie had left me wanting more, and I had also enjoyed (but honestly not loved) 361. As news of his passing spread someone out there on the net proposed the idea of reading a Westlake book a month in commemoration and the idea stuck with me. Working in a library I had access to a number of his works and via the Friends of the Library and my local mystery book shop (Aunt Agatha's) I was able to amass a small but growing collection of his works.

As they say on the Out of the Past podcast "Works consulted for this year include":
Jan 09
The Hunter by Richard Stark
Butcher's Moon by Richard Stark
Feb 09
The Hot Rock by Donald E. Westlake
March 09
Dancing Aztecs by Donald E. Westlake
April 09
Man with the Getaway Face by Richard Stark
May 09
Kinds of Love, Kinds of Death by Tucker Coe
June 09

The Outfit by Richard Stark
July 09
The Cutie by Donald Westlake
Aug 09
The Mourner by Richard Stark
Sept 09
Parker: The Hunter (Graphic Novel) Adaption by Darwyn Cooke
Oct 09

Anarchaos by Donald E Westlake
Nov 09- Which was my short story month
From The Curious Facts Preceding My Execution by Donald Westlake
:
The Curious Facts Preceding My Execution

You Put on Some Weight
No Story
The Sincerest Form of Flattery

Devilshly

Sniff

Just One of those Days

Sweetest Man in the world




Dec 09

The Score by Richard Stark
Somebody Owes Me Money (Book On CD) Donald E Westlake

Looking over the list of Westlake/Stark books that I read, I see that the one glaring area that I did not explore is his later books. Pretty much all of what I read was from the 60s and 70s. This wasn't planned, I think it was more of a case of my trying to start with his early series work and then catch up with the later adventures of Dortmunder and Parker once I had explored the early works. As I work my way though my collection I will get to the later works-- I swear.

I don't know that I can really identify any over arching themes from the Westlake books I have read-- maybe a distrust of organizations and a pointing out of the absurdity of contemporary life. There often seems to be someone who just wants to go to work, do the job and go home in Westlake's work, people just want what they are owed. I also think that the comedic work really complements the hard core down and dirty work, it's as if he is saying that you can either laugh at the world or fight it head on. Strangely I think I am at the point in my life where I am more likely to laugh at it, but I found myself reading more of the Parker books, which fall on the fighting side of the fence.

The good/sad news for Westlake/ Stark fans is that there is one more 'new' Westlake book headed into print in the spring of 2010. The prophets of crime over at Hard Case (and if you haven't picked up one of their books yet, I urge you to-- there is a link above to the site where you can check out their catalog and each book has a sample chapter available). Then there are the University of Chicago Press reprints of the Parker books of which the first 9 have been released and the next three are also slated for spring of 2010.


Donald Westlake official site
The Violent World of Parker
Hard Case Crime

Thoughts, comments, favorite Westlake books?