Friday, May 30, 2014

Forgotten Books: 361 - Donald E. Westlake

(This post originally appeared on October 30, 2005.)

I’ve read a lot of books by Donald E. Westlake over the years and have always preferred his more hardboiled novels to his comic capers (although those are pretty good, too). His series about the thief Parker, written under the pseudonym Richard Stark, is a high-water mark in the genre, and I like his novels about disgraced detective Mitch Tobin, written under the name Tucker Coe, almost as well.

361 is one of Westlake’s early hardboiled novels, published in 1962 and reprinted earlier this year as part of the great Hard Case Crime line. (It also happens to be the only Hard Case Crime reprint so far that I didn’t own in the original edition.) A few lines from the back cover copy sum up nicely what sort of book this is: “The men in the tan-and-cream Chrysler came with guns blazing. When Ray Kelly woke up in the hospital, it was a month later, he was missing an eye, and his father was dead. Then things started to get bad.”

That told me right away this was my kind of book, a real nose-buster of a novel, to use a line of cover copy from a different publisher. As it turns out, though, it’s more than a simple vengeance yarn, as Westlake springs a couple of decent plot twists that just make things worse for his protagonist/narrator Ray Kelly. The writing is terse throughout. Overall, an excellent book, and I’m glad the guys at Hard Case Crime brought it back into print.

UPDATE: The paperback edition of this one is still available on Amazon, as is a Kindle edition, which didn't exist back when I wrote this post.

3 comments:

George said...

I'm with you: Westlake's hard-boiled novels are my favorites, too. The humorous crime novels are fun, but the darker books really have an impact.

Adventuresfantastic said...

I'm with you and George. I think it might be due to the fact that humor is so subjective, whereas hard-boiled hits people at a deeper level.

RJR said...

I think the first two Tucker Coe books are his best work.

RJR