|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
35 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Eight million reasons to read!,
By
This review is from: Eight Million Ways To Die: A Matthew Scudder Mystery (Mass Market Paperback)
This is the book that really set the standard for the Scudder series. It's the fifth Scudder adventure and it opens with Matt just out of the hospital after a major drinking binge. He is hired by a prostitute who wants out of the business, so he tracks down her pimp, Chance. No problem, Chance says. She can get out, but she could have saved herself some money and skipped the middleman.Everything looks great, but then the prostitute is murdered. Scudder, of course, assumes that Chance is the killer, so he calls in a tip to the police. Next thing you know, Chance is out and he's looking for Matt. This book is the first to really show Matt's struggle with alcohol. He starts attending AA meetings, but still doesn't see himself as an alcoholic. Normally, by the fifth book, a series begins to run out of steam. With Matt Scudder, though, the series is just beginning to find its legs. The mystery is fair play, but if you figure out how it all ties together before Matt, you're a more astute reader than I am. All of the characters are well-drawn and fully realized. Block is a true master and this is a masterpiece!
13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Scudder Descends into the Depths,
By
This review is from: Eight Million Ways To Die: A Matthew Scudder Mystery (Mass Market Paperback)
"Eight Million Ways to Die" is a classic piece of hardboiled detective fiction that represents a turning point in the life of its hero, Matthew Scudder. Early on in the narrative, Scudder is told frankly by a young doctor after a two-day alcohol blackout, "if you drink, you'll die." Scared by the warning, Scudder takes a case he doesn't want in a despearte attempt to distract him from alcohol. His struggles with the bottle come across very real and are harrowing to behold. The case is a good one as well with Scudder attempting to track the manaical killer of a hooker who was trying to leave the life. Death is an ever constant theme, with the book's title being a riff on the old literary saying "there are eight million stories in the naked city."This book is everything great private detective fiction should be; dark, cynical, violent and lonely. Frankly, I like Scudder better during this period than later on after he sobers up. If you agree, you'll love this book.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Eight Million Ways to Die Blocks Best Scudder Novel Ever?,
By Terry Quinn (Minnesota) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Eight Million Ways To Die: A Matthew Scudder Mystery (Mass Market Paperback)
Having only read one other Lawrence Block novel "A Dance at the Slaughterhouse", I was intrigued at the depth of Eight Million Ways to Die. The characters and the environment of New York being the backdrop for this story makes for an entertaining read. As well as Scudders unwillingness to accept that he's an alcoholic. The ending was a classic one. The way Block is able to bring to life the city as a main part of the plot in the story is amazing. Eight Million Ways to Die is a classic and will forever be remembered as one of the top 25 mystery novels of all time! Other recommended books:
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the all-time great detective books,
By
This review is from: Eight Million Ways to Die (Matthew Scudder Mysteries) (Hardcover)
The mystery is pretty good in itself, but what sets this book and all of Block's books apart is the vivid world in which it takes place. Block has John D. MacDonald's gift for dialogue matched with Charles Dickens' ability to develop characters, wrapped in a noir sensibility that creates an unforgettable reading experience. Block's portrayal of the standard hard-drinking detective as he struggles with the decision to become sober is particularly poignant. I have given away several copies of this book, and so far every person I gave it to has read most or all of the Matt Scudder series.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Terrific,
This review is from: Eight Million Ways To Die: A Matthew Scudder Mystery (Mass Market Paperback)
. Matthew Scudder is Lawrence Block's remarkable private investigator. He's a former NYPD detective who left the force after an accident left a child dead in a crossfire. Because he is unlicensed you can't "hire" him. Instead he does you a favor by taking your case and solving the crime. In exchange for the favor the client returns the favor by giving him some cash. Scudder is an alcoholic. Rarely do you find him without a drink in has hand or at one of has favorite watering holes. In "Eight Million Ways to Die,' Scudder has begin to realize being under the influence is not in his best interests. He has already begun to attend AA meetings and is trying very hard not to dunk. He isn't always successful, but at least he is trying. A prostitute, Kim, comes to Matt because she wants to get out of the life. She asks him to find and speak to Chance, her pimp. Matt does and Chance agrees to let Kim off the hook. However Kim is found dead, slashed to death. Chance, of corurse, is the prime suspect. He says he didn't do it and hires Scudder to prove his innocence. In Scudder's search for Kim's killer another prostitute is found dead, this time an apparent suicide. Chance is also a collector of African art. Many pieces adorn the walls of "his girls." Although his business is to promote young women we can't help not liking him. Block's knowledge of New York City makes this and his other novels in the series more interesting to a reader who can actually visualize where he is while reading. I could not find "Eight Million Ways to Die," in our library system and because it has been out of print for sometime equally difficult locating a copy in bookstores. As lick would have it I did find a paperback edition, signed no less, in a bookstore in New Paltz, NY, a collage town. An afterthought: Matthew Scudder is a realistic, likeable character. In the early books we find that after he left the NYPD he took up drinking and left his wife and two sons. From time to time she asks Scudder to send more money because "we need it." Scudder generally obliges. For some reason that Scudder doesn't know finds himself visiting churches and leaving a donation, tithing, ten percent of money recently received from a client. Scudder says Catholic churches receive donations for than others because they are generally open at late hours. Although he's not a religious man he finds peace and solitude in the almost always empty sanctuary he visits.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Very good book.. weak ending...,
By dubeiram (SoCal) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Eight Million Ways To Die: A Matthew Scudder Mystery (Mass Market Paperback)
Superb character development.. may have dragged a bit at times...but entertaining and better written than most crime novels I have read... but the ending...hmm... how can a book that had been that good up until the final chapters end so.. well.. disappointingly...
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
eight million ways to die,
By dave (somerset, nj) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Eight Million Ways To Die: A Matthew Scudder Mystery (Mass Market Paperback)
This is one of my all-time favorite books. If you are new toLawrence Block or his Scudder novels, this is a great place to start.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A shiny new edition of an excellent '80s mystery,
By David Roy (Vancouver, BC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Eight Million Ways to Die (Matthew Scudder Mysteries) (Hardcover)
It's 2008, and it's the 25th anniversary of the Lawrence Block's Eight Million Ways to Die. So let's put out a celebratory edition! I've never read a Block book, so I'm not sure why this particular book warrants a re-issue in a special hardcover, but it does mark a significant milestone in Matt Scudder's career, so maybe that's why. This handsome hardcover also includes an afterword by Block, so fans of the Scudder series may want to pick this up to at least read that. For non-fans of the series, you can pick it up because it's a very good book.
If you're like me, you'll have to keep reminding yourself that Eight Million Ways to Die was written back in 1983. I kept asking why the characters didn't use cell phones until I remembered. Also, the image of New York as a crime-infested city kept jarring with the way it is now. The title of the book is said by a cynical cop who claims that there are eight million ways to die in New York. While there are probably still quite a few, I don't think there are that many any more. Block does immerse you in the seedy atmosphere of the New York of 1983, though. His imagery is quite stark, and he constantly has Scudder reading the newspaper, pulling out headlines and news stories about how certain innocent people were killed, and commenting on how these will quickly get relegated to the back pages as something even more monstrous hits the front page. This atmosphere constantly weighs Scudder (and the reader) down, but at least the reader can put the book down if it gets too oppressive. What can Scudder do? Scudder is an extremely interesting character, and evidently one who changes throughout his series of books. His alcoholism has been a constant presence in previous books, and this is the one where it comes to a head. He's constantly going to AA meetings, commenting on the speakers but not speaking up himself when it comes to his turn. He just can't see himself in these people, despite knowing that he has a problem. There's an interesting running plot element regarding this bottle of Wild Turkey in Kim's apartment, something that keeps attracting him even if he's not there investigating something. While most of the characters are fairly one-dimensional, serving their purpose in the story and perhaps having one or two identifying traits, Chance himself also stands out as an extremely interesting character. He finds himself being drawn to Scudder, telling him things that he would never tell anyone else. He's an extremely deep character, almost as much as Scudder, and we find ourselves wondering how he's going to turn out as well. When he disappears for a while, I almost found myself dreading that Scudder would find out he got murdered as well. Block's hard-boiled prose is excellent in Eight Million Ways to Die, and it's definitely what will make me go back and eventually read other books in this series. It's almost a contradiction, sinking into the muck that is New York while also feeling slightly optimistic as Matt comes closer and closer to redemption. It can be brutal at times, but he doesn't revel in the carnage. He doesn't hide from it, but he doesn't dwell on it either, except when Scudder himself does as he's trying to fight off temptation yet again. Block's dialogue is top notch as well, giving the book a noir feel that draws you in. Eight Million Ways to Die is an excellent novel, and you don't have to worry that you're coming into it in the middle of a series. As a standalone, it's an excellent examination of an alcoholic detective's life. As part of a series, it's a turning point. Either way, you'll lose yourself in the past as 1983 rears its ugly head again. Scudder is great character, and this is a great book. David Roy
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Private Eye, A Great Mystery, and Alcoholism,
By Bonnie Brody "Book Lover and Knitter" (Port St. Lucie, FL) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (TOP 100 REVIEWER)
This review is from: Eight Million Ways to Die (Matthew Scudder Mysteries) (Hardcover)
I loved this mystery. It is a literary page-turner about the search for a prostitute's murderer.
Detective Matt Scudder's on-going battle with alcohlism is as vivid and intricately described as anything I've ever read. I am a clinical social worker and marriage and family therapist and I often give copies of this book to my clients who have alcohol issues or addictions. Anyone who has a problem with alcohol or addictions or has a loved one with addiction problems should read this book. Anyone who loves a good mystery with great characters will love this book.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Reviews from the Weekend Reader, Elizabeth Jean Allen,
By Elizabeth Jean Allen, The Weekend Reader (Summerville, SC USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Eight Million Ways to Die (Matthew Scudder Mysteries) (Hardcover)
Matthew Scudder is not a licensed private investigator. To claim he was one would not be ethical. Besides, private investigators have to keep up with records and billable hours... No, you can't hire him, but you can ask him to do a favor. In return for said favor, you can buy him a drink and give him a little cash.
At one point in his life Matt was a detective for the NYPD, but when a stray bullet from his gun struck and killed an innocent child during a shootout, Matt resigned. He buried his grief in a bottle and started doing favors for friends. In Eight Million Ways to Die, Matt has reached a crossroads. After experiencing blackout that lasted several days that ended with Matt in the hospital, he knew he had to come to terms with his drinking. He agreed to go to AA, but he was not ready to label himself an alcoholic. In need of money, Matt agreed to act as an intermediary for a hooker. She wanted out of the business but was afraid to tell her pimp. It was a simple job and the situation was settled without bloodshed or tears. Chance, the pimp, felt Kim wasted her money. She didn't need to hire Matt. All she had to do was tell him she wanted out. When Kim was found dead a few days later, the police and Matt assumed Chance was the guilty party. The police would never be able to prove that Chance was guilty. Chance knew that, but the fact that the police assumed he did it and were not looking elsewhere irritated him. Kim was a hooker, but she was one of his girls. The cloud of suspicion was hurting his business. As Matt already had a vested interest in the case, Chance hires him. Matt would ferret out the truth. It has been 25 years since Laurence Block's Eight Million Ways to Die was first released. New York City has changed since then, but it was easy to visualize the rabble and the rubble of the New York City of old through the eyes of Matthew Scudder. It was descriptive without the lengthy prose to go with it. It is a classic hardboiled detective story. The clues are doled out at regular intervals. An astute mystery reader may be able to identify the killer before Matt puts the pieces together. I had my suspicions but there was enough doubt to keep me guessing right up until the end. Eight Million Ways to Die is dark, cynical, violent and incredibly lonely--all that a great PI mystery should be. For the mystery fans out there, I highly recommend it. |
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Eight Million Ways to Die (Matthew Scudder) by Lawrence Block
$11.99 $6.99
| ||