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110 of 113 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Another great HCC title from Block, November 17, 2005
It was a crime novel from Lawrence Block that initiated the Hard Case Crime line (a new imprint from Dorchester Publications and Winterfall LLC that focuses on books written in the style of the old pulp crime novels) in 2004, and Grifter's Game was a nearly perfect choice. It set the tone for works to come while making a terrific impression on its own terms. Now Ardai and company have returned with another fantastic Block reprint, again with a grifting theme. I love a good long-con tale, and The Girl with the Long Green Heart is one of the best. In terms of pure entertainment value (and educational value, if you're an aspiring criminal like me), it belongs side-by-side with The Sting. The title character is Evvie Stone, secretary (among other things) to millionaire Wallace J. Gunderman. He promised to marry Evvie a long time ago, but never came through with the ring. However, that hasn't stopped him from getting his milk for free, so to speak, and Evvie is primed for revenge. Enter Doug Rance and John Hayden, a couple of long-time con artists who work terrifically together due to their complementary styles. They've hatched an ingenious plan guaranteed to relieve Gunderman of a hundred thousand of his precious dollars, and Evvie couldn't be more eager to help them out from the inside. But is she too eager? Block devises a con so well, it makes you wonder if he hasn't been involved in a little "research" himself (in addition to his lock-picking expertise as shown in his Bernie Rhodenbarr series). The author has a way with words unlike any other author. Written in the first person, The Girl with the Long Green Heart has a lot of internal monologue from John's point-of-view. Much of it has to do with the planning of the job, but a preponderence is simply one man's thoughts when thrust into a set of situations he did not plan on, and Block manages to somehow make it all utterly riveting. In which case, The Girl with the Long Green Heart reads like lightning -- I was finished before I realized I was over halfway through. And it's that kind of readability that brings me back to Block (and Hard Case Crime) time and time again, whatever the book. He's not always the most original plotter (his Rhodenbarrs owe a huge debt to Agatha Christie and his Chip Harrison "mysteries" are just softcore Nero Wolfe rip-offs), but his distinctive voice ensures familiarity and his pure skill at storytelling promises a fun read every time -- the primary reason why he is one of my favorite authors.
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24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A Solid Pulp Novel, July 11, 2010
My local library has several Hard Case Crime novels and they look like the hardboiled mysteries that I like. So, I bought Hard Case's reprint of Lawrence Block's 1965 novel The Girl with the Long Green Heart at my local dollar store and read it on vacation. I got what I wanted - an "easy-reading," hard-boiled mystery. The plot will be familiar to mystery fans: "retired" grifter Johnny Hayden gets out of San Quentin and goes straight by taking a dead-end job in a bowling alley in Boulder, Colorado. His old partner in crime - compulsive gambler Doug Rance - comes for a visit. Predictably, Doug offers Johnny the chance to participate in one, last big score. Doug has met a femme fatale (Evvie Stone) in Las Vegas. She lives in Olean, New York, where she is the mistress of a millionaire named Wallace Gunderman. Doug, Evvie, and Johnny plot to rip off Gunderman. Hardboiled mystery fans will like this one. The plot is interesting with plenty of action and violence. Block also makes good use of the settings (Chicago, Toronto, Olean). But Block's characters - while well drawn - are overly familiar: the "reformed" criminal, the femme fatale, the crooked capitalist. Also, the plot is predictable. I recommend The Girl with the Long Green Heart to mystery fans who want simple escapism. It won't change your life, but it's a lot of fun.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An indispensable crime novel, January 25, 2006
It is hard to believe as we sit here in the 21st century, but there was a point in time when Lawrence Block was not a household name. It is just as difficult, in some ways, to comprehend that Block is well into his fifth decade of writing classic crime fiction. Exhibit A is THE GIRL WITH THE LONG GREEN HEART. First published in 1965 as a paperback original, it has been reissued here under the Hard Case Crime imprint. Hard Case has been carefully and cannily publishing a mix of original and out-of-print crime novels, and THE GIRL WITH THE LONG GREEN HEART, like other reissues from the house, is more than a snapshot of a currently established writer at the infant stage of his career. It is a demonstration of the early, and unacknowledged, brilliance that Block was exhibiting while toiling in relative shadow. One who reads this book will have to do so with the knowledge that almost all of the modern conveniences that we take for granted --- computers, the Internet, fax machines, even telephone caller ID --- did not exist. Anyone, however, who has recently opened an email purporting to be from a Nigerian industrialist seeking aid in removing $27 million from a frozen bank account will immediately recognize Johnny Hayden and Doug Rance. Hayden is newly released from hard time in San Quentin, working in a bowling alley while he attempts to save up enough money to buy a small bar of his own. Rance, a casual acquaintance from Hayden's shady past, approaches him with a quick-score proposition. The object of their exercise is Wallace Gunderman, a no-nonsense real estate mogul who is ripe for the picking. Rance even has a source inside Gunderman's office, though it hardly could be described as a mole in any sense of the word. Gunderman's beautiful secretary, Evelyn Stone, may also be his lover, but Gunderman has reneged on his promise to marry her. Stone, a woman scorned, is accordingly ready to enact a financial and personal revenge on Gunderman. All Hayden and Rance need is a hook that Gunderman will find irresistible. Hayden is reluctantly drawn into the scheme --- he doesn't want to go back to jail --- but the challenge of setting the plan in motion, not to mention the possibility of quickly getting the seed money necessary to fulfill his entrepreneurial dream, becomes too strong a lure. Things go smoothly, and it almost seems as if the trio will pull it off. Longtime readers of the genre perhaps will see trouble coming, but Block, just a few years into an already brilliant career at the time this forgotten classic was written, manages to inject a surprise or two that will still resonate with and delight present-day thriller aficionados. The most important element of the book, however, is the journey, and Block provides a triptych that is long --- not only on the ultimate reliability of its destination but also upon the scenery along the way. THE GIRL WITH THE LONG GREEN HEART is yet another example of why both Block and Hard Case Crime are indispensable. Highly recommended. --- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub
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