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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Another great HCC reprint, December 8, 2005
This review is from: The Gutter and the Grave (Hard Case Crime) (Mass Market Paperback)
Ever since he found his wife Toni with one of his operatives, all former private investigator Matt Cordell has wanted to do is crawl inside a bottle and stay there. He's been perfectly happy to wallow in his memories for the last five years, panhandling for change on the Bowery, and he doesn't want any trouble.
Enter trouble in the form of Johnny Bridges, a guy from Cordell's old neighborhood he hasn't seen in ten years. Johnny can't afford a real private detective -- and he doesn't want to get the police involved for personal reasons -- so he asks Matt for his help in figuring out whether his business partner, Dom Archese, is stealing from the till in their co-owned tailor shop.
Being that Cordell doesn't have a whole hell of a lot else filling his day, he says yes. This little piece of magnanimity (really just a way to get Johnny off his back) sweeps Matt into a full-fledged murder case where he encounters a shady cast of characters so full of lies that it is impossible to tell if anyone is ever telling the truth. (Not that it stops Cordell from climbing into the sack with as many of the potential femmes fatales as will let him.)
That's what you get for doing a guy a favor.
The Gutter and the Grave is a reprint of a novel originally published by Gold Medal under the title I'm Cannon -- For Hire and the byline of "Curt Cannon" (the name the Cordell's character was changed to). This edition is Ed McBain's preferred text, complete with edits made just prior to his death. It is therefore a fascinating combination of the enthusiasm of a young writer (it is a little heavy on the exposition) and the restraint exercised by a seasoned pro (the violence is tight and visceral and not drawn out unnecessarily).
The Gutter and the Grave is a prime example of the fiction called noir: it's dark and it's dirty, and Matt Cordell is one depressing son of a bitch of a hero. He's full of self-pity and the smallest things set him off on a flashback. McBain keeps his prose raw and fluid, his dialogue sizzling, and a happy ending never crosses his mind (though there is a fun Blackboard Jungle reference for those who can appreciate it). This is a novel about the other side of society: the side where every day is a struggle and every relationship is just one more opportunity to take advantage of. It's the kind of potent novel that, after you get over the grungy feeling it leaves behind, makes you feel happy that you're not one of the characters -- a perfect addition to the Hard Case Crime canon.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Flyweight But Entertaining, April 3, 2006
This review is from: The Gutter and the Grave (Hard Case Crime) (Mass Market Paperback)
Originally published in 1958 as by Curt Cannon under the title I'M CANNON--FOR HIRE, THE GUTTER AND THE GRAVE is enjoyable but decidedly a flyweight in the Ed McBain bibliography. Matt Cordell has fallen on hard times: when he caught his blonde bombshell wife in the arms of another man he lost his P.I. license and embarked upon a decade-long drunk. When old friend Johnny Bridges turns up with a problem, Cordell reluctantly agrees to help him out.
Bridges owns a shop and money has come up missing from the cash register repeatedly over the past six months. It seems simple enough--so simple that Cordell is unprepared for a corpse, and before you can say "pulp fiction" we're up to our eyebrows in thug-like investigators, dangerous dames, and jazz musicians.
Even this early on his career McBain knows how to turn a memorable phrase and he keeps the pace going at a solid clip; the plot, however, is less effective, and it will be a very inexperienced reader who doesn't spot the killer within the first third of the novel. Even so, THE GUTTER AND THE GRAVE is enjoyably written, and fans of McBain and the genre in general will enjoy it.
GFT, Amazon Reviewer
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A guilty pleasure, but a good one., October 11, 2007
This review is from: The Gutter and the Grave (Hard Case Crime) (Mass Market Paperback)
I had not read a real hard-boiled detective novel in years before I stumbled onto this book. This is the real deal in the old pulp tradition, but the absolute best pulp tradition. Originally written in 1958, I do not think that the vast majority of modern writers could come close to recreating the mindset or the backdrop.
This isn't an elegant, intricate sort of mystery- it is more in the spirit of Mickey Spillanes's classic toughguy yarns. There is a difference though. It is more like one of Spillane's heroes had finally gone too far and found out that he wasn't a superman afterall. That is the case with Matt Cordell- we meet him on the Bowery as a pan-handling drunk. He has lost his license, wis wife, his rep, and his self-respect. He is now resigned to life as a philosophical drunk living in flops and on park benches. It is a joy watching him prove to himself and the world that he can solve one more case like a true professional. It is quite believable too, since at one point or another it seems like every single one of the other characters are lying to him.
On a secondary level this book is also a time capsule of 50's Manhattan. Infact, the settings are as engrossing as the plot. If you are getting a few years on you, it is very easy to quickly identify with both Cordell and his world...
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