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Hard Man [Hardcover]

Allan Guthrie (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 4, 2007
Pearce, an ex-con and Edinburgh hard man who’s still recovering from the recent loss of his mother, is invited by the dysfunctional Baxter family to protect their pregnant sixteen-year-old daughter from her martial-arts-expert husband, Wallace—a man ten years her senior with a penchant for killing family pets. Having found out that the baby’s not his, Wallace has sworn vengeance. Pearce declines the job: He’s no babysitter. But when Wallace kills Pearce’s dog, he goes too far. Now it’s personal.

Revenge is part of the grieving process. But has Pearce finally met his match?

Time to find out how many psychedelic drugs one man can take.

Time to find out why Jesus is living in a cage in Wallace’s basement.

Time to find out who the real hard man is.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Acerbic wit leavens over-the-top violence in Scottish author Guthrie's third "tartan noir" (after Edgar-finalist Kiss Her Goodbye). Jacob Baxter's married 16-year-old daughter, May, is pregnant with another man's baby; May's 26-year-old husband, Wallace, is a karate expert and in a seething jealous rage. To protect May, Jacob, along with grown sons Rog and Flash, confront Wallace, and none of the Baxters emerges unscathed. Their next idea is to enlist the aid of a local "hard man," and they reach out to loner ex-con Pearce (who appeared in Guthrie's first novel, Two-Way Split). After inflicting still more injuries on the Baxter clan, Pearce refuses to help, and the Baxters continue to wage a decidedly inept war against Wallace. The violence is nonstop and intense (Wallace crucifies a man-literally), but Guthrie makes the macabre funny. When Pearce finally gets involved, the story goes off the rails, but Guthrie contrives to make the hapless, hopeless Baxters into something more than mere cartoons, and their bungled blood feud is grotesquely fascinating.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Tough guy is an inexact analogue to the British term hard man; the former is usually used wryly while the latter carries more respect. Edinburgh writer Guthrie's third novel, however, manages to Americanize the Briticism a bit. After taking a beating, the men of the Baxter family--dad Jacob and sons Roger and Flash--look for help protecting the pregnant May, Roger and Flash's sister, from her psychopathic husband, Wallace. Ex-con Pearce isn't interested in babysitting, but a little subterfuge--Flash kidnaps Pearce's beloved dog, Hilda, and pins the deed on Wallace--brings him into the fray. Thus escalates a cartoonish melee of bumbling brutality and backstabbing, along with a contest, of sorts, to determine who is the real hard man. It's none of the Baxters, but is it Pearce? Wallace? Or the guy named Jesus locked up in Wallace's basement? Guthrie's blithe sense of humor and inventive approach to the worst-case scenario make this a recommendation for fans of the bumbling-criminal genre. Compared to his superior Kiss Her Goodbye (2005), however, it's a bit over the top. Keir Graff
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (June 4, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0151012989
  • ISBN-13: 978-0151012985
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.6 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,776,417 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I was born on Orkney, a small island group off the north coast of Scotland. I went to school in Kirkwall, where my primary five teacher allowed me to write during art classes, given my woeful lack of talent for visual art. I was, however, not too bad a musician, playing piano and bassoon to a half-decent standard. I became a founder member of the National Youth Orchestra of Scotland when I was twelve, and was whisked off to music school in Manchester as a fourteen-year-old.

After leaving school, I attended university in Aberdeen, where my plan to support my studies by playing piano in a posh restaurant took a nosedive when I was sacked on my second night because my hair was too long. After a year, I left Aberdeen, degreeless, and moved to Edinburgh.

Having lots of spare time on my hands, I taught myself how to program computers and spent the following twelve years working in IT. It was good while it lasted, but I started to feel the pinch and found a part-time job in a bookshop, where I was so happy I would have worked for free. For a while, at least!

Before long, I was employed full-time in the book trade, and over the nine years that followed I worked in various jobs, from stockroom supervisor to IT trainer, moving between exotic locales such as Brussels, Cork and Stirling, before giving up my day job in 2006 to work as a writer, editor and literary agent.

I'd married in 2000 and it was my wife, Donna, who was instrumental in encouraging me to take my writing seriously. After being short-listed for the CWA Debut Dagger for a book called Blithe Psychopaths in 2001 (renamed Two-way Split for later release), I started to think she might have a point. Three years and hundreds of rejection slips later, I wasn't so sure!

Eventually Two-way Split and Kiss Her Goodbye were picked up (within weeks of one another, oddly enough) by two independent small US presses. In 2006 Kiss Her Goodbye was nominated for an MWA Edgar Award, an Anthony Award and a Mystery Ink Gumshoe Award. Two-Way Split went on to win the Theakstons Crime Novel of the Year in 2007.

Since then I've published another three novels, most recently, Slammer, which describes the descent into hell of a young prison officer. I've also published three novellas, the most recent being Bye Bye Baby, a police thriller and a Kindle top ten bestseller in the UK.

 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "Blood was thicker than disgust.", June 5, 2007
This review is from: Hard Man (Hardcover)


Pearce has a reputation as a hard man with good reason. Living in Portobello, Edinburgh's seaside town, Pearce is inclined to keep to himself since the violent death of his mother soon after that of his sister. After doing ten years for killing the junkie responsible for his sister's death, Pearce's only companion is Hilda, a male three-legged Dandie Dinmont named after the hard man's mother. With only the occasional conversation with his deceased mum, Pearce is adjusting nicely to his new home when he is accosted by Flash and Rog Baxter, whose plan is to intimidate him into accepting a job. Wrong. Pearce turns the tables on the brothers, reducing them to sniveling pulp by the time their father, Jacob, arrives.

Jacob puts the deal to Pearce. The Baxter's want him to protect sixteen-year-old May from her husband, Wallace, who kicked her out when he found out she was pregnant with another man's child. Pearce's first instinct is to refuse in spite of the money, considering the Baxter's riotously dysfunctional manner of conducting business, but when Hilda is done in by Wallace ("Said the dog dropped like a stone when he hit the water."), Pearce takes it very personally, prepared to bring down May's martial arts-trained husband. Carefully planning his assault on the man who took Hilda, Pearce goes into action. Unfortunately, Wallace is more than a match and Pearce is soon in dire straights with an adversary every bit as tough.

What begins as combat between Pearce and Wallace escalates into a wild melee of unpredictable violence and mayhem, guns blasting, tires screeching and the blade of a knife slicing home. Guthrie provides a wild ride that involves the Baxter family, Pearce Wallace and a guy named Jesus in a blood-soaked, frequently acerbic, tortured imbroglio that is an unpredictable page-turner. The novel speaks for itself, a hard man up against an indifferent world with nothing to lose but the three-legged dog that is his best friend. Using the harsh dialog of the streets, Hard Man pulls no punches, yet manages to humanize a most bizarre assortment of buffoons and loners, loonies and losers, Pearce left wondering what strange trick of fate has landed him in this predicament, a joyride from start to finish. Luan Gaines/2007.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Some great scenes, but a mild disappointment, September 4, 2007
This review is from: Hard Man (Hardcover)
If you like your crime fiction unrepentantly dark, you should try Allan Guthrie, the fastest-rising name in the Scottish subgenre affectionately known as "tartan noir." Hopefully you've already read his explosive debut Two-Way Split (from great indie crime publisher PointBlank Press, which Guthrie later joined as editor) or his multi-award-nominated second novel Kiss Her Goodbye (from the amazing Hard Case Crime). Both take place within the same circle of society in Edinburgh, but follow different protagonists' stories.

In the UK, calling someone a hard man is akin to calling them a tough guy in the US ("Come on, hard man, show me what you've got," for example), and Hard Man, Guthrie's third novel and his first appearance in hardcover, is a direct follow-up to Two-Way Split. In that novel, we met Gordon Pearce, the "hero" (if you will) of the book -- which merely means he was one of the least despicable characters -- who went to prison because of his alternate use for a screwdriver in revenge for his sister's death. Soon after his release, his mother was killed and he sought revenge for that, too.

Now, just a few months later, Jacob Baxter and his sons Roger and Flash have sought Pearce out to help with their own family problems (he comes highly recommended by Jacob's nephew Cooper, a familiar name in this neighborhood). Their sister, sixteen-year-old May, cheated on her husband Wallace with another man and got pregnant. Wallace subsequently threw her out, but has been unable to leave her alone since, leading the Baxters to believe both she and the unborn baby are in danger (nothing near the danger the other fellow is in, but still...).

They want Pearce to protect her, but Pearce refuses to take the job, so the Baxters decide to force his hand. What nobody told them was that you never mess with another man's dog, especially not one he has named after his dead mother.

Despite a lot of really great scenes (including a crucifixion that goes on for pages!), Hard Man was a mild disappointment. It lacked the pure readability of Guthrie's previous work, and the humor felt forced in the beginning. Also, the story started off slow. Guthrie's characters (especially Pearce) think things through a good deal before they act, and these character digressions add depth, but they also drag down the pace. A crime novel needs to keep its pace swift.

Unfortunately, Hard Man also lacks any compelling characters that might have made up for this. Guthrie has created a succession of types with a few quirks to set them apart, but no one ever really jumps off the page, since they're primarily there to further the plot. This dearth of any interesting personalities made the book a struggle to finish: simply put, I couldn't bring myself to care what happened to anyone with the exception of Hilda the dog. I think the main problem is, despite all the thinking they do, everyone makes such stupid decisions that I had to roll my eyes (another hindrance to reading) as they committed blunder after blunder.

Even Pearce seemed to lack the basic intelligence necessary for him to have developed his stellar reputation. A single conversation would have cleared up any misunderstandings nicely and avoided the frustration and duress he experiences. If he didn't have the same name, I would not have guessed this was the same fellow who was such an engaging feature of Two-Way Split.

On the plus side, Guthrie's storytelling skill continues to improve. Once the action begins in full, it does not let up, and Guthrie certainly knows how to express intense pain on the page (something that is usually lacking even in horror novels). The humor is incorporated much more smoothly as the story progresses, and his plot shows cleverness and originality and is generally what kept me reading even through the down spots; I wondered what he would come up with next. I still wonder what he will come up with next because, despite my criticisms of Hard Man, Allan Guthrie remains one of the better crime writers working today, and I have no doubt that he will impress me once again.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More stellar work from Guthrie, March 18, 2011
This review is from: Hard Man (Hardcover)
I first discovered Allan's work a bit over a year ago and quickly tracked down everything I could find. I read (or re-read) one every few months so as to not run out before the next book/novella is published. Hard Man is my most recent read of Allan's and it didn't disappoint. If you like tight, lean prose and excellent dialogue, Allan's work is right up your alley. And if you enjoy gritty violence mixed with an acerbic wit and black comedy, give Hard Man a read. I also highly recommend Slammer, which was on my 2010 top 10 list of best reads.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
ANOTHER HOT DAY in July. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
nail gun, fucking dog
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Fat Boy, Happy Harry, Dog Home, Range Rover, Lord Jesus, Dandie Dinmont, Jacob Baxter, Jesus Christ, Rog Baxter, Tony Twelve-Inch
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