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5 Reviews
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
aka : Come Back Charleston Blue,
By
This review is from: The Heat's On (Paperback)
There are a few things you can depend on in Chester Himes's great police procedurals featuring Coffin Ed Johnson and Grave Digger Jones : colorful characters, distinctive dialect, a fierce racial sensibility, and plenty of mayhem. Meanwhile, the stories are pleasantly devoid of the kind of self-analysis and interior monologue which clutter up so much of modern fiction, even crime fiction. The Heat's On is something of an exception. Oh, there's more than enough mayhem and what with a giant albino junkie, a hunchback dwarf, a pony-sized attack dog, a faith healer, and various and sundry other folk about, there's certainly adequate local color.But when, first, the detectives are suspended for treating the dwarf a tad too roughly (for instance, he dies in custody) and then Digger is shot and reported killed, Cotton Ed lets his slip show a little. He becomes a frenzied dynamo of barely contained brutality as he tears a steaming hot Harlem apart searching for the cache of heroin that led to the whole mess. This is a terrific entry in the series and is particularly interesting for Himes's fearsome hostility towards the drug traffic which was blighting the inner-city even then. His attitude makes for an interesting contrast with the permissive modern attitude of many black leaders, who decry harsh prison sentences for drug dealers. It's awfully hard to see Coffin Ed, Grave Digger, or Chester Himes arguing that pushers are victims of an unjust drug war. GRADE : A
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
aka : Come Back Charleston Blue,
By
This review is from: The Heat's On (Paperback)
There are a few things you can depend on in Chester Himes's great police procedurals featuring Coffin Ed Johnson and Grave Digger Jones : colorful characters, distinctive dialect, a fierce racial sensibility, and plenty of mayhem. Meanwhile, the stories are pleasantly devoid of the kind of self-analysis and interior monologue which clutter up so much of modern fiction, even crime fiction. The Heat's On is something of an exception. Oh, there's more than enough mayhem and what with a giant albino junkie, a hunchback dwarf, a pony-sized attack dog, a faith healer, and various and sundry other folk about, there's certainly adequate local color.But when, first, the detectives are suspended for treating the dwarf a tad too roughly (for instance, he dies in custody) and then Digger is shot and reported killed, Cotton Ed lets his slip show a little. He becomes a frenzied dynamo of barely contained brutality as he tears a steaming hot Harlem apart searching for the cache of heroin that led to the whole mess. This is a terrific entry in the series and is particularly interesting for Himes's fearsome hostility towards the drug traffic which was blighting the inner-city even then. His attitude makes for an interesting contrast with the permissive modern attitude of many black leaders, who decry harsh prison sentences for drug dealers. It's awfully hard to see Coffin Ed, Grave Digger, or Chester Himes arguing that pushers are victims of an unjust drug war. GRADE : A
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not at all what I expected,
By
This review is from: The Heat's On (Paperback)
I've never read a Coffin Johnson and Grave Digger Jones story before (don't you just love those names?), so this was not at all what I expected. These books are set in Harlem in the sixties, and Jones and Johnson are black policemen whose turf is the colourful streets of Harlem. Police work was really different then, and certainly what the cops did to finally get their man would not be allowed today, but this book is earthy and real. You can almost feel the heat wave that is taking over Harlem while dead bodies keep piling up around Jones and Johnson. Definitely not for the squeemish or faint of heart this one.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A violent yet poignant thriller,
This review is from: The Heat's On (Paperback)
Coffin Ed Johnson and Grave Digger Jones are 2 of strongest characters and 2 of the toughest partners in crime fiction. However in this volume of the Himes series they play an almost secondary role. In spite of this I enjoyed the book as much as Cotton Comes to Harlem. Coffin Ed will go to extremes to revenge his partner as he unravels this mystery.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Maybe the best in the series,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Heat's on (Paperback)
I've been reading Himes' stories about Gravedigger and Coffin Ed in order of when they were written (see Wikipedia, if you want a chronology), and this one may be the best yet. The bad guys are extra-eccentric and amoral. The streets are extra-gritty. Grave Digger and Coffin Ed are extra-alone in their fight against it all.As usual, Himes is better at the first 95% of the story than he is in wrapping up the last 5%. As usual, female characters are, at best, conniving villains or throwaway props. The good stuff is so good that these quibbles hardly matter. I'm looking forward to the rest of the series. |
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Heats on by Chester Himes (Paperback - June 1986)
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