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Manslaughter [Hardcover]

Parnell Hall (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Stanley Hastings Mysteries January 22, 2003
Having survived a murderously uncomfortable New England holiday in the much-praised Cozy, private eye Stanley Hastings returns to more familiar New York urban turf with his twisted logic and droll style effectually intact. With Joe Balfour—a client who did time 25 years ago for killing a man in a barroom brawl—Stanley embarks on an ingeniously plotted and frequently hilarious excursion that will confront him continually with embarrassments: like the arrest of his client for the murder of a notorious blackmailer who’s been found in his Upper East Side apartment with a carving knife in his back. And before he cracks the case, Stanley will be breaking and entering, contaminating crime scenes, concealing evidence (or else planting it), framing two innocent men for two different homicides, aiding an extortionist, hanging out in a topless bar, blackmailing a few attorneys, and outwitting the cops. This is the fifteenth novel in the long-running mystery series that the New York Times finds “very funny” in its “manic nonsense” and “fiendish constructions of sound logic.”


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In Hall's 15th outing to feature offbeat New York PI Stanley Hastings (after 2001's Cozy), a new client, Joe Balfour, admits he once served time for manslaughter after killing a man in a barroom brawl. Now, 25 years later, blackmailer Philip T. Grackle is threatening to make this embarrassing fact public. When Grackle is found with a carving knife in his heart, Balfour is arrested for murder. The plethora of suspects includes Balfour's daughter, who works in a topless bar, but the truth proves elusive, leading to a number of wacky complications and a vague ending. Though far from compelling, the story moves at a good clip, buoyed by snappy dialogue and its amusing, eccentric narrator. Hastings sizes up Balfour as "a simpleminded but amiable lout, who obviously killed only at the behest of undesirable companions who led him into evil against his will." He adds, "Of course I was making all that up. All I really knew about Balfour was that he was a impediment I had to circumvent before setting out on my actual job, chasing ambulances for a negligence lawyer." Whodunit fans with a taste for the unconventional will find this just what the doctor ordered.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Here's the latest installment in the long-running Stanley Hastings chronicle, a series of lighthearted mysteries featuring a New York private eye who would be perfectly happy chasing ambulances for small-time lawyers but, instead, keeps stumbling into cases that quickly become way too complicated. This time around, Stanley is hired by Joe Balfour, an ex-con who is being blackmailed. Stanley is supposed to pose as Balfour at a meeting with the blackmailer, but our hero asks his cop buddy, MacAulif, to sit in for him. Then several things happen, lightning-fast: MacAulif is slapped across the face by a luscious young woman; Stanley learns there is no such person as Joe Balfour; and the luscious beauty apparently turns out to be the daughter of the man who called himself Balfour. What the heck is going on? And can Stanley sort out the mystery while keeping his skin, and his sense of humor, intact? As usual, Hall has crafted a mystery that's both funny and genuinely mysterious, a real treat for his many fans. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Carroll & Graf (January 22, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0786711272
  • ISBN-13: 978-0786711277
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.2 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,240,429 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Parnell Hall's music video, KING OF KINDLE, is on his Amazon author page! Cameos by Lawrence Block, Mary Higgins Clark, and dozens of other mystery writers. See how many you can spot. (Scroll down for video)

Parnell is the author of the Puzzle Lady crossword puzzle mysteries, set in the fictitious town of Bakerhaven, Connecticut. Cora Felton, the Puzzle Lady, has a nationally syndicated crossword puzzle column, but couldn't construct a puzzle if her life depended on it. Her niece Sherry Carter writes the column for her. The much married Miss Felton is much happier solving crime. She made her debut in 1999 in A CLUE FOR THE PUZZLE LADY, and has since romped through LAST PUZZLE & TESTAMENT, PUZZLED TO DEATH, and A PUZZLE IN A PEAR TREE, WITH THIS PUZZLE, I THEE KILL, AND A PUZZLE TO DIE ON, and STALKING THE PUZZLE LADY. Cora is herself a suspect in YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN PUZZLED.

Though poor at words, Cora proves most adept at numbers in THE SUDOKU PUZZLE MURDERS. New York Times crossword puzzle editor Will Shortz constructed the sudoku puzzles that help solve the mystery. Sudoku puzzles also play a part in DEAD MAN'S PUZZLE, and THE PUZZLE LADY VS. THE SUDOKU LADY. Cora tackles a new number puzzle in THE KENKEN KILLINGS.

As research for the Puzzle Lady books, Parnell competed in the National Crossword Puzzle Tournament in Stamford, Connecticut, where out of a field of 254 contestants he finished 250th, just ahead of the four people who failed to turn in a paper. Parnell composed the puzzles for his earlier books. He now has them created by New York Times constructor Manny Nosowsky, and edited by National Tournament winner Ellen Ripstein.

Parnell also writes the Stanley Hastings mystery novels, and the Steve Winslow courtroom dramas. His first novel, DETECTIVE, was nominated for an Edgar award by the Mystery Writers of America, and a Shamus award by the Private Eye Writers of America. His tenth Stanley Hastings novel, MOVIE, was nominated for a Shamus award for Best Private Eye Novel of 1995, and for a Lefty for the funniest mystery novel of 1995. Recently, Stanley and his wife Alice vacationed at a New England bed-and-breakfast in COZY, a takeoff on that subset of the genre; the book is full of recipes and the cat solves the crime. Stanley returned to the mean streets of Manhattan in MANSLAUGHTER, HITMAN, and CAPER. He has his first paranormal encounter in the short story DEATH OF A VAMPIRE, in the Charlaine Harris anthology, CRMIES BY MOONLIGHT.

Parnell worked for two years as a private detective in New York City. His experiences form the basis for his Stanley Hastings series. He has no courtroom experience, however, and owes his Steve Winslow series to a childhood spent reading Erle Stanley Gardner.

Parnell is an actor, who has done summer stock and regional theater, and appeared in a number of movies, including Arnold Schwarzenegger's first movie, Hercules in New York (in which he appeared clad in a leopard skin) and A New Leaf with Elaine May and Walter Matthau.

Parnell is a member of the Writers Guild of America East with several screenplays to his credit, including the underground horror movie C.H.U.D., which has been satirized on Saturday Night Live, the Simpsons, Pushing Daisies, The Dailey Show, and The Colbert Report.

Parnell's career as a professional songwriter began at the age of sixteen, when Pete Seeger sang The Literacy Test Song on the Folkways album, Gazette, Volume 2. Parnell has performed his songs at several mystery conventions, including the Edgar Awards, Magna Cum Murder, Malice Domestic, and the Bouchercon. This year he is performing The Ballad of Alferd Packard,
a song celebrating Denver's most famous cannibal, at the Left Coast Crime banquet.

Parnell Hall is a former President of the Private Eye Writers of America, and a member of Sisters in Crime. He lives in New York City.

 

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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wisecracking P.I. Stanley Hasting is on the Job. Lookout!,, June 28, 2010
By 
Dave Mayer (Huntington Beach) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Manslaughter (Hardcover)
"I killed a man." Joe Balfour tells wise-cracking PI Stanely Hastings. An opening line like that is sure to get our hero's attention. It did. Balfour goes on to say that he'd been in a bar fight years ago, the other guy died and now someone is blackmailing him. Balfour wants Stan to pretend he's him and meet with the blackmailer. The blackmailer turns out to be a beautiful young woman who gets Stan's blood boiling. He tries to tail her, loses her, but when he next sees her she's Balfour's daughter.

You can't blame Stan for being confused. He tails her again, and she leads him to the real blackmailer this time and it turns out that said blackmailer, a guy named Grackle, has the goods on Balfour's whole family. Balfour's wife had posed for dirty pictures a long time ago, and the daughter secretly works as a topless dancer. So they've all, unknown to each other, been paying off Grackle. Then someone kills Grackle and all of a sudden the Balfours are off the hook. Or are they? First Joe, then the daughter, is arrested for the murder, but the wife looks good for it too.

Stan should walk away from the whole thing, but he can't. He has to know, besides, he's violated more than one law, like breaking and entering and withholding evidence in a homicide. The only way for him to get off the hook is to find Grackle's real killer and for Stan's sake, his or her last name better not be Balfour.

Mr. Hall has a wit about him that he gives to his characters, especially to Stanley and his wife, that makes them a delight to spend time with. He blends humor and mystery, then throws in suspense to boot, plus he keeps you guessing right up till the end.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Dumb P.I. Solves Convoluted Case, May 25, 2003
This review is from: Manslaughter (Hardcover)
By his own admission, Stanley Hastings is a dumb private investigator. So he is an ambulance chaser for Richard Rosenberg, negligence lawyer.

But then Stanley hits it lucky. He is hired by Joe Balfour to stop a blackmailer. From that point on things begin to go drastically wrong. A few days later the blackmailer, named Philip T. Grackle, is found killed. Enters Joe's daughter Jennifer who also pays blackmail. And so does Joe's wife. We have a ring-around-the-rosy,with every member of the Balfour family protecting the other by paying Grackle.First, Stanley has to find out why there is blackmail. The reason for it changes every few pages, presenting rather outrageous guesswork. Father and son Millsap, legal eagles, are added, to spin the case some more.

Luckily, Stanley has the help of his wife Alice and of Sergeant MacAullif and so solves the case. But while the book is quite funny, the ending is rather outrageous. Mr. Hall should be forgiven because he entertained us.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
"I KILLED A MAN." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
blackmail photos, blackmail evidence, police theory
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Sergeant Thurman, Joe Balfour, Richard Rosenberg, Midnight Lace, New York, Darien Mott, John Doe, Judge Hobbs, Joseph Balfour, Stanley Hastings, David Millsap, Diet Coke, Paul Henry Starling, Herman Bertoli, Sixth Avenue, East Eighty-first Street, Fletcher Headly, Allied Associates, Leroy Stanhope Williams, Riverside Drive, Criminal Court Building, Cross County Parkway, Felicia Grant Starling, Fifth Avenue, Mickey Spillane
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