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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars On my Top 10, August 27, 2003
By 
Carl Hoffman (Cleveland Heights,, OH United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Million - Dollar Wound (Mass Market Paperback)
This is one of the jewels in Collins' long-running series THE MEMOIRS OF NATHAN HELLER. It's distinguished by the titular private eye's combat trauma in the U.S. Marines during the bloody 1942 battle for Guadalcanal. Invalided home on a section 8 discharge for mental illness, Heller struggles to recover his own identity at the same time he unravels a series of interlocking mysteries in Hollywood and Chicago. Historical highlights include the mob-related murder of Edward O'Hare, father of the Navy hero for whom Chicago's airport is named, and one of Collins' certified revisionist theories about Outfit godfather Frank Nitti, the man who succeeded Capone. The book features a smashing balance of action, historical research, and psychological insight, transcending the private eye genre. It's on my all-time Top 10 list of historical novels, and I'm overjoyed it's back in print. See also NEON MIRAGE and STOLEN AWAY.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent detective novel, April 16, 2000
By A Customer
The last in Collin's Nitti Trilogy is better than it's predecessor (True Crime), but not as strong as the first in the series (True Detective). Still, a fine novel and a fitting end to the cycle as Nate Heller's relationship with the famed gangster comes to an end.

The next in the series, The Neon Mirage, begins a new stage in the charater's existence.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The series continues wonderfully...., December 8, 2005
This review is from: The Million - Dollar Wound (Mass Market Paperback)
Max Allan Collins sends his historical detective Nathan Heller off to war in The Million-Dollar Wound, the third in the series after True Crime. A little male pride, some misplaced patriotism, and a few drinks too many land Heller, too old for the draft, in the Marine enlistment office in 1942, right alongside best friend and ex-boxer Barney Ross. Far too soon after, they find themselved smack dab in the middle of Guadalcanal Island, surrounded by "Japs" and fighting death in both its projectile and contagious forms.

As especially bad case of malaria finds an amnesiac Heller back in the States with a fuzzy memory but a thriving investigation practice, and a request to testify against Frank Nitti, now in control of the territory left vacant by Al Capone's prison sentence. The story quickly flashes back to 1939. Those used to the linear narratives of the first two novels in the series (True Detective and True Crime), and their relative chronological proximity to each other, may be thrown by The Million-Dollar Wound, which takes place nine, then six, then ten years after the events in True Crime.

The Million-Dollar Wound was Max Allan Collins' most complex novel, both emotionally and narratively, up to that point. The weight of the combat experience weighs heavily on Heller's mind throughout the remainder of the novel, especially the bad dreams he has involving a fellow Marine's death by "friendly fire." Did Heller fire the fatal shot? He can't remember. This lends a gravity to this third entry that only enhances the reading, offering a deeper sense of character through Heller's reaction to the truth. I understand that the war effects Heller throughout the series, but only time will tell. (Note: The title refers to a war wound that gets a soldier sent home, but doesn't kill him.)
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent series! It's being re-issued on Audible also, November 2, 2011
I was delighted to see that the Nate Heller series is being re-issued on Audible.

This, along with "Flying Blind", are highlights in this outstanding series. It's like discovering John D. MacDonald or Lee Child for the first time, and then realizing there are many more books yet to read.

Heller is far removed from his PI business in Chicago in this one, in fact, he's fighting the Japanese in the South Pacific. In "Flying Blind" he's also fighting the Japanese in the South Pacific, he's just not wearing a uniform.

The action moves back to Chicago, as it always does and there's a girl, as there always is. All the Heller books are immersed in a piece of American history and the research is super well done. The pace is quick, the writing crisp and the reader is disabused from any notion that the 1920s through 1950s were 'the good old days.' The novels are based on history after all - not "Leave it to Beaver' or "Brady Bunch."
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5.0 out of 5 stars The end of Frank Nitti trilogy, January 26, 2012
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I am only part-way through this book, yet it has AGAIN captured me. The author, plus his usual characters, have returned from WWll and little has changed but the venue. Whereas the first two books took place mostly in Chicago, this final book ends in Hollywood,where the old union organizer emerges, from his dad. Each book has humorous moments, plus lots of gangster philosophy.

I bought all three at Amazon and will shortly be looking for more by the author, Max Allan Collins.
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The Million - Dollar Wound
The Million - Dollar Wound by Max Allan Collins (Mass Market Paperback - August 1, 2003)
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