Friday means Friday's Forgotten Books. Barry Ergang is
back with the review below to close out the year. For the complete list of
books, authors, and reviewers, please surf over to Patti Abbott's excellent blog..........
If I told you, you'd want to kill me for spoiling the fun
and excitement. As it is, I've given you the barest outline of the novel's
beginning without revealing necessary and intriguing details, minutiae, and
subsequent plot developments.
Barry Ergang ©2013
THE GIRL WITH THE LONG GREEN HEART (1965) by Lawrence Block
Reviewed by Barry Ergang
Having spent seven years in San Quentin after a con game
went bad, and determined to walk a straight-and-narrow path to avoid a return
to prison, John Hayden now lives a deliberately spartan life in a small, cheap
room and works as the assistant manager at a bowling alley in Boulder, Colorado,
earning eighty-five dollars a week. He's taking a correspondence course in
hotel management, hoping one day to buy a roadhouse outside the city that has
rooms upstairs and cabins out back. "The current owner doesn't know what
to do with the place," he tells Doug Rance. "He's a lush and he just
knows how to sell drinks and how to build himself a case of cirrhosis. With the
right kind of operation the place would be a gold mine."
Rance, nine years younger than Hayden's forty-two, is
someone Hayden met years earlier but never worked with, and who has come
looking for him, hoping to persuade him to go back on the grift. Rance was
recently in Las Vegas
where he met a woman named Evelyn Stone, the titular character. She complained to
him about her boss, a man named Wallace J. Gunderman, the intended target of
Rance's depredations—the "mooch," as marks are referred to in this
novel—whom for personal reasons she'd love to see get taken for a great deal of
money. Gunderman made his money buying and selling land, and had already once
been the victim of a con game involving property in Canada. Rance wants to work yet
another Canadian land grift on Gunderman, and thinks Hayden would be the ideal
partner. Evelyn Stone would also get a cut for her role in the game.
As much as he fears the prospect of going back to prison
should something go wrong, Hayden realizes that his portion of the money they stand
to take Gunderman for would enable him to fulfill his roadhouse dream almost immediately
instead of requiring him to work for chump change and save perhaps twenty-five hundred
dollars annually for the next nine or ten years while living a desolate excuse
for a life. And so he declares himself in, and he and Rance go to elaborate lengths
to stage the operation and psych out the mooch. Gunderman is neither stupid nor
a fool; he needs to be carefully suckered into buying what Hayden and Rance
pretend to sell. They execute their scheme thoroughly and meticulously, taking
into account every contingency. They have everything covered, right? Nothing
could possibly go wrong, could it?
Narrated in the first person by John Hayden, in an
unadorned, often staccato prose style, The
Girl with the Long Green Heart is one of Lawrence Block's earliest efforts.
It amply demonstrates the storytelling skill, sense of character and pace, that
would ultimately win him the Mystery Writers of America Grand Master Award, and
many other literary honors. As has usually been my experience with a Block
novel, this one was very hard to put down, and is highly recommended to fans of
criminous fiction.
Barry Ergang ©2013
Barry’s books for
sale from his personal collection are at http://www.barryergangbooksforsale.yolasite.com/.
You can find his fiction at http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B005GXMF86
and http://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/cassidy20.
2 comments:
Thanks for mentioning this book. It strikes a chord in my memory and I intend to revisit the scene of the crime so to speak.
You're welcome, Vonnie. The scene is eminently worth revisiting.
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