Noted crime writer, author, and much
more, Lawrence Block avoids writing book reviews. He also prefers to write, if
he is going to, about those authors that have departed. He explains why and
more in the first section titled “Before We Begin” of The Crime of our Lives.
While he won’t write reviews, he will write introductions to books which is
what most of this book consists of— many of the various introductions he has
written over the years.
After that beginning, which is
basically an interesting forward, the author explains how the whole writing
thing began all those many years ago in “My Life In Crime.” Along with
explaining his past, Mr. Block goes on to consider the past of the mystery
field and well as how he sees things today. In essence, he gives a sort of “the
state of the mystery” and finds our union to be in very good shape.
That section segues into a detailed
list of his sixteen favorites. As mentioned before, if you made his list it
means that not only were you an author (a good thing), you are most certainly
dead (not such a good thing). You may not be a deceased parrot, but you are
most certainly dead. (gratuitous Monty Python
reference.) For each of the sixteen authors listed, Mr. Block has a few
paragraphs covering a favorite book or two and why they made the cut beyond
being dead and all. While the list it is something to aspire to in a future
updated version of the book, it certainly is not something one wishes to rush
into considering the consequences.
Then it is on to the introduction
that Lawrence Block wrote for various books over the years. The
introductions not only reference the book it was written for, but put the work
and author into context through a variety of means and mediums. The result is a
book of introductions that serve, if you will, as a crash course in movies,
books, and history over the years that every mystery/crime reader should be
aware of. In fact, the same can be said for the entire book.
One could easily develop quite the
reading list, a movie list, and a couple of other lists based on the inferences
and works cited in The Crime Of Our Lives. While some of the authors mentioned in the
introduction section are still alive and producing new works such as Mary
Higgins Clark, Ed Gorman, among others, the majority of the authors mentioned
are no longer with us. Fortunately, their books still are so, after you read
this one, you have a lot of reading and watching to do.
The Crime Of Our Lives
Lawrence Block
Self-Published
March 2015
ASIN: B00V9EEBDI
E-Book
(also available in print)
221
Pages
$9.99
In
recent months I have been very honored to receive unsolicited e-book review copies
of the author’s work. Such is the case here as I received this some time back
for my use in an objective review.
Kevin
R. Tipple ©2015
Kevin, I would enjoy reading the thoughts and opinions of Mr. Block so I'll have to consider this one. Thanks for the heads up.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed TCOOL a lot. One thing a reader should be prepared for--given that the book consists of reprints of things published at various times and in a wide range of places--is that there is a fair amount of repetition. But a very, very good book.
ReplyDeleteI did not think there was that much repetition all things considered. Definitely some and I was not surprised by that.
ReplyDelete