My review of Catch And Release: 17 Stories
by Lawrence Block from October 2013 is
my offering for FFB today. I believe Patti Abbott has the links over on
her blog. If not, or anything else is wrong, I will fix it later today once we
are back home from Sandi’s appointment with her cancer doctor.
The latest book from author Lawrence
Block titled Catch And Release: 17 Stories is an enjoyable grab bag of
tales. Short tales, long tales, and a play are present here where those
involved almost always offer a philosophy on life and their role in the world.
As such, this is a thinking reader’s book and not a light weight read where the
characters just run around shooting people and killing folks for the heck of
it. Everything that happens, or does not happen, is because a character made a
conscious decision based on his or her philosophy of life and his or her role
in it and the word as a whole.
The book opens with “A Burglar’s-Eye
View of Greed” where the narrator goes to see his favorite bookseller, Bernie
Rhodenbarr. Fortunately for Bernie he
doesn’t have to sell books to survive. He very well may be the last of the
gentlemen burglars.
All you want when you have had
losing hands all night is “A Chance To Get Even.” Richard Krale is having a bad night and wants
his chance to finally settle up. Not just for the bad night of poker, but for
other matters as well.
“A Vision in white” comes next and
is a story that is nearly impossible to discuss at all without ruining it for
the reader. As you read it, the tale
should make things abundantly clear where the inspiration came from in the
sports world.
The signature story of the book
“Catch and Release” (previously available as a solo short story confusing some
readers) follows where the water is on not at all involved except a
metaphorical level. He has his methods and his fantasies in a tale that plays
with the reader right to the end.
Katherine “Kit” Tolliver had a
mission when she arrived in Toledo, Ohio, in “Clean Slate.” Like the main character of the proceeding
story, Kit has a plan to balance things out.
In what has to be the most flat out
disturbing story in the book (though “Catch and Release” comes close) hoarding
is just part of the issue in “Dolly’s Trash and Treasure.” It begins with a visit by child protective
services and Mrs. Saugerties has some very strange answers.
Next is a one act play tilted “How Far.” Dorothy Morgan has a problem and Billy may or
may not help her. One doesn’t really know until the end.
The end of the TV show the Sopranos
annoyed many of us. It annoyed Mick
Ballou as well. In “Mick Ballou Looks at
the Blank Screen” he ponders what was meant by that ending and more. He’s doing all this thinking for a good
reason.
As the years pass, the familiar
often has to make way for something new. That idea is a small part of the tale
“One Last Night at Grogan’s.” Mick Ballou, the major character of the
proceeding tale, is the primary focus here as well in another good read.
Walters stole some very valuable
information and Jondahl wants him stopped and the information retrieved in
“Part of the Job.” The history of the
tale is almost as interesting and explained in the attached piece titled “The
Story About The Story . . .”
Like several of the previous
characters, the main character in “Scenarios” has twisted fantasies. It ends where and when it ends.
An elderly man helps with an oral
history project in “See the Woman.”
Doing so stirs up for more than just memories.
Numerous stories within the main
story is the author technique at work in the next two long stories. The backdrop is a poker game where a variety
of characters from various walks of life discuss sins, philosophy, and much
more in “Speaking of Greed” and “Speaking of Lust.”
Routine is important to Kramer in
“Welcome to the Real World.” Kramer
likes things the way they are and isn’t ready to change. Yet a former coworker
seems intent on helping Kramer change-- one way or another.
Colliard didn’t really want the
coffee, but, he had to do something with his hands in “Who Knows Where It
Goes.” Life wasn’t supposed to work out
this way, but it has, and the options are few.
“Without a Body” is the last story
of the book and features a narrator where one isn’t sure if one is dead or
alive.
Explanations of the various stories
and their history are provided in “Story Notes.” A short author bio and ads for other books
bring the book to an end.
Catch And Release: 17 Stories features characters that over their philosophy on crime,
life, and more. What happens, or does not happen, in these tales is because the main character
has made a conscious decision based on his or her philosophy of life and his or
her role in it and the word as a whole. The tales are complicated with twists
that make the reader pay attention and think. The book is also very good.
Catch and Release: 17 Stories
Lawrence Block
September 2013
ASIN: B00F9HZF6I
E-book (294 pages)
$9.99
Material supplied by the author in
exchange for my objective review. Print versions of the book are available from
Subterranean Press and Hard Case Crime.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2013, 2016
3 comments:
I bought CATCH AND RELEASE but haven't read it yet. Nice review!
This sounds great and I've heard of it somewhere else. I wish I had time to read more. Anything by Lawrence Block is good to me. Glad to see Bernie (Rhoden----however it's spelled)is included.
It's been soooooooooooooooo long since I've read any fiction by Block. This sounds like the perfect place to start remedying that omission.
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