From the massive archive…
Fred
Fitch is a con artist's wet dream. He seems to radiate an aura of gullibility that
any and every grifter can see or sense: "Con men take one look at me,
streamline their pitches, and soon go gaily off to steak dinners while poor
Fred Fitch sits at home and once again dines on gnawed fingernail." It has
been this way for him since his childhood in
Now
thirty-one and living in an apartment in
As it
turns out, however, Goodkind is legitimate, and so is Fred's inheritance. He
calls his mother and learns that he really did have an Uncle Matthew Grierson,
a man who was the black sheep of the family. Jack Reilly tells him that Uncle
Matt was a con artist who was known by the monicker Matt "Short
Sheet" Gray. After the irony of the situation leaves Fred a little
hysterical, Reilly voices concern about what will become of the money if Fred
actually gets possession of it because he's afraid it won't remain in his
possession for long.
Then he
tells Fred that although Uncle Matt had cancer, it wasn't what killed him. A
blunt instrument did.
Things
begin to happen rapidly and wildly after that, as Fred encounters an array of offbeat
characters, among them lovely Karen Smith, who accosts him in the street and
asks him to kiss her; Gertie Divine, the Body Secular, a stripper who was Uncle
Matt's nurse and companion; Grant and Wilkins, the other two tenants in Fred's
building; Homicide cops Steve and Ralph, who come across like comic
vaudevillians but who, Gertie says, aren't candidates for sainthood; the
elusive Professor Kilroy, Uncle's Matt's former partner; Dr. Osbertson, who
goes to a wacky extreme to avoid talking to Fred; Gus Ricovic, who's always
willing to trade information for cash; the menacing Coppo brothers, whose
father Uncle Matt swindled during the years he lived in Brazil; and former
senator Earl Dunbar, who began the Citizens Against Crime Organization.
Fred may
be gullible, but he's not stupid. He realizes that he's suddenly become Mr.
Sought-After now that he has money. When someone trails and then takes some
potshots at him, and after he discovers another murder victim, he questions whether
he can trust anyone, even the police, as he tries to decide what to do with the
money, how to avoid being murdered himself, and how to determine who is behind
all of the chaos.
Written relatively early in a long and illustrious career, God Save the Mark is a fine example of why Donald E. Westlake is generally acknowledged as the all-time-greatest writer of comical crime stories. A well-plotted tale, its situations develop primarily from its delightful cast of idiosyncratic characters. I highly recommend it to readers who enjoy a brief and breezy page-turner that will keep them smiling and sometimes chuckling aloud.
Barry Ergang ©2012, 2019, 2022
Derringer Award-winner Barry Ergang’s written
work has appeared in numerous publications, print and electronic. Some of it is
available at Amazon and at Smashwords. His website is http://www.writetrack.yolasite.com/.
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