Showing posts with label 87th Precinct series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 87th Precinct series. Show all posts

Friday, September 06, 2019

FFB Review: The Big Bad City by Ed McBain

Back several weeks ago, Barry Ergang offered his review of The Big Bad City by Ed McBain who was also known under his legally adopted name of Evan Hunter. I realized when I was reading Barry’s FFB review that I had not read this one. As it was available from the Dallas Public Library in hardback, I picked it up and read the majority of it while at UTD waiting for Scott. For the full list of reading suggestions for this first Friday in September 2019, head over to Todd Mason’s Sweet Freedom Blog.

“So if you came here thinking, Gee, there’s going to be a neat little murder takes place in a town house and some blue-haired lady will solve it in her spare time when she isn’t tending her rose garden, then you came to the wrong city at the wrong time of the year. In this city, things were happening all the time, all over the place, and you didn’t have to be a detective to smell evil in the wind. (The Big Bad City, Page 32)
The detectives of the 87th precinct, let alone the other precincts of New York City have their hands full. That was before a suspect in the precinct cage knifed a fellow suspect before being shot by Detective Carella. That resulted in two teams of paramedics being brought in and the obligatory visit from Internal Affairs Detectives on a mission to determine what the heck happened. It doesn’t help that it is August and the air conditioning in the precinct house is seriously on the fritz.
Then there are the murders.
One murder is the dead young lady found in Grover Park in front of a park bench. One could tell by looking at her throat she had been strangled. Detectives Brown and Carella had been ready to call it a day and go home when their boss, Lieutenant Brynes sent them out on the case. A case that is going to become incredibly complex.
The burglar nicknamed “The Cookie Boy” continues to do his deal of breaking into places and stealing stuff before leaving a container of homemade chocolate chip cookies behind.  Detectives Mayer and Kling have been on that case quite a while. A case that may now involve two murders.
The detectives are not the only ones on the hunt in the city. So too is a man bent on revenge. His target is one of the detectives of the 87th precinct. Like some of the other two legged predators that travel through New York City, murder is on his mind.
The Big Bad City: A Novel Of The 87th Precinct is a complicated police procedural with many moving parts. Like others in the series, it is a solidly good read. As noted in the above quote, this is not a read for cozy readers who prefer sanitized language and situations.



The Big Bad City: A Novel Of The 87th Precinct
Ed McBain
Simon & Schuster
January 1999
ISBN# 0-684-85512-7
Hardback (also available in various formats including paperback and digital)
272 Pages
$25.00

My reading copy came from the downtown branch of the Dallas Public Library System.

Kevin R. Tipple ©2019

Friday, August 16, 2019

FFB Review: THE BIG BAD CITY (1999) by Ed McBain Reviewed by Barry Ergang

Barry Ergang is back on the blog today with an all new review for FFB. For the full list of reading suggestions, check out Todd Mason’s Sweet Freedom blog.

THE BIG BAD CITY (1999) by Ed McBain

Reviewed by Barry Ergang



The dead woman who “lay sprawled in front of a bench in Grover Park” in the 87th Precinct “was wearing a white blouse and pale blue slacks, white socks and scuffed Reeboks.” The detectives assigned to the case are Steve Carella and Arthur Brown. Who the woman actually is and what the detectives uncover about her and her past takes them into the pasts of other suspects and events with some surprising revelations.

Meanwhile, the man who murdered Carella’s father has been persuaded that he needs to do the same to Carella lest he wind up in prison for life or dead at the hands of other inmates, and begins to stalk his next victim.

At the same time, detectives Meyer Meyer and Bert Kling pursue the burglar who has come to be known as The Cookie Boy because he leaves a batch of home-made chocolate chip cookies at the homes of his targets. A man who prides himself on his scrupulous and considerate approach to burglary, as well as on his love for baking, he finds himself on the run when events turn catastrophic during a particular foray.

A Mystery Writers of America Grand Master, Ed McBain is probably the most well-known of the many pseudonyms of the versatile novelist Evan Hunter. The 87th Precinct series has long ranked as one of the greatest series—perhaps the greatest—of police procedural novels, notable for its three-dimensional characterizations via internal and external dialogue, impeccable pacing, drama, suspense, and humor.

Raw language and racial slurs occur as part of some characterizations, so readers easily offended should avoid this one. To those not offended, this is an easy recommendation.



© 2019 Barry Ergang
Some of Derringer winner Barry Ergang's work is available at Amazon and Smashwords.

Friday, October 02, 2015

FFB Review: "King's Ransom: An 87th Precinct Mystery" by Ed McBain

As far back as I can remember, Dad was an amateur radio operator. On more than one occasion I sat out in his office in our converted garage while he banged out Morse Code to fellow hams all around the world. That hobby was a major part of who he was all of his life. His framed license still hangs on the wall in his very packed office as is everything else exactly like he left it a little over three years ago when he suddenly passed. Like a lot of things, my Mom still won’t allow me to go in there and start doing the very hard task that needs to be done.

I thought a lot more about my Dad than usual while reading King’s Ransom by Ed McBain. Amateur radio plays a role in the read and there are references to the parts stores of my youth. Growing up, I spent many an hour with Dad in parts stories big and small while he surveyed rack after rack of parts. Dad built radio controlled planes from scratch (what some folks now call drones and come virtually ready to fly), radio controlled boats, and all sorts of other cool stuff. That gene bypassed me, who never had the manual dexterity for building stuff beyond models of various things, and went to my brother.

It was a far different world back then. Pretty much everything in my old neighborhood is gone now as it has been replaced by something else. Those kind of part stores have died out, my Dad has passed, and yet he lives on in me and my brother. His legacy lives on in a different way than Ed McBain’s and yet in some ways they are the same. Today on the blog we celebrate the legacy of Ed McBain. Both here and over on Patti’s blog where you can find more reading suggestions as part of Friday’s Forgotten Books.


King’s Ransom: An 87th Precinct Mystery by Ed McBain

It is October 1960 and Douglas King has worked himself to a position of some power at Granger Shoes. He has plans to move up and take over the shoe company as do others who intended to use him as a small part of their plans. Competing agendas and the future for Douglas King is at stake as his money is tied up in a deal to finally achieve his long held goal. A goal that he is not going to let anyone or anyone
interfere with as he finally sees a real opportunity to fulfill his dream.

That future is not going to be thwarted by the kidnapping of a child. If it was his child, it might make a difference. It isn’t.  It is the child of King’s chauffeur so Douglas King does not see the need to pay five hundred thousand dollars to get that kid back. If he gives his money up to meet the ransom demand, he will lose his opportunity and will very quickly be forced out of a job. One does not launch a takeover bid and survive the failure.

The men of the 87th Precinct don’t see things the same way as Mr. King. Detectives Meyer Meyer and Steve Carella certainly don’t and never will. Of course, they never have had that kind of money working for the NYPD and never will. They are honest and hardworking cops who do their best day in and day out despite all the job stresses and everything else. A kidnapping case gives them a break from petty crimes, bad coffee, and dirty jokes. It is cold this October in New York and the next few hours will tell the tale.

King’s Ransom: An 87th Precinct Mystery by Ed McBain is a good classic cops and robbers style read. Along with the complex details of the business deal and the kidnapping case, readers are treated to the backstory of numerous characters and their own situations as day to day life is a business deal as well. Sometimes, by fate or chance, you make the wrong bargain with the wrong people.



King’s Ransom: An 87th Precinct Mystery
Ed McBain
Thorndike Press
ISBN# 978-0-7862-9173-1
Large Print Hardback (available in other formats)
315 Pages


Material supplied by the good folks of the Plano Public Library System.


Kevin R. Tipple ©2015