Gregory McDonald is, hands down, my favorite author, but I've not read a ton of his non-FLETCH novels. That changes this year as I begin a project to work my way through the rest of his oeuvre.
RUNNING SCARED is McDonald's first novel, published in 1964 (ten years before the first FLETCH novel). A brisk 208 pages, the book follows Tom Betancourt, a possible sociopath, sleepwalking his way through Harvard University. Unfeeling and unwilling or unable to connect with other humans (even his own family), Betancourt watches impassionately as his college roommate kills himself one night. Suddenly transformed into a social pariah once news of his inaction comes out at school, Betancourt drops out and, in an effort to find a new interest, decides to disguise his identity and check in on his deceased roommate's family.
It's while pretending to be a drifter boathand that Betancourt meets Ellen Case, the sister of his dead roommate and a woman who had previously written Betancourt a letter of anger, blaming the boy for her brother's death. But Ellen doesn't know that Betancourt is Betancourt, and Betancourt has no plans to reveal his secrets because he's fallen head over heels in love with the girl.
RUNNING SCARED is a fun, pulpy read - feeling a bit like a cross between AMERICAN PSYCHO and a Nicholas Sparks novel. When I first started reading it, I thought it felt too dissimilar from McDonald's FLETCH novels - dense in descriptive prose and light on dialogue - but there are moments, especially the flirtation between Tom and Ellen, where you can see McDonald's gift for dialogue establishing itself. You can really tell that McDonald came from a journalism background from the way he sets the scene with a newshound's eye for details.
RUNNING SCARED feels very much like a first novel. The plot structure is secondary to the character work and the book's ending, while absolutely perfect for the story, does feel a bit rushed. The last line in the book, though? One of the best ways I've ever seen an author close out their story.
That said, I really enjoyed the book quite a bit. Reading it via an increasingly battered paperback felt like the perfect possible experience for this elevated dimestore romance.
RUNNING SCARED is currently out of print, but you can track down used copies online pretty easily. It was adapted into a British film in 1972 (with the action transported from Cambridge, Massachusetts, to Cambridge, England. The film, though, has seemingly never been released on home video and, besides a screening in England in 2011, has only been sporadically seen since its release. Well, at least I've got another white whale movie to keep an eye out for. If SPOOKIES can get a Blu-ray release, maybe RUNNING SCARED can as well.