Following The Dark City and The Butcher's Dozen, legendary lawman Eliot Ness returns to square off against Cleveland's crooked labor leaders. It is the sweltering summer of 1937, and no one but Ness can break the vicious stronghold these racketeers have on the city's unions.
Received the Shamus Award, "The Eye" (Lifetime achievment award) in 2006.
He has also published under the name Patrick Culhane. He and his wife, Barbara Collins, have written several books together. Some of them are published under the name Barbara Allan.
Book Awards Shamus Awards Best Novel winner (1984) : True Detective Shamus Awards Best Novel winner (1992) : Stolen Away Shamus Awards Best Novel nominee (1995) : Carnal Hours Shamus Awards Best Novel nominee (1997) : Damned in Paradise Shamus Awards Best Novel nominee (1999) : Flying Blind: A Novel about Amelia Earhart Shamus Awards Best Novel nominee (2002) : Angel in Black
Bullet Proof, Max Allan Collins [Wolfpack Press, 2020 (revised)].
The third installment in a historical fiction/crime saga chronicling Eliot Ness’s post-Untouchables career. Working as public safety commissioner in Cleveland, Ness investigates a ring of racketeers who have infiltrated organized labor and are extorting local businessmen, as well as the assassination of a union organizer. A briskly, paced adventure.
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Max Allan Collins is one of America’s most lauded writers of hard boiled fiction. A former Mystery Writers of America Grandmaster and 25X recipient of the Shamus Award from the Private Eye Writers of America, Collins is perhaps best known for the classic graphic novel Road to Perdition, the basis of a feature film by Sam Mendes [2003].
Collins returns to Eliot Ness with a fight against crooked labor leaders. The book starts during the "Little Steel" strike of 1937. Ness is trying to prevent a repeat of the 1937 Memorial Day massacre in Chicago. While attempting to keep peace between the union and Republic Steel (and the police), Ness investigates racketeering in a couple of other unions, including one for glaziers.
Collins does a good job, and has Ness do a good job, of walking the line between union and business. Ness is pretty clearly pulled by the business interests in Cleveland to act as a de facto strike-breaker. Ness sets out a course to prevent violence from both sides. Collins also walks a decent line with regard to the investigation in to union corruption. It's clear that there were corrupt unions at the time. It's also clear there were unions that weren't corrupt but that were targeted by management and law enforcement anyway.
A nice entry in to the Ness series and a good entry point to look at an era of labor relations that has probably been forgotten by the public at large.