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Billed as "the most hard-boiled novel of the 1930s" and featuring one of the most brutal finales in crime fiction history, some say this lost 1933 masterpiece took hard-boiled crime writing too far. In the last days of Prohibition and the first days of the Depression, East Coast crime bosses are vying for control of Los Angeles. Caught in the middle of the intrigue is Gerry Kells, a former New York enforcer now living a life of ease on the West coast. As the fiercely independent Kells rejects the appeals of various crime bosses who want to make use of his talents, powerful forces align against him. Being framed for a murder turns out to be the least of his troubles and as the stakes get higher, and the odds get longer, it's only Kells' nerve and toughness that keep him one step ahead of the law—and the reaper.
210 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1933
. In addition seven of his Black Mask short stories are available in Seven Slayers
. Great cover.I never worked for anybody in my life and I’m too old to start. Because I don’t like the racket, anyway—l was aced in. It’s full of tinhorns and two-bit politicians and double-crossers—the whole goddamned business gives me a severe pain in the backside.Stripped down slang clangs the senses:
The greaser kept fingering a chiv in his belt—you know: the old noiseless ear-to-ear gag.Cain wrote at a time when just about everyone was a scam artist, a hypocrite, liar, criminal, or a cheat. They'd had twelve years of Prohibition.
“We're all right, baby,” he said softly. “They build these cars in Detroit. That’s machine-gun country."Jeffrey Epstein's game is nothing new. "Political information" as a squeeze tool is in the story, as is cocaine. In some ways, it could have been written yesterday.
I was surprised to learn that Paul Cain (not his real name) hung out with Sinclair Lewis, and gave Myrna Loy her name. He also left us a bit of wisdom: "The smarter they are, the sappier the frame they’ll go for."