COUNTDOWN: Mid-20th Century North American Crime
BOOK 39 (of 250)
Spillane's books remind me of Quentin Tarantino's films: you're wary, you know what you're getting into, but you also know you can't resist. I don't like violence at all in books or movies, unless it's done very, very well. Spillane isn't considered to be a 'literary' author. But WHY NOT? He is great at his art. As good as this is, it serves as a very good follow-up to the far better "I, The Jury."
HOOK=2 stars: This opens with Hammer at home, philosophizing about the world outside. Compared to other openers in the genre, this is on the lackluster side.
PACE=4: This is a very fast read after the first page or so.
PLOT=4: An early shocker (Hitchcock did it a decade later in his film 'Psycho') gets things rolling: Hammer is furious when a hooker he has helped out of the gutter (he gives her money, not for sex, but to get things together) is killed. He'll stop at nothing until justice is served.
CHARACTERS=5: Mike Hammer: think a big, strong Bond on steroids but no gimmicks to help him nail the bad guys. I thought this exchange great when Hammer meets the lovely Lola in a bar:
Lola: "You're a nice guy, mister. What's your name?"
Mike: "Mike. How would you like to go for a ride and sober up a little?" (Mike never takes advantage of drunk ladies.)
Lola: "Umm. You got a nice shiny convertible for Lola to ride in? I love men with convertibles."
Mike's reply is a classic hard-boiled detective line: "I only have one thing that's convertible. It's not a car."
Lola: "Oh, you're talking dirty, Mike."
But the thing is, Mike could very well be talking about his convertible sofa. He is choosy with the ladies. Such as Red, the hooker down on her luck who Hammer helps to get back on her feet with new clothing, etc. Hammer sees "Red" then sees "red" certainly. Then there is Fenny Lee, chauffer and bodyguard to Berin-Grotin, an older, rich guy who hires Mike for various assignments. Velda, Mike's 'secretary' of sorts is here but in the background. (She plays a bigger role in the first Hammer book, "I, The Jury")
ATMOSPHERE/PLACE=5: Seedy flophouses and molding beach motels are rendered perfectly. The atmosphere of a singular revenge, present 100% throughout "I, The Jury", is here but not as steady as in the first outing. That said, Spillane ups the sex factor here. Like this:
Lola dresses for Mike: "I made this gown to be worn only once. There's only one way to get it off".
Mike thinks: A devil was making love to me...My fingers closed over the silk and I ripped it away with a hissing, tearing sound.
Spillane knows how to start a sex scene, but even better, he knows (like any great artist) when to stop.
SUMMARY: I enjoyed this book for a rating of 4.0. Very good, but again "I, the Jury" is better, and for me even "I, the Jury" isn't the best Hammer/Spillane work. More on that later.