Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Dumm gelaufen (detebe)

Rate this book
Ein Haifischbecken, das ist das Brooklyn der 80er-Jahre. Harte Zeiten also für kleine Fische. Mickey, der in einem Fischladen jobbt, lässt sich überreden, Sportwetten für einen Kunden abzuschließen - und verliert jede Wette. Jetzt hat er den Buchmacher auf den Fersen und ein Problem. Dummerweise kommt ein Problem selten allein: Mickeys Kumpel Chris hat einen todsicheren Plan, um ein bisschen Kohle zu machen. Doch todsichere Pläne können tödlich enden ...

243 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 23, 2014

17 people are currently reading
144 people want to read

About the author

Jason Starr

116 books244 followers
Jason Starr is the international bestselling author of many crime novels and thrillers, including Cold Caller, The Follower, The Pack and The Next Time I Die. He also writes comics for Marvel (Wolverine, The Punisher) and DC (Batman, The Avenger) and original graphic novels such as Red Border and Casual Fling. In addition, he writes film and TV tie-in novels including an official Ant-Man novel and the Gotham novels based on the hit TV show. His books have been published in sixteen languages and several of his novels are in development for film and TV. He has won the Anthony Award for mystery fiction twice, as well as a Barry Award. Starr lives in New York City.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
64 (24%)
4 stars
116 (43%)
3 stars
56 (21%)
2 stars
25 (9%)
1 star
5 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 29 of 29 reviews
Profile Image for Still.
642 reviews118 followers
March 20, 2023
Kicked up a star to five stars.
This is the closest thing to a mainstream crime-suspense novel I've read by Jason Starr.

It starts out as a kind of coming-of-age tale of a young man in the late 1970s, working in a fish market, saving money since he was in grade school to attend college and make something of his life. He comes home at night to care for his dad who is now suffering from Alzheimer's. His mom died while crossing the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway on her way to work when he was still a kid.

After a hundred and so pages the main character gets involved in a shit-for-brains burglary that goes so wrong in so many ways that it's doomed almost before it even begins. It's as doomed as the kid's future looks to be.

This is the closest Jason Starr has come to writing something as fully and completely realized as a novel by Richard Price or Pete Dexter. This should have been a huge success for the author. Maybe in twenty or thirty years someone will rediscover it.

Highest Possible Recommendation.
Profile Image for Dylan.
124 reviews1 follower
December 14, 2025
A young man, still a teenager, is hanging out with the wrong crowd, meets the wrong guy, and makes a very wrong choice. These 3 wrongs lead to a whole lot of bad decisions, and his best intentions end up having the worst results—his road to hell is paved with a whole lot of Tough Luck.

A fitting title would be Just Say No because there are countless times when the main character should have said that. I understand that this kid is intimidated and easily manipulated by all the alpha males around him, and I doubt there was ever a good influence in his life or even a good person in the book.

The other books by this author I've read follow this same theme of a character completely losing it, and he does that very well. I thought it was humorous when the water was over his head and things couldn't get any worse; they did over and over again.

The story throughout has a lot of jerks doing tough-guy, jocular humor that gets ridiculous after a while, and it is a very dark comedy. I liked it, but yeah, it is not for everyone.
Profile Image for Scott Cumming.
Author 8 books63 followers
September 18, 2018
Mickey is a fishmonger, who gets in debt with his bookie after placing bets for a local mobster who frequents the store. Mickey is trying to live an honest life and raise money to go to college while looking after his dementia suffering father. The debt, however, leads Mickey to make some terrible decisions and he soon finds things spiralling out of control.

Starr delivers his take on classic noir that is filled with suspense. It didn't have the high drama of Twisted City, but it did have the same propulsive narrative that makes it almost impossible to put down. I look forward to many more Starr novels in the future as there is a fair backlog for me to get to.
Profile Image for Mark Desrosiers.
601 reviews158 followers
June 21, 2010
Reviews of Starr often refer to his "spare, snappy crime writing" and call him a throwback to Jim Thompson and James M. Cain. Here's an example: Finally, one afternoon after school, Sal Prada took Mickey to a pet store on Avenue N and Mickey picked out a Tabby. Mickey named the kitten Spunky. Mickey played with Spunky all the time and he took good care of him. He always made sure there was fresh food and water in Spunky's dishes, and he changed his litter box two times a week.

Seriously, that's just the beginning (or rather, middle): this novel has all the crisp snappiness of a Babysitter's Club installment, and slogging through all the stoopid paragraphs made my brain atrophy, I'm certain of it. Not to mention the two dimensional characters, the wooden dialogue, the retarded worm turning in the hapless protagonist's brain (which nonetheless does not derail the contrived mechanics of the plot), the Mister Rodgers urban sociology, and the irritating reliance on Kurtis Blow and Run-D.M.C. to provide the 1984 period details. On the whole, Tough Luck could turn into a pretty decent B movie, if it got some punched-up dialogue and some Tarantino-style rearranging. But even that thought pissed me off, because B movies end in under 100 minutes.

Starr is associated with the mighty Ken Bruen, so let's hope he can absorb a thing or two from him about randomness, depravity, lust, and the way people actually talk.
Profile Image for David.
Author 46 books53 followers
November 30, 2008
Mickey Prada is a throwback to the noir anti-heroes of old, a Seemingly Good Guy who gets in deeper and deeper after he makes one unfortunate decision, agreeing to place a bet with his bookie for a man who claims to be a member of the mob. As Mickey's life unravels, he makes more bad (and sometimes criminal) decisions, but he keeps reader sympathy because he is, after all, a Seemingly Good Guy. Jason Starr manages the affair with great skill and finishes with a closing line that is almost perfect. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Saratoga.
6 reviews
December 26, 2008
There is a fabulously funny scene in this book about a trip to Aqueduct racetrack where Mickey Prada just doesn't get it -- clothes are wrong, attitude is wrong, betting is wrong, everything is wrong. But Mickey thinks he is a very cool guy.
747 reviews3 followers
January 9, 2024
[No Exit Press] (2015). SB. 222 Pages. Purchased from Amazon.co.uk.

Scams, robbery, betrayal, assault, murder… holds the reader’s attention. Good, but shy of Starr’s best.
Profile Image for Sophie Songe.
218 reviews2 followers
June 29, 2015
Brooklyn dans les années 1980, Mickey trime, et assume son père atteint de la maladie d'alzheimer. il rêve de reprendre ses études et de devenir meilleur. Son quotidien est harassant, lourd à porter, c'est un petit gars naïf et trop gentil qui va malheureusement s'enfoncer dans les dettes et les emmerdements bien malgré lui.

C'est après sa rencontre avec celui qu'il prend pour un mafieux, que tout va commencer. Les paris aux jeux, l'intimidation, et c'est l'engrenage. Ce monde est noir et sans pitié, et au fur et à mesure que Mickey s'enlise, on perd espoir pour lui. Les fréquentations, les mauvaises influences feront le reste. Et pourtant en lui, en Rhonda dont il tombe amoureux, demeure la petite étincelle d'espoir.

Le récit est dur et dresse un constat amer et sans appel sur la difficulté de s'en sortir, quand on est pas né du bon côté. Portrait social et intrigue policière,font de ce roman un beau mélange où l'auteur abat ses cartes avec talent et un savoir faire maîtrisé.

J'ai aimée là où l'auteur nous emmenait sans en avoir l'air et je me suis laissée prendre au jeu.

Périlleuse, la descente aux enfers programmée pourrait finalement ne pas avoir lieu... A vous de voir !
Profile Image for Vance Cariaga.
Author 4 books5 followers
February 21, 2022
From the blog (vancecariaga.com): One of those books that starts off kind of nondescript, then hits you after 40 pages or so and ends up pulling you in to its vortex. It’s a gritty crime novel with a lot of heart, and one of the better things in the genre I’ve read in a long time. The protagonist is Mickey Prada, a good kid from Brooklyn who delays college for a year to care for his ailing father. Soon enough Mickey finds himself in the middle of all kinds of grief with some of the local con artists and hoodlums, including a couple of wiseass nogoodniks who pose as his friends. I won’t give too much of the plot away. The writing is spare and efficient as it takes us through a bleak nightmare of one bad thing after another that can’t possibly end up good. Highly recommended.
1,840 reviews16 followers
February 26, 2019
Interesting short story. A young guy has a lot of good things going for him. Then bad decisions and bad things happen. He rapidly spirals down, but always remains optimistic, even at the end.
7 reviews1 follower
April 15, 2020
Handlung:
Nichts allzu außergewöhnliches, auch wenn die Grundidee sehr vielversprechend war. Kann man Mal lesen, aber nicht mehrfach.
Spannung ist vorhanden, aber auch nicht (zu) viel.
Das größte Problem ist wohl dass mir die Charaktere insgesamt sehr unsympathisch waren und ihr Schicksal mit relativ egal war.
Die Geschichte an dich jedoch isst gut und kurzweilig.
Ich könnte keine Bindung zu den Figuren aufbauen und es erschien mir insgesamt sehr sachlich was aber an mangelnder Sympathie liegen könnte.
Einzig das Ende war positiver als erwartet und hat mich ein bisschen überrascht.
Als in allem ganz okay, kann man Mal lesen, muss man aber nicht. In fünf Jahren, wird mir die Handlung jedenfalls nicht mehr in Gedächtnis sein.
Stil:
Angenehm zu lesen, nicht zu bemängeln, allerdings auch nichts Außergewöhnliches.
Profile Image for Harris Tweed.
20 reviews
October 25, 2025
The writing was decent, not great, but the story certainly moved - I knocked this off in less time than it took to play Game 1 of the World Series.

A kid in 1980s Brooklyn is working at a fish shop and saving to go to Baruch to study accounting. His boss is a jerk and his dad is suffering from Alzheimer's and getting violent. They share a two-room apartment in East Flatbush. One day, a Mafia guy shows up and asks him to place a couple bets for him with his local bookie. Things get rapidly out of hand from there.

This isn't the sort of book you're going to kick yourself for missing, but if you see a copy anywhere and you're in the mood for a fast, relatively tense neo-noir, you could do a lot worse.
Profile Image for Nele Handwerker.
Author 18 books8 followers
March 31, 2019
Leicht deprimierender Einblick in das Leben eines jungen Mannes ins New York der 80er Jahre. Hat mir gezeigt, wie entscheidend es ist, wo man hineingeboren wird. Dennoch eine spannende Milieubeschreibung.
Profile Image for Alex.
113 reviews3 followers
June 17, 2022
Reading this next to Malcolm Lowry, it felt like a middle school essay.
The story was predictable. The writing immature.
Profile Image for Donald Schopflocher.
1,467 reviews36 followers
September 22, 2022
Reads like a ya morality tale, though with a foul mouth. Best part was the ending which made me laugh out loud.
Profile Image for Anthony.
301 reviews7 followers
January 2, 2026
Good lord, what a horrendous sequence of events for probably the first character in Starr's books I've actually felt sorry for!
Profile Image for Karine SIMON.
676 reviews
February 24, 2015
J’ai un peu hésité avant de choisir ce roman parmi la sélection Denoël du mois de février 2015. Tout d’abord, parce que le monde des paris et des bookmakers, ce n’est pas vraiment mon truc, et encore moins le monde de la mafia ou de la pègre. Mais ensuite, je me suis dit pourquoi pas…

Avec Petit Joueur, nous plongeons dans le Brooklyn des années 80, et c’est bien sombre. Mickey qui est issu d’un milieu plutôt défavorisé, a pourtant tout d’un gagnant. Il a la tête sur les épaules et il a réussi brillamment ses études au lycée. Il a déjà mis de l’argent de côté pour l’université, mais avant il s’offre en quelque sorte une année sabbatique. Il bosse depuis plusieurs années dans une poissonnerie, sous la coupe d’un patron pas très sympa.

A Brooklyn à cette époque, le racisme fait légion. C’est un milieu difficile. Mickey vit avec son père seul. Ce dernier est un homme malade d’Alzheimer qui sombre de plus en plus dans des crises de démences et de folies. Mickey n’est pas spécialement apprécié dans son quartier, il est surtout très naïf.

Un jour, un homme qui a tout d’un parrain de la mafia entre dans la poissonnerie ou Mickey travaille, et commence à faire ami-ami avec lui. Malgré les recommandations de son entourage, Mickey est tout d’abord flatté, et il finit par se laisser manipuler et prendre des paris pour cet homme. L’engrenage commence…

Je dois dire que je suis ressortie déçue de ma lecture. Attention, tout n’est pas mauvais, et d’ailleurs je n’aurais pas la prétention de dire que ce livre est mal écrit. Ce n’est pas ça du tout.

Déjà, comme je l’ai dit, l’ambiance du roman est un milieu qui n’est pas ma tasse de thé, mais j’ai eu envie d’essayer tout de même. J’ai failli me prendre au jeu, après un début plutôt hésitant, la seconde moitié du roman m’a vraiment plu. Il y a un événement qui fait basculer l’histoire dans un polar un peu plus classique, et qui a fait monter la tension dans le livre de manière assez inattendu, et ça m’a plu. Puis brusquement, tout dérape à la fin, et franchement, je n’ai pas compris. Pourquoi une telle fin ?

On suit un gamin tout ce qu’il y a de plus banal, qui essaye de s’en sortir malgré le milieu défavorisé dans lequel il vit, et tout à coup tout bascule. Le problème c’est que je n’ai pas réussi à m’attacher à Mickey, ou plutôt que je m’y suis un peu attachée et que quelque chose dans le roman m’a gêné jusqu’à ce qu’il me dégoutte vraiment.

En fait je n’ai pas compris ce choix de l’auteur, et son personnage n’est tout simplement pas conforme à mes attentes, c’est dommage.

En bref, un roman qui n’en demeure pas inintéressant malgré ma déception. Je trouve que c’est un roman assez inégal dans son ensemble. Un début plutôt sympathique, un développement très intéressant et malheureusement une fin décevante. Le personnage de Mickey suit ce même schéma, et ça m’a posé problème.

Je remercie chaleureusement les Editions Denoël pour leur confiance.

Ce roman est disponible depuis le 12 février 2015 chez votre libraire.

http://milleetunepages.com/2015/02/24...
Profile Image for Ladiibbug.
1,580 reviews86 followers
April 25, 2009
Crime Fiction

Mickey Prada is a good guy, working at a seafood market, saving money for college, living at home and watching out for his father, who has Alzheimers.

Mickey's life gets complicated when a customer keeps asking Mickey to place bets for him -- bets that keep losing. And the guy won't pay up, Mickey placed the bets for the guy, so is Mickey going to have to pay the bookie?

Mickey is loathe to take his hard earned money from college out of his bank account to pay the bookie. When his buddy Chris comes to him with a "can't lose caper", Mickey goes along.

From here it gets REALLY complicated ... reading Jason Starr is like watching a roller coaster slowly spiral out of control, plot-wise -- in the best possible way. You never know what's going to happen next, but you are guaranteed of a thrill ride.
Profile Image for Ed Armstrong.
71 reviews2 followers
March 14, 2010
Mickey Prada is, in a manner of speaking, a lost soul. He spends his days working in a fish Market in Brooklyn. He longs to begin college and, over the years, has saved a couple of thousand dollars which he has carefully guarded. Mickey is pretty much a lonely guy. He lives with his father, a man in his seventies and suffering from dimentia. His mother was killed years ago in a tragic accident. Because he tries to be honest he's ridiculed by those he thinks are his friends. His naievity lead him in an unfortunate direction and he loses his money, girlfriend, father and job and is embroiled in small crimes and then more serious crimes including armed robbery and murder. The story's ending leaves one with an unsettled feeling.
Profile Image for Harry.
81 reviews
October 15, 2012
Zumindest bei seinen Krimis erzählt Starr mehr oder weniger immer dieselbe Geschichte: Wahnhafte Charaktere stolpern auf einer rasanten Talfahrt ihrem privaten und beruflichen Niedergang entgegen.

Auch bei »Tough Luck« (dt. »Dumm gelaufen«) funktioniert das einmal mehr wunderbar. Trotzdem die Charaktere hier nicht ganz so wahnsinnig sind und der Plot etwas weniger Spannung und Raffinesse bietet, als man es von Starr sonst kennt. Ob Hollywood ausgerechnet deswegen demnächst »Tough Luck« unter der Regie von Michael Rapaport verfilmen wird? Wer weiss.
Profile Image for LeslecturesdeMylene.
5,725 reviews85 followers
March 15, 2015
15/20
En bref, l'ambiance de ce roman est vraiment très bien faite et on plonge avec beaucoup de facilité dans cette histoire. J'ai eu un peu de mal avec Mickey mais on ressent pleinement sa descente aux enfers et son impression de se noyer. On espère qu'il s'en sortira sans trop de mal .... mais l'auteur nous réserve quelques surprises.....

http://www.leslecturesdemylene.com/20...
Profile Image for Josh English.
2 reviews4 followers
December 27, 2014
Really blew. Just a bunch of bad stuff to little effect happening to a poor schlub in Brooklyn. Aims for Richard Price's The Wanderers, but lacks the ear for dialog (and originality), authenticity and insight into male failure that makes Price such a devastating author. Save your time and read Price or The Pope of Greenwich Village for your gritty, old school New York stories about losers.
Profile Image for Mickaéline Cuny.
346 reviews1 follower
March 18, 2015
Une lecture plutôt agréable, mais sans réelle surprise. Jason Starr a su trouver les mots justes pour nous plonger avec réalisme dans le Broklyn des années 80, j'ai adoré les clins d'œils fait aux séries télé et aux musiques de l'époque. Malheureusement, je ne me suis pas attachée plus que ça, au héros que je trouve vraiment stupide. Mais là, est tout l'intérêt de ce thriller psychologique.
Profile Image for Pam.
2,203 reviews32 followers
October 8, 2007
07/24/05 #126
TITLE/AUTHOR: TOUGH LUCK by Jason Starr
RATING: 4.5/B+
GENRE/PUB DATE/# OF PAGES: Crime Fiction, 2003, 248 pgs
Profile Image for Brandon Nagel.
371 reviews19 followers
August 23, 2012
Enjoyed it. Read it one afternoon. Jason Starr is a hell of a writer.
Profile Image for Judi Mckay.
1,138 reviews6 followers
April 14, 2017
A book group choice. Kind of an odd read. I really felt for the main character, Mickey Prada, who seemed like a good kid, who had bad friends and to whom life had dealt the worst cards. The story is one of those "train wreck" stories, where you watch as someone gets deeper and deeper into trouble and there is nothing you can do about it, and everything he does just makes it worse. Gritty and portraying a Brooklyn that I am pleased I never experienced, this is a fraught read. I'm not sure I will read anything else by this author as it was quite a sobering and depressing story.
Displaying 1 - 29 of 29 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.