I watched the 1994 movie of The Shadow the other day. It was fun enough, I suppose (Tim Curry is always a treat), but did not do much justice for the lead character. This book - his first appearance in written form, I believe - does, perhaps because it takes just about the exact opposite approach with him.
The movie has The Shadow himself as the main hero and point-of-view, telling us everything there is to know about him and his background and showing mostly everything of him as he does it. In this book he's rarely shown, pretty much never identified until much after the fact, fully maintaining his mysterious reputation and grim aura. A lot of times you suspect he might be around in a given scene, in disguise or hiding in shadows, but most of the time you're never given any answer one way or the other. It's spooky and pretty great, and I'm taking notes for my personal use later, maybe.
The actual main character is Harry Vincent, whom The Shadow pulls off the suicide bridge and immediately recruits. I thought that he accepted his new lot in life pretty quickly, but then, if I were to ever contemplate suicide as the other option, perhaps I would too. I thought he was fairly bland and also ended up relying on good luck, or caught up by bad, a time too often. I had a lot more fun with the crooks, their stupid schemes, and trying to spot The Shadow among them spying on them and foiling them before they even know of it.
On the other hand, the prose was unremarkable and uninteresting, even bland. There was a fair amount of good description about light and shadow in any given scene, which was rather necessary given the name character's gimmick and powers, but outside of that it mostly focused on describing things and events and thoughts as they happened, without trying anything fancy. It's usually not one of my main priorities or gripes, but I do think that the story and the world as a whole ended up rather suffering for it. Perhaps later books improve this, perhaps not: I'll find out.
It's a pretty decent beginning, on the whole. Nothing special, but nothing so terrible that I would not drop the series entirely with just this one book under the belt.