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148 pages, Paperback
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."