The ingredients are by now familiar. Heck, they were familiar more than forty years ago. Small town. War vet. Ill-gotten gains hidden away. Tough cop. Buried secrets. Beautiful women. It's not so much the ingredients as what you do with them, however, and John D. MacDonald was a master producing a tasty dish.
Tal Howard's the war vet, back home after having survived a North Korean prison camp. One of his fellow prisoners, who knows he's going to die, has told Tal about embezzling $60,000 from his brother's business, but he doesn't reveal where it's hidden. He does, however, give Tal a clue.
Tal finds himself at loose ends after the war. His life doesn't have much purpose, and he realizes he doesn't love the girl he's supposed to marry. So he takes off. He goes to the small Florida town where the money's hidden to see if he can find it and maybe find some meaning for his life at the same time.
Already in town is Fitzmartin, another ex-POW, and he knows about the money, too. He's been looking for it for a while, and he's one of MacDonald's cold, hard, implacable villains. A fine creation. What he lacks, aside from any human feeling, is the clue that Tal has.
Tal, of course, meets a beautiful woman. Not just a woman. The Woman. But he doesn't tell her the truth about why he's in town. That doesn't work out so well. Then Tal meets another woman, the one who has the answer he's looking for. Things happen.
Great characters, smooth writing, a fine action chase and climax. It doesn't turn out as you might expect. MacDonald doesn't spare anybody. There's a sort-of happy ending, though it's by no means certain that things will work out, not after all that's happened.
All through the book there are great little touches of description and character that MacDonald just sort of tosses off as if it were the easiest thing in the world. Believe me, it's not.
The cover makes the book appear to be a backwoods novel, and while it's a great cover, it's highly misleading. Don't let it keep you from reading the book, which might not be MacDonald's best but which is likely to keep you pinned to your chair for a few hours just the same.
10 comments:
Thanks...I might just borrow my friend's Kindle for that. Had MacDonald settled in Florida right after the war, I wonder.
I believe so. Not 100% sure.
I own a later edition of A BULLET FOR CINDERELLA but haven't got around to reading it. After your review, it moves up the Read Real Soon stack.
I got a copy for my Kindle as well. Loved it. You're right, MacDonald was so smooth, he made writing look easy.
I bought this last year (different cover, so probably a later edition) and had been planning to read it and do a Friday Forgotten Book post on it. You beat me to it. Is this the cover the Kindle has for it?
That's a scan of the cover of the book I own. It's the same as the one on the Munsey's site.
So you don't get that cover on Kindle? What a gyp.
It shows up, but in B&W.
Bill
Missed that you had gotten a Kindle...what do you think so far?
I got mine for Christmas, and have been using it for almost all of my reading.
I'm still reading mostly "real" books. The Kindle's a nice toy, though, and I like using it.
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