Back in the middle '50s, Evan Hunter hit the Big Time with The Blackboard Jungle. By that time he'd written a lot of stories and other novels under various names. In his introduction to Learning to Kill, a collection of his early short stories, Hunter mentions Cut Me In, an "as-yet-unpurchased novel" that his agent submitted to Pocket Books. Pocket didn't buy the novel, but it eventually sold to Abelard-Schuman and was reprinted by Pryamid books. The pen name Hunt Collins was used in both cases. And that was the end of it.
Until now. Hard Case Crime has brought back Cut Me In after it's languished in obscurity for nearly 60 years. Hard Case will be releasing the novel under the Ed McBain byline, which is more marketable than Hunt Collins, I suppose. And it also allows them to use the "McBain is a master" blurb from Newsweek.
The book's narrator is Josh Blake, a literary agent. Right there, I'm hooked. I'm ready for some inside scoop on literary agencies in New York in the '50s, since Collins/McBain/Hunter would know plenty. I was a little disappointed that there wasn't more of that kind of thing in the book, but what is included is both amusing and interesting.
The book is a mystery novel, though, so publishing info wasn't the main reason for its existence. Sometimes, when the info does come, it feels almost as if it's being shoehorned in. Blake's partner in the literary agency is murdered, and while the cops are perfectly capable of solving the crime, Blake gets involved, not necessarily because he wants to but because of the McGuffin in the case, a copy of a contract with a writer.
Cut Me In is a long way from an Evan Hunter novel of the middle '50s. It's more like a paperback original by Richard Marsten, with beautiful women seducing or trying to seduce Blake every time he meets them. Lots of fisticuffs, too. Even some shooting. I think most readers will be way ahead of both the cops and Blake as far as the mystery goes, but I still had a lot of fun reading the book. It's fast and smooth, and it's even funny in parts. When I read about the book in Learning to Kill, I immediately went on the Internet to search for copies. I found some, too, but they were priced at a lot more than I was willing to pay. I'm glad Hard Case has reprinted it so I can read it at last.
But wait. There's more. Also included in this edition of Cut Me In is "Now Die in It," a long-lost novelette about alcoholic p.i. Matt Cordell. You can't go wrong, so order your copy now.
11 comments:
I'll read anything by Ed McBain. Love the cover, too!
It sounds soso but yes, I did order it.
I was ready to swear I'd never read LEARNING TO KILL, but of course I had, in 2006.
Getting old is not much fun.
I probably reviewed it back then. I should rerun the review.
It appears that I didn't review it. Drat.
Well, you can read the book again and you won't remember that you've already read it.
Sad, but true. The Hunter story I mentioned in my review of THE VIOLENT ONES a couple of weeks ago is also in LEARNING TO KILL, but I didn't remember it at all.
Doen't much matter what it is--with a few exceptions--if I read it more than a decade or two ago, I won't remember much if any about the book. Seems that way, at any rate.
Lit agent narrator! Clever idea if the manuscript's still looking for one.
Considering that the narrator's an utter heel, not to mention fairly crooked, I'm not so sure.
I'm once again gobsmacked by the pricing (all this at Amazon)...$9.99 ebook; $3.04 in hard cover; and $24.06 in paperback. Guess in which format I bought it.
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