Friday, 8 January 2010

SHOTGUN BY ED MCBAIN

I've read a couple of McBain's in the past but a long time ago, when I was a kid in fact. I didn't really know much about the author then but he was published in the UK as part of the Keyhole Crime series and I could find them easily in my local newsagents. I'm not sure if they were from the 87th precinct series, though. They might have been - I can't remember.

So to all intents and purposes this was my first taste of McBain and it certainly won't be so long until I take another nibble.

Set in a fictional city which seems to be based on New York we follow the lives of the detectives of the 87th precinct. If you Google the series it reveals that there were over fifty books in the long running series and this one is number 23 but they are all, I believe, standalone novels based around the same group of characters. Reading the book I could see how TV shows like Hill Street Blues took much of their style from these books. And author McBain (Evan Hunter) once said that the 87th series was very much influenced by Dragnet.

"Long before Hill Street Blues, Homicide, and NYPD Blue, there was Ed McBain's 87th PRECINCT. The series began in 1956 with Cop Hater. Although not the first procedural, it was one of the first and the 87th Precinct has come to virtually define the genre. The books generally feature an ensemble cast and multiple plot lines. Although the books vary in quality, on the whole this is a major series, a classic of American crime fiction that has entertained, enlightened and influenced the genre for over three decades (and counting!)."



According to the web there have been a couple of TV series and several TV movieS made based on the series but I've never been aware of these. I may be wrong but I don't think the TV series was ever shown over here in the UK. Though I vaguely remember a movie The Pusher based on the series. Again information on this seems scarce but a Google search did reveal that Leonard Nimoy once played a drug pusher in the TV series based on the books.

The book starts off with Detective Steve Carella visiting the scene of a double murder only to find fellow detective Bert Kling throwing up in the street. Carella almost feels like being sick himself when he sees the victims of a double murder - a young couple, both shot at point blank range with a shotgun. From here we follow the investigation in great detail as the detecives try and uncover the killer - much of the book is dialogue driven, often entire pages are filled with dialogue as we witness the detectives questioning people and talking amongst themselves. This is one of the strengths of the book as the speech is presented in a realistic fashion and there is much humorous banter between characters which serves to lighten what is a dark brooding narrative.



"In the early sixties, a TV series made its debut, featuring Robert Lansing as Det. Steve Carella and Gena Rowlands as Teddy. It also featured Norman Fell, Ron Harper and Gregory Walcott. Although well-received by critics (particularly Rowlands' performance) it didn't last long, although at least two comic books were rushed out, hoping to cash in. But they weren't quickie recycled TV episodes; in fact, they were relatively "adult" for a "good" publisher like Dell. The first was drawn by Bernie Krigstein, who is so well known for his E.C. horror work, and is truly a bizarre visual excursion. The second deals in great detail with drugs, and may be drawn by one of the artists who also did the Michael Shayne books, another short-lived series which Dell decided to take a similar approach to."



As we near the climax, stumbling over a few twists and turns, the tension is mounted up and the book is genuinely exciting. It's a quick read, superbly entertaining and Ive got five more McBain 87th books on my shelves so it won't be too long before I once again visit the precinct.

7 comments:

Chris said...

There's one called Guns that some blogger reviewed not too long ago. That one always looked interesting to me.

Nice review!

Randy Johnson said...

Be on the lookout for any of the 87th novels with the Deaf Man, a persistent antagonist for the boys.

Ray said...

The 87th Precinct series was before your time. Not as good as the books though.
'Fuzz' is an 87th Precinct movie.
I know that both 'Give The Boys A Great Big Hand' and 'Let's Hear It For The Deaf Man' were filmed though one of them may have been 'Fuzz'. I can recall Yul Brynner as The Deaf Man.

Anonymous said...

I never became an 87th Precinct fan. Maybe I prefer other crime novels over over police procedurals or maybe I picked up the "wrong" titles. But I do like McBain's Matthew Hope books (the ones with the fairy-tale titles) and I've been meaning to investigate a western McBain/Salvatore Lombino wrote as Evan Hunter, The Chisholms.

Gary Dobbs/Jack Martin said...

Chap that's interesting - never knew Mcbain had done a western - I'll be on the look out for that one.

Jerry House said...

The Chisholms was made into a good television movie and a very short-lived television series starring Robert Preston as the fundamentalist (and snake-handling) head of a family making the perilous trek west. Hunter also wrote the teleplays for The Legend of Walks Far Woman (with Raquel Welch, va-va-voom) and Dream West (with Richard Chamberlain as John Charles Fremont). I'm not sure, but I suspect that he may have written some western short stories for the pulps early in his career; one of your blog readers may know for sure.

In my opinion, his 87th Precinct series can't be topped. It began when US publisher Pocket Books was afraid their cash cow Erle Stanley Gardner would have very few new Perry Mason novels left in him (they sure were wrong there!) and wanted to start a new long-running series. Hunter actually tried to kill off Steve Carella in the first book, but the publisher wouldn't let him because one does not kill off the main character of a series in the first book. This confused Hunter at first since he felt the main character of the series was the entire 87th Squad.

There have been a number of films about the 87th, both in the US and in Japan. (Kurosawa's High and Low was based on an 87th Precinct novel.)

I think you will find yourself gobbling up the 87th Precinct books like peanuts, once you've read a few more, Gary.

Gary Dobbs/Jack Martin said...

Jerry I'm going to do Cop Killer next, which I think was the first