Friday, February 17, 2012

Forgotten Westlake Books: The Parker Trilogy by Richard Stark

It’s been a long time since I read a Parker book. Too long. So this week’s Forgotten Books Westlake Tribute (more HERE), seemed the perfect excuse. And I’m mighty glad I took advantage of it.

What I didn’t remember was that the first three books in the series form a sort of trilogy. While book 1, The Hunter, works fine as a stand-alone novel, the next two volumes are pretty much dependent on the first book, and upon each other. Read in order, they tell a fine and rich tale, but a reader picking up just The Man with the Getaway Face or The Outfit might have a less than satisfying experience.

Read as a trilogy, the three books nicely compliment each other. The Hunter sees Parker released from jail and on the hunt to square himself with the man who betrayed him. In the process, he incurs the wrath of the mob, here known as The Outfit. In The Man with the Getaway Face, Parker gets plastic surgery in an effort to return to his criminal career without interference from the organization. When that plan fails, he’s forced, in The Outfit, to take drastic action to get them off his back.

Having read these before, I knew they were good. And of course the whole series is pretty much universally revered by aficionados of noir. But I did find a couple of surprises.

First, it wasn’t until I was well into the third book that I was reminded (by Westlake admirer Doug Levin) that these novels were written almost 50 years ago. The prose and dialogue is so fresh - and dare I say timeless? - that they seem brand new. It was only on reflection that I noticed there were no computers or cell phones.

Where the stories may show their age is in  the story structure. Westlake employed some techniques that might not pass muster today - at least for an aspiring novelist.

In at least two instances, the story follows the point of view of a supporting character to a scene where Parker makes a surprise appearance. We know this is bad (and probably fatal) news for the supporting character and want to see how it plays out. Instead, Westlake backtracks several days and spends several chapters showing us what Parker was doing to lead him to that confrontation.

In both cases, Westlake’s saving grace is that Parker’s point of view is so compelling that we don’t mind the lack of suspense. In the hands of a lesser writer, though, or with a character lacking Parker’s intensity, I’m not sure it would work.

The Man with the Getaway Face has a particularly strange structure. The main plot, following Parker and friends as they plan and carry out a heist, ends with the book only two-thirds over. For the final third, we’re left the remains of a much less interesting subplot, and sent backtracking in the point of view of a less interesting character. Parker eventually returns, of course, and saves the story, but the end of the book is anticlimactic, and satisfying only in that it sets up the action to come in the next book, The Outfit.

Despite those lapses in suspense, I found all three books hard to put down. I’ve just started book four, The Mourner, and have three more in the To-Be-Read pile. So whatever Westlake was doing here, it sure worked on me.

Cover trivia: Check out Parker's hands on the covers of the first two books!

5 comments:

  1. I picked a Parker novel to review, too. But you went right back to the beginning, Evan. It's hard to think of comparable classic books kicking off a series. Maybe the first three Travis McGees...

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  2. You're right about the hands, Evan. Obviously the same book cover designer (or a lazy one). By the way, I don't recall if I ever congratulated you on the Robert L. Fish Award, but kudos!

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  3. As maybe a coda to the trilogy, THE MOURNER, #4,picks up some unfinished business with Bett Harrow from THE OUTFIT.

    The movie version of THE OUTFIT managed to turn the story into a stand-alone pretty well, but the novels are probably best read together, in sequence.

    George, a comparably dynamic start to a series, Donald Hamilton's first three Matt Helm novels.

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  4. You're right, Fred! Those first three Matt Helm books made me feel like my hair was on fire while reading them!

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  5. Thanks, BV.

    And I could use some hair-on-fire right now. Matt Helm coming up!

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