Reviews

Dead Skip by Joe Gores

msand3's review

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2.0

1.5 stars. Dead boring. I read this only because it shared a chapter with the Parker novel [b:Plunder Squad|596673|Plunder Squad (Parker, #15)|Richard Stark|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1382387489l/596673._SY75_.jpg|3830]. And that chapter is the only interesting thing in this novel. It’s exactly as advertised: the very same incident from the perspective of Kearny rather than Parker. The rest of the novel is a dull detective procedural involving a repo firm investigating an employee’s assault. I felt no compelling interest in the crime, the characters, the plot, or the investigation beyond the brief connection with the world of Parker in one chapter.

psteve's review

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3.0

Just read this book again, after turning it up for a quarter at the library sale. It was well worth the quarter & well worth the re-read. It's a DKA novel -- Daniel Kearney Associates -- wherein one of their agents is assaulted and left for dead in the middle of the night. This is the story of the rest of the crew trying to find out what happened.

Several things make this a really interesting read in 2011. First, it's a non-romantic portrait of the city at the time. Gores' locations are really there, and are not their for any purpose except to show where things happened. He isn't commenting on anything but the action, and this way he seems to me to show a very good portrait of the city.

The book, in its detail of a relatively boring type of detective work -- repossessing cars -- also isn't romanticized, but shows what seems to be a real way of working. Interesting to think of how the world has changed since 1972, and how this work must have changed. No computers, no cell phones. Young people reading this today must be confused at all the talk of carbon copies and the like.

But what makes the book worth reading is the low-key characterizations of the DKA crew and the portrait of the city.

guiltyfeat's review

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3.0

Nice 70s noir with repo men chasing around San Francisco to find out why one of their colleagues was beaten into a coma. Not content with merely name-dropping Richard Stark early on, the book goes on to feature a whole scene with Parker in it, which may be an exact reflection of the same scene in Plunder Squad, but I can't be bothered to dig it out and check. If I find more of these old-time paperbacks I might pick them up.
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