Robin Marx's Writing Repository

Crime

This review originally appeared on Goodreads on September 19, 2021.

So Nude, So Dead

By Evan Hunter – Hard Case Crime – July 14, 2015

Review by Robin Marx

An addict wakes up next to a beautiful lounge singer he’d met the night before, only to discover two bullet holes in her stomach and the 16 ounces of heroin she showed him missing. Chased by the police, Ray Stone must find the killer and attempt to clear his name while fighting off the effects of withdrawal.

This book is a fast-paced tour of the underbelly of the city, bouncing back and forth from seedy hotels, bars, disreputable clubs, and the apartments of various temptresses. The prose is fast and the action tense throughout, but it sags a bit in the middle when Stone makes second visits to people he already visited during the course of his ad hoc investigation.

Overall this is a solid crime story with a driving plot, but the characters felt pretty stock. A decent read, but perhaps not worth going to great lengths to seek out.

★★★☆☆

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This review originally appeared on Goodreads on March 24, 2021.

Pimp: The Story of My Life

By Iceberg Slim – Cash Money Content – May 10, 2011

Review by Robin Marx

This autobiography is about a young black man from a broken home. He’s had an abusive childhood, poverty is never far away, and he’s living in the racism of 1930s America. He takes all his hate and rage about the oppression and hopelessness of his situation...and begins to bully and brutalize black women, perhaps the only social group more oppressed than himself. Pimps are scum. But to be fair, they’re not particularly glorified in this book. I doubt the reading comprehension of anyone who reads this book and decides to pursue the vocation.

This book read a bit like a serial killer memoir. The author rarely attempts to defend his predatory behavior, the casual manipulation and abuse of women at his hands is presented in a fairly matter-of-fact manner. Slim wanted prestige and wealth in an unfair society, and any woman he crossed paths with were potentially a means to that end. Slim was driven to a goal, and other people were tools.

In addition to the serial killer memoir feel, this book also has a Clockwork Orange vibe. The entire book is written in a rich lexicon of blunt, brutal slang that compellingly brings the bleak ghetto lifestyle to mind. As with A Clockwork Orange, violence tends to be sudden and shocking, and as likely to be a tool of the authorities as the criminal underworld.

While I wouldn’t describe it as fun or pleasurable spending time in the world presented here, it’s a fascinating story related in an engaging manner. I look forward to reading the novels of Iceberg Slim.

★★★★☆

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