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Tag Archives: David Corbett
Summer reading report back 2013
As the summer holiday’s draw to an end and the business part of 2013 kicks off, it’s time for a little run down of what I’ve read over the Christmas/New Year period and how I’m going to approach my reading in the year ahead.
I’ve seen the 1972 movie Fat City, directed by John Huston, many times but never read the 1969 book of the same name by Leonard Gardner. It was hands down my read of the summer. Indeed, I’ll go as far as saying it’s one of the most beautifully written novels I can remember reading in a while.
Set in the fifties, Fat City is the story of two amateur boxers, Ernie Munger and Billy Tully. Tully is the older of the two, a former fighter who wants another shot at the big time. The fact he’s an alcoholic means he’s got no chance. Munger is a young man with potential, but you know from the first time we meet him, he’s not going to amount to much. The book follows the hopes, dreams and most of all, anxieties of these two men through a series of bars, flop houses and dead end jobs. As I said, there’s never any doubt the two won’t amount to much, the question is just how far they’ll slide.… Read more
Posted in Crime Factory, Crime fiction, James Ellroy, Lee Marvin, Noir fiction
Tagged American Death Songs, Blood of Paradise, Crime Wave Press, David Corbett, Dead Sea, Dwaybe Epstein, Fat City, James Ellroy, Jim Nisbet, Jordan Harper, Lee Marvin: Point Blank, Leonard Gardner, Lethal Injection, Nicole Moore, Patricia Hindsmith, Sam Lopez, Shakedown, The Censor's Library, The Talented Mr Ripley