I read this book for the Mount TBR Reading Challenge hosted over
at My
Reader’s Block from January 1 – December 31, 2017. The challenge is to read
books that you already own.
Death and Taxes
– Thomas B. Dewey
This Detective “Mac” mystery was published in 1967. Mac’s
first and last names were never revealed in these PI novels, which went from
the early 1950s to about 1970. Mac never aged either, staying in early middle
age for the entire run.
Mac is hired to deliver a million dollars in cash to
the daughter of his client, a notorious gangster Marco Paul, upon the thug’s
death. However, Marco Paul is gunned down in an old-style gangland hit before he has a chance to tell Mac when
he stashed the stacks and stacks of hot cash. Gangsters being awful gossips,
plug-uglies sniff the existence of the million and assume that Marco told Mac of
the location of the cache. This make
Mac’s life difficult, as he becomes the subject of strong-arm tactics to get him
to tell. This is a hard-boiled mystery but the violent scenes aren’t
disgusting. So Mac needs to catch the killer and find the cash fast.
There are two attractive female characters in the mix,
but Mac, as always, is chaste. Mac, in fact, is rather a worrier, who wears his
emotions and concerns on this sleeve. After reading lots of Dashiell Hammett
lately, I feel that Mac rather pales beside the rugged but human Op. Mac is
based in Chicago, but besides street names there is little local color.
Finally, Mac doesn’t wrestle with The Ambiguities like Phil Marlow or LewArcher. Nor does Mac seem to have any kind of life outside of detecting (his
lives in an apartment attached to his office).
I still recommend these hard-boiled mysteries, with a
tight stories, a minimum of violence, and no foul language, for readers to this
old-school genre.
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