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Paperback Joker Poker Book

ISBN: 1793433437

ISBN13: 9781793433435

Joker Poker

(Book #1 in the Pat Gallegher Series)

First book in the Pat Gallegher Mystery Series. Slacker jazz cornet player in New Orleans' French Quarter agrees to help a desperate woman find her lover, whom she thinks has been murdered -- by her... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: New

$15.95
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Customer Reviews

4 ratings

A tribute to the genre

Joker PokerBy Richard HelmsThe first thing I liked was the literary sleight of hand Mr. Helms pulled off in the first chapter. The second thing I liked was the rest of the book. Mr. Helms may have been a student of Chandler, Spillane, MacDonald and others, but this is a case where the student takes rightful place next to the masters. This is polished, professional prose with all the elements right on target.The main character, Pat Gallegher, has no illusions about his middle-aged body, his abilities to enforce the 'favors' he does for people as a quasi-P.I., or his very understated personal weaknesses. He's a man with feet firmly planted in reality without the whining, and yet is vulnerable enough to not only feel the softer side of emotions, but allows them to dwell in him unconflicted with the tough guy he has to be when necessary. It's a remarkable balance that Mr. Helms pulls off so smoothly, one reaches the end of the book before realizing you've got Pat Gallegher under your skin and you like it. This cornet-playing unlikely hero, as a favor, agrees to find a lover/con man who's disappeared. The wealthy, obversely puritan woman who wants the guy back is afraid her husband has discovered her leisure activity and has had her lover killed. So let the games begin.Professional thugs, a crime boss, a red-headed Siren, the local constabulary, the owner of the bar where Gallegher performs nightly, and others, all want a piece of him in one way or another. Whether one of those pieces of him is of a size to fill a coffin, either through legal means or otherwise, we know won't happen, but watching him dodge that is fun. His own protection backup is long-term memorable, and I hope Mr. Helms continues to let him out to play in the other Pat Gallegher books.One of the bellwethers of the quality of Mr. Helms' writing is how he has Pat Gallegher sum up previous cases (that haven't been published yet) in a few sentences which tell the complete stories. It's easy to make the leap to mentally riffle through unprinted pages as fast as a deck of cards and end up feeling as if you'd read the books about them. Richard Helms has an easy style of writing and a protagonist with all the qualities required for strong stories and further interesting character development. There's layers to Pat Gallegher we probably won't ever have explored, but we don't need it; he's a complete package as-is. Nice job, Mr. Helms. Keep doing it.

Edgar award nominee, a bright voice to the genre.

Admirable, smooth, funny, intelligent writing. Helms is a terific story-teller, reminiscent of his idols Chandler, Hammett, Spillane; hard-boiled, but with his own,unique brand of sharp, clever humor, a terrific way with words and a deeper understanding of the human condition. His tough, but sensitive, multi-faceted protagonist is someone I would want for a buddy. Joker Poker is well worth a read.

Big Score for Story Set in the Big Easy

New Orleans is a perfect setting for a hardboiled mystery, as it is arguably the most corrupt city in the US. Helms uses this corruption to his advantage in Joker Poker, by portraying the expected legions of con men, gangsters, loansharks and pimps that have become a staple of the genre. In the center of this collection of ne'er-do-wells is Pat Gallegher,a man whose life is more than half over, with little to show for it. In an attempt to escape his past failures, he has settled into a life of playing music at night, and collected overdue debts for a shady loanshark by day. Despite his near-derelict subsistence level of survival, he maintains his own sort of "bushido", a code of honor that he uses to rationalize everything else in his life. The plot of Joker Poker is an old standard - the supplication by a client, the set-up, the murder, the frame, and finally the extrication by Gallegher from the trap set for him by -- whom? I know, but I won't tell (no spoilers here). The plot, being a stock form, allows Helms to roam free within it,and develop exacting, engaging characters and snappy, crisp dialogue. Pat Gallegher's character is a cross between Travis McGee and Spenser, but there is more here,a lyrical, poetic quality that is reminiscent of, but not as heavy handed as James Lee Burke. And that is, perhaps, fitting, as both Helms and Burke are Southern writers at heart. Here's hoping that Joker Poker's riveting climax on Lake Pontchartrain is not the last we will see of Pat Gallegher. There are characters here about which I would like to learn more, not the least of which is Gallegher himself.

Great Characters!

Joker Poker is the first in a series of books by Richard Helms featuring his reluctant knight Errant and adventurer Pat Gallegher. The series is set in New Orleans.Pat Gallegher is a jazz coretist in a dive bar in New Orleans. He owes twenty thousand dollars to a loan shark so he works off his debt doing collections. He also does favors for friends with locating people when they cannot turn to the law; I guess you could call him a jack-of-all-trades. Cully Tucker, Gallegher's lawyer, shows up one night at the bar with a classy lady who needs help in finding her lover, and she can not turn to the police because she is married. Mrs. Vincouer thinks that her husband may of had something to do with the disappearance.This mystery is one of the good, old-fashioned kinds that we used to read and love, one where the protagonist is hard as nails and goes to any lengths, legal or otherwise, to solve his case. This book is full of quirky characters that really give the story substance and add to the book's greatness.
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