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Paperback A Swell--‐looking Babe Book

ISBN: 031640392X

ISBN13: 9780316403924

A Swell--‐looking Babe

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

It was supposed to be only a temporary job -- something to pay the bills until Dusty could get his feet back on the ground and raise enough money for medical school. After all, there's nothing wrong with being a bellboy at a respectable hotel like the Manton -- that is, until she came along.

Marcia Hillis. The perfect woman. Beautiful. Experienced. Older and wiser. The only woman to ever measure up to that other her -- the one whose painful...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Paging Dr. Freud.

No one could ever accuse Jim Thompson of playing it safe. A Swell-Looking Babe contains material that many readers will find to be outside their comfort zone. To be more specific, the book has an underlying theme of Oedipal love which, in places, gets a bit graphic. Much of the narrative takes place in the Manton Hotel. Bill "Dusty" Rhodes is the lone bellboy on the graveyard shift. His dream of pursuing higher education has been put on hold because he has to work to support himself and his disabled father. Dusty's mother is deceased but her memory lives on in a very unhealthy way in his mind. One night a stunning woman, the swell-looking babe of the book's title, checks into the Manton. Her name is Marcia Hillis and she reminds Dusty of dear old Mom. Or could it be that it's not Marcia herself but rather it's the sensual response that Marcia arouses that makes Dusty think of his mother? Rounding out the cast of characters are Bascom, the night desk clerk who may have a checkered past, and Tug Trowbridge, a crude racketeer who makes the Manton his home. The plot is a cleverly crafted one with a number of unexpected twists. Suffice it to say that a serious crime takes place with young Mr. Rhodes unwillingly playing a central role. A Swell-Looking Babe is worthy of a 5 star rating for a number of reasons. It has great dialogue. Thompson has his characters speak in ways that are well nuanced and authentic sounding. The narrative unfolds smoothly even though it is at times difficult to determine whether something is actually happening or merely being imagined by the main character, Dusty Rhodes. Rather than detracting from the novel's effectiveness, this blurring of the border between the real and the surreal serves to enhance reader involvement. Moreover, Thompson does a great job of describing what it's like at night in a hotel whose best days are behind it. Few writers would have dared to pursue the Oedipal theme to the extent that Jim Thompson did in this book. In doing so, he took a risky path which will undoubtedly turn off some readers. A Swell-Looking Babe is a fine example of Thompson at his iconoclastic best. Well worth reading.

Buy this book without hesitation! Just do it!

I just read this book for the second time. The first time was fifteen years ago. I've read most of Thompson's books, and in my opinion, this book is his best, slightly edging out A Hell of a Woman and Cropper's Cabin. For the most part, I read literary fiction and the "classics." Make no mistake, I consider Thompsen to be one of the finest writers of the 20th century. That said, this novel, like his others, is not without flaws, plot holes, and underdeveloped characters. What this has going for it is that it starts out so innocently. Thompson sets up the reader for the harshest fall, a descent into the most tortuous psychological hell imaginable. Things are not what they seem, and by the time you, the reader, figure this out, you will be too hooked to put it down. I have never experienced a book that so successfully pulls the rug out from under the reader. The graphic details of contemporary fiction are missing, but the genius of Thompson is that even without these details, the underlying anger will shake you to the core. If you are looking for a mystery whodunit in the Agasta Christie vein, don't read this. If you're looking for psychological horror crafted by a genius, this is your book.

Perverse Masterpiece

Of all of Jim Thompson's twisted protagonists, Dusty Rhodes might just be the sickest and most cold-blooded. Outwardly, he appears the most normal - a humorless, but intelligent kid who dropped out of college to work as a bellhop and take care of his invalid father. The thing of it is, Dusty was adopted, taken from a foundling asylum, and there was that unnatural attraction to his mother ... and maybe he's responsible for his father's current state. All this is the backdrop as Dusty gets involved with a swell-looking babe who's ready to frame him for rape, a double-crossing gangster, and a deadly as hell lawyer.This is one of Thompson's best - right up there with Hell of a Woman, Savage Night, Pop. 1280 and Killer Inside Me.Dave Zeltserman, author of In His Shadow

excellent, totally gripping

The best one of Thompson's I've read. More true to life than some of the others, since much of it is based on his own adolescent experience. A real killer ending, too. Packs a real punch.

Excellent crime novel, but perhaps not what you would expect

A Swell Looking Babe ranks with Thompson's best, but it is much different than many of the novels for which he is famous. The narrator is a bellboy who hates his father. Unlike many other Thompson 1st-person barrages, he is not crazy, however. He can't hold a candle to Lou Ford, in other words. What makes this novel interesting, however, is the character of the hotel; it has a personality of its own.
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