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Paperback The Bullet Trick Book

ISBN: 1841959170

ISBN13: 9781841959177

The Bullet Trick

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Book Overview

Crime Writers Association award winner Louise Welsh follows up her hit artworld noir The Cutting Room with a slick literary suspense thriller set among the decadent domains of contemporary Berlin, Glasgow, and London. Meet William Wilson, a foundering so-called mentalist, conjurer, and above all -- despite frequently being the opening act for strippers -- a master performer. When his agent books him for a string of cabaret gigs in Berlin, he's...

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

A Thrilling Gothic Mystery

I picked up this book from my library, the picture first caught my eye and then the title, and when I read the blurb and noticed that some of it was set in Berlin ...... I was travelling to Berlin soon ....... I just had to borrow it. And I'm really pleased that I did as I absolutely loved it. The story starts in present day Glasgow and travels back and forth in time to Berlin and London narrated by William Wilson, Mentalist and Illusionist, who was "the warm-up act for a whole trough of comedians and stand ups. The guy nobody came to see." When his agent sends him to a London club for a gig he somehow gets mixed up in a missing persons mystery, involving the police and blackmail, and where, shortly after, two men are found shot to death, he decides it would be a good idea to disappear and take another job in a cabaret club in Berlin....... but, unfortunately, his troubles have only just begun. As the chapters alternate between the different cities and the different times, I loved the way Louise Welsh built up the suspense, we knew something terrible had happened to William earlier but the clues are slowly dragged out and the story never slows or gets boring. Even though William is not the most endearing of characters, he drinks too much, smokes too much, and at the beginning of the book he gambles too much, but his witty and dry humour had me laughing out loud a couple of times and I found myself liking him more and more as his life starts to unravel in the darkly gothic world of glamour and magic. The descriptions of his illusionist acts were fascinating, all the various larger than life characters were well-defined and I was totally engrossed from start to finish.

Reviewed by Janelle Martin

William Wilson, a down-at-the-heels conjurer, is engaged as the warm-up act to a pair of "dancers" at Inspector James Montgomery's retirement party. Put up for the job by his friend Sam, he realizes that the skills he was hired for had nothing to do with the stage and everything to do with his skill at picking pockets. When a theft sets off a chain of events leading to the death of Sam and his partner, William spends the next year on the run, trying to evade his own conscience and, more pressing, the man whose secret he now possesses. Set in the gritty pubs of Glasgow and London, as well as Berlin's seedy cabaret scene, The Bullet Trick is an adults-only tale, flashing between past and present, blurring the line between illusion and reality. Louise Welsh's The Bullet Trick is a dark, yet exaggerated, noir tale that reads like a novel from an earlier time. Named after a dangerous magic trick in which a magician appears to catch a bullet in his mouth after the gun is fired directly at him, Welsh's novel does feature a variation of this classic act; however, in this version, Wilson is the one with the gun in his hand. Wilson is a conjurer, guiding his audience's attention through the use of psychology, forcing them to see what he has created. Like a master conjurer, author Welsh uses words to create the burlesque and illusions that keep her readers' attention directed where she desires while skillfully working her slight of hand. Welsh is known for her highly evocative, yet economical language: "Get over whatever it is that's bothering you, because right now you're going in one of two directions, the jail or the morgue. Now piss off. And remember, this is my local." I looked around at the tired décor, the deflated men, the uneasy chairs, then back at the police inspector supping his first pint of the day at eight in the morning and said the worst thing I could think of. "Aye, it suits you." Elements of The Bullet Trick are drawn from Welsh's own trip to Berlin: the clockwork toys sold at Chamäleon Varieté, the acts taking turns serving drinks at Kleine Nachtrevue, the topless male aerialist plunged repeatedly into a bath of water to the sounds of "In The Heat of the Night" also at Chamäleon Varieté and the girl twirling dozens of hula hoops about her person at The Winter Garden. These small elements are minor details in the scope of the novel but add verisimilitude to this complex work. In an article written for the British newspaper Guardian Unlimited, Welsh stated "It's my lifelong ambition to be able to distinguish glamour from sleaze. Perhaps Berlin would teach me the difference." If The Bullet Trick is any indication, Welsh certainly fulfilled her desire. While many readers found The Cutting Room much too disturbing, what is unsettling in The Bullet Trick is subtler. Violence is a core theme of both The Cutting Room and The Bullet Trick. One of Wilson's inamoratas questions him about the violence in his act, "...And y

"The past is like an aged Rottweiler. Ignore it and it'll most likely leave you alone"

The Bullet Trick is a story of darkness and night, where depravity lurks in the theatres of London and on the pavements of Glasgow and Berlin, the gloomy streets filled with danger and menace. In this world of drunks and harlots, striptease artists and small-time crooks, petty criminals and corrupt cops, author Louise Welsh takes us on a journey, bringing to life the sordid underbelly of cabaret culture where loyalty and betrayal go hand in hand. Her chief protagonist is the cynical Scotsman William Wilson, a down on his luck conjurer, mentalist and illusionist. William is used to life's hard knocks and is currently mired in gambling debts, he has a fondess for heavy drinking, and as we meet him, he is just trying to scrape together enough money to survive in his home town of Glasgow where he's living in a dumpy, ramshakle studio flat near the center of the city. William seems intent to drink himself to death, favoring pubs with no mission other than to "empty your pockets, fill you full of bile and kick you into the street at closing time." But it is in London toiling through the British comedy circuit - "the warm up for a whole trough of comedians and standups" - where William finds himself doing a magic act in a Soho Night Club owned and operated by petty criminal Bill Noon and his young boyfriend Sam. Forced by Bill to buy an unfunny string of smutty schoolboy jokes, "that no one finds funny but everyone laughs at," William performs for a macho police crowd celebrating the retirement of Chief Inspector Montgomery, a cop with shady past. Bill would like nothing better than to know what Inspector Mongomery has on his dad. The Chief had also promised to tell Bill the truth about his mother Gloria, gone missing back in 1970, her fate never disovered, although the obvious conclusion is that she is probably dead. Bill gets William to pick-pocket the Inspector, hoping that an envelope he has in his possession will perhaps hold the key to unlocking the mystery of what really happened to Bill's parents. Suddenly, however, William finds himself stuck with the goods. While Montgomery stands just beyond the door of Bill's office, Sam thrusts the envelope into his hand and William eventually discovers that this vital document - which on a whim he posts to his mother in Scotland - is in fact, going to vastly affect his life, becoming both his insurance and perhaps even the bait to his eventual downfall. When William's chain-smoking manager Rich offers him a job working as an illusionist at the Schall und Rauch, a rundown theatre in Berlin, William jumps at the offer. And it his here that he meets Sylvie, an American exotic dancer who also becomes his muse and partner in crime, and her friend and father-figure Dix, who is also up to his eyeballs in debt. Both Dix and Sylive ensare William in an implacable web of events that reach far beyond his control. Meanwhile, Montgomery is out there somewhere, eager to get his hands on the evidence that m
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