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Hardcover The Distance: A Crime Novel Introducing Billy Nichols Book

ISBN: 0743214439

ISBN13: 9780743214438

The Distance: A Crime Novel Introducing Billy Nichols

(Book #1 in the Billy Nichols Series)

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Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

*Best Available: (ex-library)

$39.89
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Book Overview

Penzler Pick, January 2002: This debut mystery is by an author who already has a claim on the hearts of his audience: he produced two splendid works of nonfiction that are must-haves for every mystery... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Excellent crime novel

Very easy to see why this won the Shamus, gumshoe, anthony. An excellent crime novel, very well written, with a noir 40s and boxing backdrop that's brilliantly drawn.

And precious little whining ...

Eddie Muller's THE DISTANCE is a wonderfully atmospheric noir tale of murder and passion set in colorful, corrupt, post-war San Francisco. [Note that the San Francisco of the late 40s was much closer in time and ambiance to the period of the great 1906 earthquake and fire than to the glistening "city on a hill" tourist mecca for yuppies and trans-gendered folk it has become today.] THE DISTANCE combines two cultural elements which are now fading memories: professional boxing and the great newspapers. The Brown Bomber has retired to debt, and the heavyweight crown is available for a price. San Francisco is served by five daily newspapers. [Television is just coming on board and has not yet swamped the ship.] Men are men and women are women, and don't bet on the outcome. Noir fiction depends for its success on authentic speech more than on highly cultivated plot, and Muller does a fine job of recreating the languages of the period. Just listen, and you can hear the color! I liked especially that Muller mixed it up, but never went for the knockout. THE DISTANCE, as a title, reflects that long 15 rounds which were the nature of a life then, the grinding working class struggle to survive. And precious little whining.

A Vivid Book Noir Debut

Read this recently and am wasting no time in recommending Muller's vividly drawn debut to those of you who're looking for something a little different, a little complicated, and a lotterrific.Those of a certain age may remember the good old days of boxing, when the Gillette Friday night fights were all the rage. When cigar voiced announcers called each fight as though their very lives depended on the outcome. When the sound of the bell drew you into the living room and kept you there, glued to your seat, until the last punch was thrown.Well, doesn't matter if you do or don't.Because Eddie Muller has brought this fascinating world back to life.His debut novel is set in 1948 San Francisco, when the fight business was still important business. He brings to life Billy Nichols,sportswriter for a major metropolitan newspaper. A guy with a pencil thin mustache, a fedora, and an attitude. Known in the trade as Mr. Boxing, Nichols has spent years building up his following and now at the pinnacle of his game, has a hell of lot to lose. But Billy's not just a hack, he is a very complicated fellow. In fact, he spends most of the book flailing away at a guilty conscience brought on by a bruisingly stupid act which takes place early in the book. Bruisingly stupid and yet so understandably human, this act propels Billy into an out of control spin. Deception upon deception becomes an uncomfortable way of life.How this guy still manages to keep his humanity, his honor and his life is a remarkable tale. I'm not spilling any secrets when I reveal that much, since this book, I understand,is the first in a series.Muller's writing is so evocative, so vivid, that he pulls you instantly into Billy's garish world. The raucous boxing arena, the sweaty gym, the smoke filled bars and steamy bedrooms of this era before air conditioning, are there before you, thrillingly alive. Dames with copper hair and blood red lips people this place.Ham fisted cops with Irish faces, lumbering boxers with short tempers and hearts of gold, sleazy cigar faced managers, crooked politicos and hard hearted wives all live here. Murder, adultery, blackmail, doublecross upon doublecross weave in and out of this web which has ensnared Billy Nichols.Muller has brought the film noir cult movies of the late forties and early fifties vividly back to life in this book.I was captivated.The Distance reads like one of those dark, deep shadowed, sharply photographed b/w movies of that time. Movies which always seemed to take place at night and usually starred John Garfield and Ida Lupino or Robert Taylor and Anne Sheridan or Veronica Lake and Alan Ladd or.......well, you get the picture.This is one of the best debuts I've EVER read.I can't wait to see where Muller takes Billy next.And, by the way, I don't even like boxing.So, that's how much Muller impressed me.This is one ripe, juicy plum of a book.

Runyon-Hemingway Revisited

I am a mystery buff and first edition collector. I am not a fight fan, yet Muller has captivated me. He has written a period piece mystery which captures the late '40s era. His main character is believable, memorable, and sympathetic. To me, he calls to mind Damon Runyon as if written and scripted by Ernest Hemingway ("My Old Man"). There are some holes in the mystery, but they take nothing away from the terse machine gun style. I don't owe Eddie anything, but bring Billy Nichels, the hero, back.

A Smashing First Novel

Raymond Chandler meets Larry Merchant (of HBO Boxing commentator fame). In Dark City, Eddie Muller illustrated his love of film noir and the pulp genre. His fluency in the pulp language and the world of boxing is evident in this novel. Hack Escalante and Billy Nichols are compelling characters. The story is well paced and his writing so on target you can smell the stale cigars and see the blood hitting the canvas.
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