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Mass Market Paperback The Ivory Grin Book

ISBN: 0553273523

ISBN13: 9780553273526

The Ivory Grin

(Book #4 in the Lew Archer Series)

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Traveling from sleazy motels to stately seaside manors, The Ivory Grin is one of Lew Archer's most violent and macabre cases ever. A hard-faced woman clad in a blue mink stole and dripping with... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

The Ivory Grin

First published in 1952, The Ivory Grin, remains a classic of crime fiction. MacDonald's Lew Archer is a private investigator working with a post WWII cast of characters as weird as strawberry flavoured onions. Lew's client is less than frank. The young suspect, passing as white, soon becomes a victim. There is an odd tie in to another missing person case and then a spate of murders. Lew puts the jigsaw together, tracking towards a big reward, but with a host of hostile parties to negotiate. In my view a great read, but I'm damned if I can understand the relevance of the title.

A master at work.

The detective novel had been around for many years prior to Ross Macdonald starting his series featuring Lew Archer, but the main writers (Hammett and Chandler) did not take their characters to the depth that Macdonald took Archer. Archer sees the bleakness of the world through a cynic's eyes and reports to us his findings which are rarely optimistic. Macdonald's books usually had the unlying theme of families disintegrating due to the sins of the past being reborn. Macdonald's books are all classic detective fiction and well worth your time.

"You can't stand the human idea."

The Ivory Grin (also published under the title Marked for Murder) was the fourth Lew Archer novel and was released in 1952. It's classic hard-boiled territory-- a dubious case, a lying client, a need for cash, and a vicious murder. Lew Archer gets a taste what men will do for love in a town where it seems like anything goes. Macdonald is one of my favorite of the hard-boiled writers, and The Ivory Grin is an exceptionally good example of the Archer books. It may not stack up against the absolute best in the series (so far, my favorite is the 1st-- The Moving Target) but is still a fine fine book. Recommended. Particularly for fans of the genre.

As current a mystery as you would want

Ross Macdonald's Lew Archer is one of the most famous characters in all of detective fiction, and The Ivory Grin quickly shows the reader why. Archer is hired by the archetypal mystery client who won't tell him anything about herself, to find a young woman she won't tell him much about either. Archer knows from the first moments that he is being conned, but he's both a little short on cash and a romantic at heart, and he just can't resist the challenge that goes with the $100. If you're afraid that a novel written and first published in 1952 will seem dated, you'll be both right and completely wrong. Of course, the clothes, cars, telephones, and even some of the geography no longer apply, but the motives and deception, the danger and the twists and turns of a first-rate detective novel are timeless. Macdonald carries it all off with a flair and a high sense of style that have kept his novels in print and his readers wishing he could have lived and written forever. When he died in 1983, Macdonald - a pseudonym for Kenneth Millar - left behind what critic William Goldman called "the finest series of detective novels ever written by an American author." Archer has a dry wit and no overly developed sense of his own importance. His observations of his clients, his surroundings, and the events he becomes part of are smart and wise. In this novel, Archer starts out in his hard-boiled detective office, but spends little time there as he travels between Los Angeles and one of those hot and dusty inland California towns where his clients and the people they're seeking always seem to end up. He runs up against desperate people, motivated by greed and unloosed from whatever moral compass they may have started with long ago in some other existence. He struggles at each point to see who might be on the right side of things, and in almost every case he is disappointed. In The Ivory Grin, there are no heroes, except perhaps Lew Archer himself, and he lays no claim to that title. Armchair Interviews says, "If you're looking for a detective, a story, and a writer that won't disappoint you, pick up Ross Macdonald's The Ivory Grin--and then prepare to rush out for more."

Really good.

In this early (1952) Lew Archer mystery, author Ross Macdonald does a great job of storytelling. The descriptive passages are original and highly evocative, the dialogue is first rate and the intricate plotting is very compelling. Macdonald introduces a number of interesting, realistically crafted characters from many different walks of life and masterfully weaves their individual stories together to create a literary tapestry that is quite satisfying. The Ivory Grin is a remarkable example of detective fiction. Its two greatest strengths are the vividness with which the characters are drawn and the precision with which the multiple plot threads blend together. Highly recommended.
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