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The Barbarous Coast (1990)

The Barbarous Coast (1990)

Book Info

Genre
Series
Rating
3.87 of 5 Votes: 4
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ISBN
0446358827 (ISBN13: 9780446358828)
Language
English
Publisher
warner books (ny)

About book The Barbarous Coast (1990)

She said surprisingly, in a voice as thin as a flute. "Are you a good man?""I like to think so," but her candor stopped me. "No," I said, "I'm not. I keep trying when I remember to, but it keeps getting tougher every year. Like trying to chin yourself with one hand. You can practice on and off all your life, and never make it."***The DC-6 left the runway and climbed the blue ramp of air. There were only a dozen other passengers, and Rina and I had the front end of the plane to ourselves. When the NO SMOKING sign went out, she crossed her legs and lit a cigarette. Without looking at me directly, she said in a brittle voice, "I suppose I owe you my life, as they say in the books. I don't know what I can do to repay you. No doubt I should offer to go to bed with you. Would you like that?""Don't," I said. "You've had a rough time and made a mistake, and I've been involved in it. But you don't have to take it out on me.""I didn't mean to be snide," she said, a little snidely. "I was making a serious offer of my body. Having nothing better to offer." "Rina, come off it. ""I'm not attractive enough, is that what you mean?""You're talking nonsense. I don't blame you. you've had a bad scare." She sulked for awhile, looking down at the Chinese Wall of mountains we were crossing. Finally she said in a chastened tone: "You're perfectly right. I was scared, really scared, for the first time in my life. It does funny things to a girl. It made me feel-- well, almost like a whore-- as though I wasn't worth anything to myself.""That's the way jerks want you to feel. If everybody feels like a zombie, we'd all be on the same level. And the jerks could get away with the things jerks want to get away with. They're not, though. Jerkiness isn't as respectable as it used to be. not even in LA. Which is why they had to build Vegas."******All the safe contained was money though-- bundles of money done up in brown bank paper. "Take it," Graff said. "It is yours.""It would only make a bum out of me. Besides, I couldn't afford to pay the tax on it.""You are joking. You must want money. You work for money, don't you?""I want it very badly," I said. "But I can't take this money. It wouldn't belong to me, I would belong to it. It would expect me to do things, and I would have to do them."

This book is effective, in its way, with some fine behind-the-scenes glimpses of Hollywood, mobsters, and the country club crowd, and Archer is good too, making more than a few weary observations about how private detecting has changed him, and not for the better. We get our first sustained look at a sadder, wiser Archer (we have had more than a few short glimpses before), and he is frank in telling his audience--and a few other characters who will listen--how the shabbiness of the search for truth can soil a man.Perhaps this "sustained look" at the man is the main trouble with the book. Archer journeys into the self, but it is not the same journey that the narrative must take, and, rather than complementing each other, the reflections and commentary often seem to be at odds with the plot. "The Barbarous Coast" is inferior to Macdonald's earlier triumphs, such as "Find a Victim," but even here we can sense that he is moving toward something richer, something that will soon lead him on to even greater achievements. "The Galton Case" is not far away.

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Now here is the real thing: where I felt McDonald’s Doomsters has promise it never quite fulfilled, this is a tight little number. McDonald still loves digging into the exploits of the dissolute rich, and you as a reader should listen closely to whatever a Freudian analyst says in a McDonald novel, and all through the book, Lew Archer never sleeps, though he is knocked out a couple times, so maybe that’s when he rests. But there’s some new in this, too: this one also packs some seemingly sincere social criticism, especially at the expense of Hollywood and the celebrity culture. There’s palpable heat here, some dynamite action, and just plain weird, shocking stuff. I don’t think that McDonald is really a friend to women, or the mentally ill, but this is a solid little thriller.
—Matt

According to the latest scientific research sharks can smell a drop of blood in a volume of water about the size of a backyard swimming pool (Google is your friend). Sounds impressive? Not so much if you think that when it comes to sense of smell sharks smelling blood have nothing on organized crime smelling money. Lots of money buys laws and once you do it you are no longer a criminal; you are a highly respected citizen. In fact you become more respected than any low peon who busts his back trying to make an honest living. What was (and still is) one of the places in US in the middle of the last century with great amount of money? Washington first and foremost but let us not forget this place which comes close second: Thus we are talking about Hollywood, big money, mobsters, movie and TV stars, corruption, high-level lifestyle and everything in between. A guy in Hollywood hired Lew Archer for a bodyguard job. Archer really hates such jobs - and for a reason too: everything I know about them shows person being guarded always turn out to be too stupid to live with a strong desire to make the guarding job as difficult exciting as possible. Sorry, I got carried away. Coming back to the book, a couple of pages later Archer had to take another client for a very innocent-sounding job. Usual noir fun followed. I noticed something curious reading this novel - this also relates to other books of the series, but to a lesser degree. Most of the people who got killed had been really asking for this, persistently and I can think of only one possible exception this time. Let me put it the following way. Imagine the following situation: suppose I work for an insurance company (I do not by the way) and somebody comes to me to buy a life insurance saying his/her main source of income is a blackmail of a crime boss. Guess what? I would not touch this case with a ten foot pole: there are better ways to throw company's money away. Overall this is a good mystery with interesting characters in very colorful places; not outstanding but good enough to warrant 4 stars. Next book of the series, here I go!
—Evgeny

Looking back, if I had to read this book all over again, I would try to read it straight through without a lot of other distractions. I read this while juggling a couple of other books, and as a result got lost a bit in the plot. In "The Barbarous Coast", Ross MacDonald offers up a classic detective story, along with his trademark descriptions and metaphors.In this book, Lew Archer, attempts to make contact with his new client, only to break up an attack by a man who claims that his wife is missing. The unravelling of the plot puts Archer in touch with Hollywood moguls, washed up boxers and gangsters. The plot of this one (despite my being distracted by other stories) seemed a few moves more complex than the standard MacDonald offering. That is not a criticism; it just means that you need to pay attention to be able to take in the whole story.MacDonald begins and ends his book with an image of three divers, caught in a photograph. The plot eventually reveals the names and histories of the divers, and the events in their lives that make up the backstory to the book. The characters throughout the book are quite strong and well-defined. The dialogue is crisp and the story chugs right along from chapter to chapter.I will leave it up to others to decide if there are a few too many twists and turns in this novel. I did find that right after the chapter when I began to admit to myself that I was a bit lost, thing started to make sense! The ending chapters explain the whole sordid set of personalities and events that made Archer's presence necessary in the first place. If you are ready for a fairly challenging plotline and can pay attention, this book rewards the effort.
—David

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