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Green Ice

door Raoul Whitfield

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In this Golden Age noir classic, a falsely convicted man is released from prison only to find he's being framed for multiple murders  In the 1930s, when pulp magazines like Black Mask reigned and noir fiction was in its heyday, mystery author Raoul Whitfield ranked with Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler as one of the genre's heavy hitters. Widely acknowledged by those in the know as a pioneer of hard-boiled detective fiction, Whitfield wrote action-packed tales of murder and mayhem that noir aficionados adored. His debut novel, Green Ice, is considered by many to be his masterpiece. Mal Ourney has spent the last two years in Sing Sing for a crime he didn't commit, taking the rap for a lady friend whose carelessness behind the wheel resulted in someone else's death. Always a champion of the underdog, Mal has done his time quietly and without complaint while lending a sympathetic ear to the small timers who were unwittingly led into a life of crime by big-time, low-life gangsters. Now that he's a free man, Mal's got a plan to make the big guys pay. But he's barely stepped through the prison gates when people in his life start dying, beginning with his ex-girlfriend. It seems someone is determined to frame Mal Ourney, and it has to do with a missing cache of priceless emeralds. Now the innocent ex-con will have to do some fancy footwork if he hopes to sidestep the electric chair. This ebook includes an introduction by Boris Dralyuk.… (meer)
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Raoul Whitfield was a friend of Dashiell Hammett and a prolific writer for Black Mask. Under the pseudonym "Ramon Decolta" he authored a series of tales about a stoic Manila detective named Jo Gar, and today those stories are Whitfield's primary claim to fame. Green Ice demonstrates why he is more highly regarded as a short story writer than as a novelist: skimpy characterization, lots of violent action, exceedingly awkward prose even by genre standards. Whitfield made up his own lumpy street slang and used it so often that it's painfully obvious he was fishing for critical praise. People are "humans," cigarettes are "pills"; humans are constantly lighting pills and narrowing their eyes (also a habit of Jo Gar, Whitfield's Filipino shamus) to indicate how tough they are. This sort of thing is acceptable in a short story, but no one--least of all Whitfield--can reasonably sustain it for more than two hundred pages. As a novel, Green Ice rates two stars out of five. As a work of hardboiled crime fiction, I give it three stars for pure absurd momentum. Better than Carroll John Daly, but nowhere near as good as Hammett or Chandler or John K. Butler. ( )
  Jonathan_M | Aug 15, 2018 |
Raoul Whitfield was one of the pioneering figures of hardboiled fiction and wrote as many as ninety stories in the famed Black Mask magazine. He was a contemporary of Hammett, Chandler, and Carroll John Daly, and a drinking buddy of Hammett’s. Green Ice was Whitefield’s first published novel and is in actuality a set of five shorter stories that were originally published in Black Mask. If you are looking for real, hardboiled stories without pretense and just plain action, action, action, this is it. Mal Ourney served two years in Sing Sing, taking a manslaughter rap for a gal he had been dating and, while there, word gets out he is has it out for the big guys, the crime breeders, who control all the action on the streets. Violence is everywhere as he steps out of the Big House and it all looks like it is going to come back down on Ourney just for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Hammett himself described Green Ice as 280 pages of naked action and tough, staccato prose. It may not be as cleverly plotted as some other hardboiled novels – these were originally short stories- but it literally breathes that tough, dark, hardboiled atmosphere. ( )
  DaveWilde | Sep 22, 2017 |
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In this Golden Age noir classic, a falsely convicted man is released from prison only to find he's being framed for multiple murders  In the 1930s, when pulp magazines like Black Mask reigned and noir fiction was in its heyday, mystery author Raoul Whitfield ranked with Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler as one of the genre's heavy hitters. Widely acknowledged by those in the know as a pioneer of hard-boiled detective fiction, Whitfield wrote action-packed tales of murder and mayhem that noir aficionados adored. His debut novel, Green Ice, is considered by many to be his masterpiece. Mal Ourney has spent the last two years in Sing Sing for a crime he didn't commit, taking the rap for a lady friend whose carelessness behind the wheel resulted in someone else's death. Always a champion of the underdog, Mal has done his time quietly and without complaint while lending a sympathetic ear to the small timers who were unwittingly led into a life of crime by big-time, low-life gangsters. Now that he's a free man, Mal's got a plan to make the big guys pay. But he's barely stepped through the prison gates when people in his life start dying, beginning with his ex-girlfriend. It seems someone is determined to frame Mal Ourney, and it has to do with a missing cache of priceless emeralds. Now the innocent ex-con will have to do some fancy footwork if he hopes to sidestep the electric chair. This ebook includes an introduction by Boris Dralyuk.

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