My Gun Is Quick and Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead
Working hard on the outline of a new Travelers book. In the meantime, here’s two thrillers I read last month. They couldn’t be more different from each other. One is traditional hard-boiled, the other is quirky literary.
The first is My Gun Is Quick (Mike Hammer Book 2, 1950) by Mickey Spillane. I’d never read one of these books, although I was familiar with the character from popular culture (which means I knew the character’s name, but I don’t know why).
Mike Hammer is a hard-drinking, quick-to-fight private eye who lives by a code of protecting the innocent and punishing the guilty. On this outing, a prostitute is murdered, and the police aren’t interested, at least initially. So Hammer digs into her death and uncovers the city-wide corruption supporting a violent prostitution ring.
Lots of twists and turns here, leading to a smash-up finale, although you’ll have to ignore the casual sexism and homophobia that marked the hard-boiled thrillers of this era.
Also read Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead (2019) by Olga Tokarczuk. (Tokarczuk is a Nobel Prize winner). This is a first-person literary mystery. The narrator, Janina, is an eccentric older woman. You might practice astrology, translate William Blake into Polish, and be strong for animal rights, but, trust me, you are not as eccentric as Janina. Community leaders in her village are being murdered in bizarre ways, and she gets involved in the investigation, trying the patience of the local police.
We dig into her character via her philosophical musings, odd outbursts, and spirited generosity, as we follow along to the discovery of the killer and the surprising ending. Challenging and enjoyable.
Happy reading!