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Tag Archives: Ted Lewis
Mid-year reading report back: David Whish-Wilson, Simenon takes a train & 1970s Mexico noir
It already half-way through the year, and I thought a quick report on the highlights of my reading so far is in order. This is especially since I have a couple of big writing projects on the go and, as a result, will probably not have the time to do anything of the sort again before the end of the year.
So, let’s get to it.
The Sawdust House, David Whish-Wilson
Regular readers will have seen me talk before on this site about how much I rate David Whish-Wilson. I genuinely believe he is one of the most underrated crime writers working in Australia today and his latest does nothing to disabuse me of this view. The Sawdust House is Whish-Wilson’s second book to explore the lost Australian history of mid-19th century San Francisco. The Coves (2018) told the story of Australian criminals, many of them former convicts, who drifted to the San Francisco in the hopes of making a fortune amidst the gold rush gripping the west coast of the US at the time, and who assumed a major role in the lawless city’s criminal world. The Sawdust House focuses on the life of one of these men, Irish-born James ‘Yankee’ Sullivan, who has been arrested as part of the nativists attempt to root out and crush Australian criminal influence in San Francisco.… Read more
Posted in Book Reviews, Crime fiction, David Whish-Wilson, Derek Raymond, Georges Simenon, Laura Elizabeth Woolett, Neo Noir, Noir fiction, Ted Lewis
Tagged Beautiful Revolutionary, David Whish-Wilson, Derek Raymond, Georges Simenon, He Died with His Eyes Open, How the Dead Live, Laura Elizabeth Woollett, Once Upon a Time In Hollywood, Quentin Tarantino, Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Ted Lewis, The Love of a Bad Man, The Newcomer, The Sawdust House, The Snow Was Dirty, The Train, Velvet was the Night
The mystery of Billy Rags
Crime fiction is just far too large a literary field to aspire to anything near being a completist in terms of reviewing. That said, the British noir author Ted Lewis has been something of a favourite on this site. I reviewed Jack’s Return Home aka Get Carter (1970) and its two sequels, as well as the novels Plender (1971) and GBH (1980). But there is one more Lewis work I want to tackle, Billy Rags, originally published in in 1973 and which, coincidentally has just been re-released by No Exit Press in the UK.
Billy Rags is very closely based on the life of the real British criminal John McVicar. Just how closely I’ll get to directly. McVicar was an armed robber, declared ‘public enemy no 1’ by Scotland Yard in the 1960s, until he was apprehended and given a 23-year sentence. He was also a serial escapee and after his final arrest in 1970 received a 26-year sentence but was paroled eight years later. McVicar was also something of a uniquely 1960s/70s phenomena, the self-aware/educated working class career criminal turned author and commentator on prison reform, a major social debate in those two decades. He studied for a university postgraduate, wrote an autobiography, McVicar by Himself, published in 1974, and authored a couple of other true crime books.… Read more
Posted in Book Reviews, British crime cinema, British pulp fiction, Crime fiction, Crime film, Neo Noir, Noir fiction, Ted Lewis, True crime
Tagged Billy Rags, Charlie Richardson, GBH, Get Carter (1971), Getting Carter: Ted Lewis and the Birth of Brit Noir, Goronwy rees, Jack's Return Home, John McVicar, Mark Chopper Read, McVicar (1980), McVicar by Himself, Nick Triplow, Plender, Roger Daltry, Sweeney 2 (1978), Ted Lewis, Tom Clegg
Fifty years later, Get Carter is still the iconic British gangster film
When you get a moment, my latest for the CrimeReads site is on 50 years of Get Carter, how the Michael Caine revenge flick attained cult status and changed the face of British crime cinema. I don’t think Get Carter is the best British gangster film ever made but it is certainly the most influential. You can read my piece in full at this site via this link.… Read more
Posted in British crime cinema, British pulp fiction, Crime film, Heist films, Michael Caine, Neo Noir, Noir fiction, Richard Burton, Stanley Baker, Ted Lewis
Tagged British gangster cinema, crime films set in northern England, Get Carter (1971), Jack's Return Home, Michael Caine, Mike Hodges, Ted Lewis
My top 10 crime reads of 2017
Late last year the German culture website, CulturMag, asked me to nominate my top 10 reads for 2017. My list is now live (and in English), along with contributions from a number of other individuals and can be seen in full here.
As usual, it is a mix of old and new fiction, as well as some of the non-fiction books I enjoyed. What were your top crime reads of 2017?… Read more
Posted in Australian crime fiction, Crime fiction and film from Latin and Central America, Neo Noir, Pulp fiction, Pulp fiction in the 70s and 80s, Pulp paperback cover art, Ted Lewis
Tagged Day In, Day Out, Getting Carter: Ted Lewis and the Birth of Brit Noir, Grady Hendrix, Hector Aguilar Camin, Iain Ryan, Julie Szego, Laura Elizabeth Woollett, Paperbacks From Hell: The Twisted History of ‘70s and ‘80s Horror Fiction, Ted Lewis, The Jones Men, The Love of a Bad Man, The Obama Inheritance: Fifteen Tales of Conspiracy Noir, The Student, The Tainted Trial of Farah Jama, Three Hours Past Midnight, Tony Knighton, Vern E Smith