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Tag Archives: The Likely Lads
“Dirt under its nails”: Ted Lewis’s Plender
Confession time. I have not been reading a lot of new crime fiction in 2020 and, for reasons that I am sure many of you share, have found it hard to concentrate on reading anything during the Covid-19 lockdown. What I find has been working for me is just picking up something at random from the large number of unread books I have on my shelves and seeing how far I get. Sometimes I don’t get more than 20 pages before turning my attention to something else. Other titles I can’t put down.
Ted Lewis’s 1971 book, Plender, was definitely in the latter category.
I didn’t come to Plender completely cold. As regular readers of this site will know, I am a major Lewis fan. I have written at length about Lewis’s 1970 novel, Jack’s Return Home a.k.a Get Carter, and I reviewed Nick Triplow’s biography of Lewis by Nick Triplow, Getting Carter: Ted Lewis and the Birth of Brit Noir on this site here. Triplow had also recommended Plender at some point in our online correspondence, saying, “It’s got dirt under its nails”. I duly ordered a copy and left it on my shelf where it sat for several years.
Plender was Lewis’s follow up novel to Jack’s Return Home.… Read more
Posted in British crime cinema, British pulp fiction, Crime fiction, Crime film, David Peace, French cinema, Neo Noir, Noir fiction, Ted Lewis
Tagged All the Way Home and All the Night Through, Billy Rags, British gangster cinema, British noir, David Peace, GB84, GBH, Get Carter, Get Carter (1971), Getting Carter: Ted Lewis and the Birth of Brit Noir, Jack Carter, Jack's Return Home, John McVicar, Le Serpent (2006), Michael Joesph, Michael Klinger, Mike Hodges, Nick Triplow, Plender, Red Riding Quartet, Ted Lewis, The Likely Lads, The rabbit, The Zodiac Factor, Tom Barling