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THERE WAS A LITTLE GIRL
NY Times Book Review
Juggling Live Electric Eels By JOHN SKOW
Ed McBain can do anything,
as his circus mystery shows Probably it works this way: after
years of riding the Shetland pony across the slack wire above
the center ring, you begin to wonder if you could do it blindfolded.
Sure, easy. But if the pony were blindfolded? If you were
both blindfolded and you were juggling live electric eels?
Something like this may have gone through Ed McBain's mind
as this master began There Was a Little Girl, his 80th or
maybe 160th crime novel. Could he, for instance, just to make
things interesting, write a thriller in which his hero gets
shot on the first page and stays unconscious for the entire
book? What kind of hero would that be? Interesting question.
Let's see... What is surprising is not that McBain pulls this
off but that he does it without breaking a sweat. As always
in his novels, sharp, clear sentences trot briskly one after
another, tailing up into effective paragraphs and chapters
as if there were nothing to it. As always, the funny stuff
is funny and the scary parts scary. The puzzle is even puzzling:
What did Florida lawyer Matthew Hope stumble over while trying
to negotiate the sale of a fairgrounds to a local circus that
got him shot? A few of Hope's friends try to find out and
are soon stumbling clueless through the circus world, wondering
whether the death of a gorgeous midget was suicide or murder,
why the animal trainer seems himself to be a predator, and
whether the dashing young man who hangs by his hair is kept
aloft by cocaine. The author's secret appears to be the steadiness
of his gaze. He looks straight at whatever he is describing,
concentrating utterly (for a chapter or only a sentence or
two) on, say, why bears are more dangerous than tigers in
animal acts, or on the merry custom of "choosing day," when
carny couples pair up. Or on the night toward the novel's
end (and it may be toward Hope's end as well) when the hero's
teenage daughter talks to him by his bedside for 12 hours
and more, telling him about the time in Rome when her hands
were sticky with gelato and he washed them in a fountain.
"Dad," she says, "could you just squeeze my hand a little?
Just so I'll know you're hearing me? I'm not rushing you or
anything ..:" McBain gets the daughter right, of course, and
the bears and the tigers right too, as he has done for dozens
of books and years.
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