REVIEW

Book Review: Hit And Run by Lawrence Block

Written by Mel Odom
Published June 24, 2008

Keller is a professional hit man. He specializes in paid-to-order death that looks like an accident and has always gotten away without being caught. However, Keller is also a man with a conscience. Not about the people he kills, because that would get in the way of him doing his job. But he dwells on how he spends his life, the people he spends it with, and what life is ultimately all about. That aspect of Keller is the one that I most enjoy spending time with in the books.

Hit And Run is veteran mystery/suspense writer Lawrence Block’s fourth book about Keller. It’s also the first of the four books that’s actually a novel. The previous three books were collections of short stories gathered in a loose novelistic style. Block first published the stories in Playboy magazine and other magazines. Block always threw in a few new stories each volume as well.

I love the characters of Keller and Dot, the woman who brokers the services Keller offers to discriminating and wealthy clients. I look forward to the times they sit and discuss the world and their lives after Keller’s adventures. Despite the lethal business they are in, Keller and Dot appear like people you could meet on the street and engage in an idle chat that would give you something to think about. Each time I closed a Keller “book” in the past, I could think about different thoughts or revelations that Keller experienced in those stories.

Block took his time writing the stories. I can tell how much he enjoyed exploring the characters and themes he developed over the course of bringing Keller and his assignments to the page. Throughout the books, the character and his situation changed. The relationship with Dot altered too, and the two of them became even closers friends than business partners.

Hit And Run changes a lot of things, though. For the first time, Keller’s face is in the news for a murder. The kicker is that Keller didn’t kill the governor of Iowa. He was framed, and he doesn’t even know who did the framing.

The book divides neatly into three acts, though I didn’t notice that at the time I read the book. I started on the novel intending to read just a few pages, just enough to close the book on Keller’s first kill. Instead, Keller never even gets to whack the guy he hired on to kill. By the end of the first chapter, he’s running for his life. Not only are the cops pursuing him, but so are the faceless people he just became the fall guy for.

I read the book from cover to cover. Could not put it down. As I said, the book divides neatly into three acts. The first act is pure adrenaline as Keller doubles back and tries to figure out what to do. Dot is off-line for the first time since forever, and there’s not a single other person in the world that Keller can talk to about his career.

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Mel Odom is the author of over 100 novels. Winner of the American Library Association's Alex Award for 2002 and runner-up for the Christy in 2005, he's written in several genres, including tie-in novels for Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, Without A Trace, and novelizations of Blade, XXX, and Tomb Raider. Thankfully, he's learned to use his ADHD for good instead of evil.
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Book Review: Hit And Run by Lawrence Block
Published: June 24, 2008
Type: Review
Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Audio Book, Books: Crime, Books: Mystery, Books: Suspense
Writer: Mel Odom
Mel Odom's BC Writer page
Mel Odom's personal site
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