Book Review: Hit And Run by Lawrence Block
Published June 24, 2008
Keller makes it back to New York and his apartment in time to see the story about Dot’s “accidental” death on the television news. In his apartment, he discovers that someone has ransacked his home and taken his stamp collection. Regular readers of Keller’s adventures know that the stamp collection is the one thing that the hit man has allowed himself to care about other than Dot. All the money that Keller once had is also gone – his retirement, etc., because his real name is known to the police and he’s a person of interest.
Act two covers a lot of ground. I enjoyed watching Keller trying to get it together, trying to figure out what he was supposed to do since he’d been cut off from his other life. The sincerity and weight Block brings to his character’s ruminations are dead-on emotionally. In this time when so many drastic changes occur in a person’s life, seeing Keller struggle with the same things is almost cathartic and lends hope.
The relationships Keller builds at this time, not only with others but with himself, are extremely well done. The love story and the resolution of the woman’s sick father was well played. All the characters are vivid and believable. Block even takes time to dig into the problems New Orleans (the city where Keller ends up) faces even now.
The third act, even though it’s predictable in nature to a degree, revolves around Keller’s search for the men that burned him and Dot. It offers some introspection and humorous moments as well, and a lot of tension because I really didn’t know how Block was going to bring everything to a close.
Hit And Run is a game played by a master. Block put me on the ropes even though I was dead tired that night, and he kept me there. The gentle delineation of character, the effortless plot twists and surprises, and the pared-to-the-bone writing infused me with new energy that kept me turning pages till I reached the final one with a mixture of excitement and sadness.
I’d really recommend reading other Keller “novels” before this one, but you don’t have to. But to get all the subtlety Block pulls off with the character and the plot, I think it’s better if you have a passing acquaintance with Keller. This is a great book.
- 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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