Black Money
By Ross Macdonald.
Vintage Crime/Black Lizard.
Published by Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.
First published 1966.
Paperback.
ISBN-10: 0679768106
ISBN-13: 978-0679768104
Description:
“A Beautiful job … rich in plot and character…. The
denouement is both surprising and shocking and the whole is up to Mr.
Macdonald’s extraordinarily high standards.” – The New York Time Book Review.
When Lew Archer is hired to get the goods on the
suspiciously suave Frenchman who's run off with his client's girlfriend, it
looks like a simple case of alienated affections. Things look different when
the mysterious foreigner turns out to be connected to a seven-year-old suicide
and a mountain of gambling debts. Black Money is Ross Macdonald at his finest,
baring the skull beneath the untanned skin of Southern California's high
society.
“It was not just that Ross Macdonald taught is how to
write; he taught us how to read, and how to think about life, and maybe in some
small but mannered way, how to live.” – Robert B. Parker.
If any writer can be said to have inherited the
mantle of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, it was Ross Macdonald. Between
the late 1940s and his death in 1983, he gave the American crime novel a
psychological depth and moral complexity that his predecessors had only hinted
at. And in the character of Lew Archer, Macdonald redefined the private eye as
a roving conscience who walks the treacherous frontier between criminal guilt
and human sin.