
Black Money
A Lew Archer Novel
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Narrado por:
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Grover Gardner
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De:
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Ross Macdonald
Black Money is Ross Macdonald at his finest, baring the skull beneath the suntanned skin of Southern California's high society.
More mayhem? Try our other Lew Archer mysteries.©1993 Margaret Millar (P)2009 Blackstone Audio, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















Reseñas de la Crítica
"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." ( New York Times Book Review)
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I almost didn’t get through the first chapter. I’m kind of glad I read it though. The original sin of this novel that prevents me from rating it higher is this: a pasty white failson hires a PI to check out his ex-fiancé’s new beau. Not because he’s treating her roughly, which is is. Not because he’s planning on taking her out of the country - although that impacts the pacing. Failson hires a PI because the new beau is a dark skinned (foreign) man acting like has has a right to be rich, while surrounded by formerly wealthy folks pretending they’re still rich, which is not a reason to hire a PI. Couple that with the sexism of assuming the ex-fiancé, who entered college at 16, was somehow too dumb to make her own choices at 24, so the jealous guy who failed out of the only college he could get into and was too lazy to look past his neighbor for a date thinks it’s his right to make her listen to “reason”. And the PI & the first few interviewees all agreed that an uppity dark skinned man was worthy of a case. And for the reason of educating a woman who couldn’t possibly know better. For this, minus 2 stars.
What’s odd is that a number of women of varying ages and status are treated with respect, deference & assumed competence, while others are assumed to be flighty dingbats. There’s a bit too much judgement of women who are in it for the paycheck - whether that paycheck is money or marriage, but hey, 1965 had fewer choices for women, especially those without money, and that shows up all over this book. The fascinating part is that an author who thinks racism is a great motive, & women are conniving, manages to describe multiple relationships with some nuance and complexity.
It’s kind of worth reading for the descriptions of the wide variety of marriages and partnerships - transactional to true love, desperate, despairing, fun, frivolous, antagonistic. Not a single relationship is like another. Some of the people might seem simple but they’re given complexity and a lot of that is as their part in a couple.
I found Black Money (grr) a lot more interesting and vastly less annoying than The Maltese Falcon. The PI here is a better human for one. “I’m not a do gooder, I just try to do less badder.” He wields an authority (such as calling in an off duty employee before promise of payment) that seems a little over the top, but in general takes people as they are, where they’re at, and tries not to push them in a bad direction. He and other characters put a lot of store in mental health conditions in an ableist way, giving some folks more leeway than others, but the PI is the most kind and forgiving of people’s faults. Drunk musings are “irrigated memories” and eating ones emotions are a reason to kindly suggest therapy, not mockery.
There were non-racist reasons for the case to exist. I wish the author (1965) had thought to use them. To be fair, the PI never thought Ginny was incapable, only the guy who hired him did, and “make sure my neighbor isn’t going off with a mobster” might be a reasonable case for someone with disposable income. Also, the case starts as that, “look into this guy” and somehow bodies pile up afterward, which makes the plot & case take on a life of their own.
The case itself is full of tentacles and dead people. I guessed at some of the players involvements, but for wrong reasons. I’m always sad when a lot of people die, which they do here, but the story had solid pacing and escalation and new things uncovered which kept me invested.
Of one can tolerate a motive that shouldn’t be persuasive, the rest of the book is better. It also shows that US politics hasn’t improved society’s take on much race or at all on immigration from 1965 to 2021, which is both tragic and illustrative.
Steam: None. No on page sex. Some thoughts of kissing or more, but no details. Inevitable results of relationships discussed, and there are offers made, with varying levels of sincerity, but the book doesn’t go into bedroom details.
Narration: The narrator is a favorite of mine, which is why I picked the book. He does ok here but it’s not as nuanced or lively as he can do. Solid B+. Sound quality even.
Interesting character and relationship study
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good twisty plot
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Marvelous, old school detective novel!
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Loved it
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Good as always. Macdonald as in all the books delivers a taut and engrossing story that speaks volumes about the California of the 50s and 60s.
Good but not great
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I can't get enough of Ross Macdonald
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Sanguine '60s Noire
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Good book, great reader
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I'd listen to almost anything Grover Gardner narrates.
Solid Mystery
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Good read, not my favorite of the Archer series
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