Quantum Storytelling

The Probabilities of Storytelling

A little Block here, a little Westlake there…

No, not writer’s block… Lawrence Block — and his pal Donald Westlake. Digging into some pulp that I’ve missed out on. Here’s the summary:

  • 361 by Donald Westlake

    Ray Kelly gets out of the airforce and arrives back in NYC to meet his father, only to witness his father’s murder and consequently suffer a horrible car accident in which he loses an eye. It’s your basic revenge story, but a good one at that. 361 ended up being my ideal format example for fiction. At 207 pages, 361 made for a breezy read embellished by the fact that chapters were no more than a few pages each, and something happens on every page. The inciting incident the murder of the hero Ray Kelly’s father which happens by about page eight, and the story is in full gear by page twenty, with a major twist around page one hundred. 361 is a great example of getting to the heart of the story right away — something all writers could bear to study.

  • Money for Nothing by Donald Westlake

    Josh Redmont starts receiving $1,000 a month from an unknown source. Seven years later, someone approaches him and tells him that he is now ‘active.’ Josh gets wrapped in a hairy conspiracy and has to find his way out. At 336 pages, Money for Nothing is a bit longer than 361. The extra page padding makes for more loose storytelling than 361, but the plot is still no laggard and if Westlake doesn’t manage to keep the philosophy of “Something happens on every page,” then at least it’s “Something happens in every chapter.”

  • The Sins of the Fathers by Lawrence Block

    A prostitute is found dead and her stepfather hires Matthew Scudder to find out more about the estranged step-daughter. Things are complicated by the suicide of her supposed killer. As Scudder learns more about the estranged daughter-become-prostitute, he gets closer to solving the crime itself even though it’s not what he was paid to do. This is the first novel in Lawrence Block’s Matthew Scudder series. It was a very solid mystery. There seems to be a lot less action than in Westlake’s novels, but half the fun is following Scudder around in his quest to find things out for his clients. Another example of blissful brevity. At 180 pages (my version), you can read The Sins of the Father in a single night.

  • In the Midst of Death by Lawrence Block

    A cop testifying on police corruption is framed for murder and Scudder must clear his name. Along the way he discovers leads which bring him to the real killer. Another short and delicious book. Not quite as good as The Sins of the Father, for the mystery is a bit more muddled and the ending lacks some resolution. But I guess this series is more about Matthew Scudder’s alchoholic journey through the seedy underbelly of New York City.

With exception of Money for Nothing, these represent both Westlake’s and Block’s earlier novels. Their later novels appear to be a lot longer. I wonder what happened? While longer might equal better from the perspective of the publisher, to me it represents bloat and excess.

Have you read any great short novels or novellas lately?

 

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  1. KG

    I have realized that I cannot remember when I last read a complete book just for fun. Everything seems to be for work. Lack of time, really.

    Then I found a quotation from an author named Susan Straight: “Reading is the passion that brought me to writing. Reading to me is crucial. I tell my students all the time, ‘If you’re not reading, who’s going to read you?’”

    Still pondering this.

  2. Eric

    Yet another reason I cut NaNo short. I got in this for the love of stories, and I realized I hadn’t enjoyed one in a long time, and simply didn’t have the time. So I made time.

    You have to read to write.

  3. KG

    I think reading — for myself, for fun — will have to be one of my top New Year’s resolutions.

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