We return to The Hard Case Crime Chronicles with seven Quarry books by Max Allan Collins.
Collins ("Mac" to follow) can be a hard author to keep up with. Over the past year, not counting any of the below, I've read USS Powderkeg (great title, great plot, needed another draft) and Scarface and the Untouchable, pt. 1 (pt. 2 here) of a comprehensive biography of Elliot Ness that he co-authored with A. Brad Schwartz. Some of that Ness story was originally written in the 80s as four fiction books, recently collected into an e-book at the very agreeable price of $2.99.
I mention all that because it seems no matter what other author or project has my attention, he's always in rotation along with whatever else I'm reading. I haven't even mentiond the Nate Heller and Mike Hammer books and audiobooks I have in queue, or the additional ones as part of this Hard Case Crime Chronicles series (The Consummata and Two for the Money.)
Anyway- the last batch of Hard Case Crime books I got off eBay had a bunch of Mac's Quarry books. I had two of them previously (reviewed here and reread for the below) but six were first time reads. These are NOT the complete Quarry novels; that list is here. Will there be another post with the rest of them, namely Quarry's List, The Last Quarry, The First Quarry, Quarry in the Middle, The Wrong Quarry, Quarry in the Black, and Killing Quarry? Probably, but it will likely be after this whole HCCC series finishes, so it could be years. I know how I am, though – if I start a series and like more than two of the books (which is the case here) it bothers me to leave the series unfinished.
That's how they get ya.
Rather than rank them least-to-most favorite, the below are presented in publication order. A quick word on the publishing: Mac published four Quarry books in the 70s, a few more in the 80s, then all of them under the Hard Case Crime imprint, along with several new (and ongoing) entries. The below mixes all the eras of Quarry's publishing life.
HCC-s02 |
Originally published as The Broker (1976).
The assignment was simple: stake out the man’s home and kill him. Easy work for a professional like Quarry. But when things go horribly wrong, Quarry finds himself with a new mission: learn who hired him, and make the bastard pay.
The first and in some ways the best of the Quarry books. From the author’s afterword: “I wanted to take it up a notch – my ‘hero’ would be a hired killer. The books would be in first person. In the opening chapter, Quarry would do something terrible, giving readers an early chance to bail; late in the book he would again do something terrible, to confront readers with just what kind of person they’ve been easily identifying with. (…) A war-damaged Vietnam veteran. I had a good friend (now deceased) who was very much like Quarry – a sweet, smart, funny guy who learned to kill people for ‘Uncle Sugar.’” Also “I wanted to make a comment about Americans in general – that we had, through Vietnam, become numb to death. That we had grown used to watching body bags being loaded into planes as we ate our TV dinners taking in the nightly news.”
A fine (and era-appropriate) American New Wave sensibility. And really that’s what should have happened – this shouldn’t be a book that came out in 1976, it should be a cinema classic in all its grainy-7os-footage glory. Would’ve been awesome. Still could. Well, sort of – you know what I mean.
This is prototypical Quarry, and the author succeeded pretty well in his mission statement above: Quarry’s a dick, throughout, and every so often does or says something awful. This might make modern readers uncomfortable. He has a tendency to describe women by their tits and men by their ethnic stereotypes; he’s also just an asshole, in general, the type of person who's always one-upping the other person in a conversation. Is this not, though, the way it should be? Is he supposed to be a killer with a heart of gold? A passionate feminist? This is a first person POV from a guy who is not a sociopath but by virtue of body count a serial killer.
I’m staying spoiler-free for these Hard Case Crime Chronicles and sometimes that handicaps my ability to review these things the way I want to. This is a very well-constructed book. The other characters particularly a fellow Vietnam vet working for the Broker, whom Quarry instantly browbeats, much like a short-timer would for a newly arrived soldier in a Vietnam movie, reflect theme and contrast Quarry in a way not always present in the other Quarry books.
Originally published as The Dealer (1976)
As part of his plan to target other hitmen, Quarry follows one from steamy Florida to the sober Midwest, But this killer isn't a man at all - she's a sloe-eyed beauty, as dangerous in bed as she is deadly on the job. Has Quarry met his match?
Spoiler alert; he has not.
This book is kind of terrible, sorry. The whole post-Broker set-up of the Quarry books, where Quarry has the Broker's list of who has targets out on them, travels to wherever one of them may be, susses out the scene (always with more arrogance than is fun to actually read or partake in), then offers his services to the "client," is very cumbersome. Watching him talk the client into, berate the client's staff, etc. I'd have rethought this. But as it's the set-up for several books, what can you do, the deed is done.
Mostly, though, Quarry's POV is so relentlessly juvenile and silly throughout that it completely dismantles anything else going on. Here's a mash-up poem of some of the more over-the-top inner musings of our protagonist:
I was watching that Oriental-eyed woman with the big breasts.
The smile was phony, but she was good at it.
And the bustline was real, so who cared?
And the bustline was real, so who cared?
If she was here, she'd be easy enough to spot:
the Oriental eyes, the awesome breasts, how could you miss her?
Even if the room were full of women.
the Oriental eyes, the awesome breasts, how could you miss her?
Even if the room were full of women.
"I'll get right on it," Lucille said. But those Oriental eyes said Go fuck yourself.
Dark pubic hair against the whiteness of her loins.
She was an architectural wonder, this girl.
One day, if she lived long enough, those massive breasts would have to droop.
She was an architectural wonder, this girl.
One day, if she lived long enough, those massive breasts would have to droop.
Gravity, like death, is inevitable.
But right now she and her high, huge breasts were alive and well in Des Moines, Iowa.
She sure wasn't the dragon lady, not in the sack anyway.
The promise of the Oriental eyes was not delivered.
The jacket came off to reveal a yellow-and-tan-striped halter top that caressed her large breasts, cradled them like a child sleeping in a hammock.
She was on her stomach but turned to one side, hugging a pillow, against which rested one generous breast, cuddled there, not squashed, its large dark nipple soft and smooth and delicate, a flower with its petals unfolded.
Legs sprawled but gracefully so.
I wondered how decorum would feel about those two big naked boobs.
Her back-up man had almost as big tits as she did.
We humped like a couple of teenagers in the back of a car,
with a desperate, innocent horniness.
with a desperate, innocent horniness.
Amen. I don't do this to berate the author, by the way. The only thing that matters is whether or not it makes sense for the character to think/ say these things. Does it? His breast descriptions are right out of Richard Blade. Is he sitting in the chair cooly appraising the swell of areolas? Who thinks like that? Would a hardened assassin whose soul was scrubbed to the raw in Vietnam really wander through life like this? I don't now. Perhaps so. I think not, though. It works against whatever else is going on, to say the least. None of this is over the top for 70s genre fiction, really; check out any blog dedicated to paperback novels of the 1960s and 1970s and you'll quickly see the Quarry books are middle-of-the-pack offensive to modern readers, even with all the drooling over the sloe-eyed bra-busters up there.
All of which is to say: it's a combination of a writer applying too much force to a set-up that couldn't quite accommodate it. I'm a 70s-movie guy in a lot of ways; I can watch a dickhead go through the motions of a script or setting if the style is right or other factors are in play, if the mood is right. That is the case in most of these Quarry books, in fact, but it's not the case here in Quarry's Deal.
"He'd been watching Ruthy throughout, hanging on her every word, savoring everything about her with that special fatherly sort of lust that gives incest a bad name."
HCC-s05 |
Originally published as The Slasher (1977).
It's normal to see bodies on the set of an adult film. But when they're dead bodies - and the cast and crew discover they're trapped in a house with a serial killer - Quarry's got his work cut out for him.
I liked this one, though it falls apart a bit at the end. The reveal of the killer and everything after. Up to that point, though, it cruises along pretty nicely. Somewhere between Inherent Vice and Boogie Nights is a great Paul Thomas Anderson adaptation of this one; wish I could peek into that alternate timeline and watch it.
Quarry is at his most Mike Hammer-esque here, though. (Seems to me he should be at his most Mike Hammer-esque in the next one on our list, not here.) This one is dripping with 70s-isms, which were not 70s-isms at the time it was written, just nowdays-isms. I like that aspect of just about anything, but here in particular. It's appropriately sleazy.
"In my line of work, it pays to be skeptical, even paranoid, especially in the face of anything even vaguely coincidental. Otherwise, you may find yourself dead. And death is nature's way of telling you you fucked up."
HCC-s06 |
Originally published as Primary Target (1987)
Now retired and happily married, Quarry turns down a million-dollar contract to assassinate a political candidate. It's not the sort of assignment you can just walk away from without consequences - but coming after Quarry has consequences, too.
As mentioned above this one should be the most Mike-Hammer-esque of the series. But Quarry's grief/ vengeance is actually rather underplayed. He takes a little revenge against one of the people who killed his pregnant wife by letting him believe he (Quarry) is going to murder his wife and family before shooting him. ("There's no reason to believe there's anything after this life but darkness, but I wanted to make sure the son of a bitch spent a few minutes in Hell.") But outside of that the wife is pretty much a forgettable character, and her death/ the whole loss of Quarry's A-frame house on Paradise Lake is kind of shuffled into the background. There's an episode of Hawaii Five-O where we meet Dan-o's fiancee (Anne Archer) in the same episode she's killed (halfway through) and then he's over it by the end. This is a bit more in-depth than that, but Anne Archer had more of an impact than... I literally already forgot her name, had to look it up. (Linda.)
Maybe this has more to do with Anne Archer. Could be an imperfect example. This is not a bad book, but the sameness of the set-up (Quarry bullies his way into his target's graces, becomes head of security, bullies the staff, bullies the target, oversells everything, sees someone he recognizes but must hide it) is a little grating. But there's an expectation of repetition in any serial genre fiction; I mean, how many times does James Bond allow himself to be captured, etc. So not a dealbreaker.
The political side of it stops short of being explicitly all-Republicans-are-hypocritical-asshole-fascists, etc. Which is appreciated, even if it's somewhat insincere. Still: better than anything one could hope for nowadays.
"Pros these boys had not been. Even driving a brand-new car they had managed to leave a trail of stupidity all the way back home. They were lucky they were already dead, or I'd be killing them again."
HCC-102 (2011) |
Even the enigmatic hit man called Quarry had to start somewhere. And for him, that was the day he returned stateside from 'Nam to find his young wife cheating. He'd killed plenty overseas, so killing her lover was no big deal. And when he was recruited to use his skills as a contract killer. that transition was easy, too.
He survived in this jungle as he had in that other one - by expecting trouble.
What he didn't expect was ever running into her again...
The back cover copy - what I'm using for all the plot summaries - is a bit longer than usual, yet it reveals less. I mean, you basically get the character's origin story, and a restatement of the title. The actual plot has more to do with moviemaking and reflects the author's real-life experience as an indie filmmaker. That part of it is not as intrusive as it could be, mainly because the reader is right there with the protagonist learning things from the ground-up in an organic way.
A few curveballs in this one to the usual set-up with Quarry pretending to be gay as part of his cover, which leads to some unexpected plot resolutions, not to mention his ex-wife and real-world past. As in Quarry's Cut it deals with a film set where Quarry shows up and pretends he's from a magazine. Stick with what you know, I guess. The time frame (1980) works in both Quarry's and Mac's favor here. (You know, I don't know if there is a Quarry set post-Y2k, with the internet and ubiquitous surveillance and cell phones, etc. He might even get killed in another book for all I know; I've avoided finding out so far.)
As in Quarry, which featured "pert Peg Baker", this one features a fictitious Playmate, Tiffany Goodwin, who is revealed to have been Playmate of the year "half a decade ago." I kept wondering who she was supposed to be a stand-in for. (Marilyn Lange, maybe? While we're here, my guess for Peg Baker was Jan Roberts. Quarry references Playboy a lot - it's fair to try to figure out who he's talking about.). Eric Conrad - the gay male lead who comes on to Quarry - starred on a popular show about cops on a beach with lots of slow-motion running. That's not a precise fit for any 70s show I know (although this was written in 2011 so it could be a post-Pacific Blue/ Baywatch projection back in time) but I'd like to know which one he meant.
"A couple of framed desert landscapes is all that separated this from a Ramada Inn
in Who Farted, West Virginia."
HCC-118 (2015) |
Quarry is a pro in the murder business. When the man he works for becomes a targethimself, Quarry is sent South to remove a traitor in the ranks. But in this wide-open city - with sin everywhere and betrayal around every corner - Quarry must make the most dangerous choice of his deadly career: who to kill?
The moral dilemma described there and in the title wasn't as weighing as it might sound. Basically once the novel gets to that point, it's fairly obvious which character he's not going to kill. I thought back to the original character description, i.e. "late in the book he would again do something terrible, to confront readers with just what kind of person they’ve been easily identifying with." But I felt in no danger of that actually happening. Except: the whole relationship with the young girl is kind of gross altogether. So, mission accomplished.
This one is set in 1972. I'm not overly familiar with the Quarry chronology, as I've mentioned - this endeavor will remain a whatever-I-grab-off-the-shelf-in-whatever-order affair to keep it flowing at the necessary pace - but that puts it a year or so before the events described in the first Quarry aka The Broker (1976). The 70s touches (the early videotapes and TV schedule) are all appreciated. That goes for the next one as well.
"'Who was it said 'whatever one sows, so shall he reap?'
'God or some shit,' the sheriff said with a shrug.'"
HCC-130 (2017) |
Memphis, 1975. 'Raunchy' doesn't begin to describe Max Climer's magazine, Climax, or his all-hour strip club, or his planned video empire. And evangelists, feminists, and local watchdog groups all want him out of business. But someone wants more than that and has hired a killer to end Max's career permanently. Only another hit man - the ruthless professional known as Quarry - can keep Climer from becoming a casualty in the Sexual Revolution.
I loved it when I read it the first time, and I still enjoyed it on a reread, but there's that sense of repetition again. I mean, this is just a slight variation on any of the ones above with some of the same details, characters, settings, etc. You expect some repetition with these sorts of things, sure, but maybe a bit too much of a hodge-podge grab of previous books, here. The later-John-Gardner's-Bond effect, maybe.
I think Climer comes across as a cross between Al Goldstein and Larry Flynt, but the author alludes to some interesting reading on historic Memphis in his Afterword. It's worth mentioning that the short-lived Cinemax series with Logan Marshall-Green as Quarry (with author, below) was set in 1970s Memphis. I prefer the character to be a Midwestern one, but the show had its moments.
I reviewed one of the episodes at the end of this post. |
Logan's a good fit for the character. Certainly looks more like how I picture him in the books than this Jack Kirby lookalike they gave him for the Hard Case Crime covers: |
"His leisure jacket was a plaid number
from the Who-Shot-the-Couch? collection."
~
The Hard Case Crime Chronicles will continue with:
Blood Sugar by Daniel Kraus,
sooner or later.
sooner or later.