**Nominated for an Arthur Ellis Award** by the Crime Writers of Canada Montreal, 1926. Mick is down on his luck until an old pal offers him a loaded revolver and a job: riding shotgun in a truck running booze across the border. Stateside Prohibition has opened up a market for certain amusements,
The Man Who Killed
β Scribed by Nixon, Fraser
- Book ID
- 107121668
- Publisher
- Douglas & McIntyre
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 166 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781553655695
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Nominated for an Arthur Ellis Award by the Crime Writers of Canada
Montreal, 1926. Mick is down on his luck until an old pal offers him a loaded revolver and a job: riding shotgun in a truck running booze across the border. Stateside Prohibition has opened up a market for certain amusements, vicious or otherwise. Mick takes the jobΠ ΠΠ βΠ²ΠΡand his problems begin.
Through his old friend Jack, Mick falls deeper into the life of the small-time tough. From whorehouse to gentlemenβ²s club, through back alleys and deluxe hotels, jazz joints, opium dens, baseball diamonds, cheap diners and anywhere trouble is to be found, Mick burns his way through the City of Two Solitudes. Other people are in town for their own reasons. Babe Ruthβ²s here; Harry Houdini, too.
The Man Who Killed is a tale of political corruption and crime, of sexual jealousy and heartbreak, a portrait of a city after last call, of smoke-filled saloons and gunfire in the night. Shot through with dark humour and strange pathos, this is a novel of two friends who do bad things mostly for money, sometimes for fun, and the women they love.
Review
Π ΠΠ βΠ‘ΡLike Ellroyβ²s White Jazz, Nixon hotwires noir and takes it to places both great and strange, cruising a Prohibition era Montreal every bit as dangerous as Chicago, New York and Los Angeles. A mesmerizing read by a writer of enormous talent and insight.Π ΠΠ βΠ‘ΡΠ ΠΠ βΠ²ΠΡMichael Turner, author of Hard Core Logo
About the Author
Fraser Nixon was born on the West Coast and has lived in Montreal, Toronto, Paris, and Vancouver. By turns an actor, painter, electrical apprentice, and hotel night manager, he has worked as a salesman of newspaper advertising, ice cream, opera tickets, and menβ²s casual slacks. The Man Who Killed is his first novel.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
**Nominated for an Arthur Ellis Award** by the Crime Writers of Canada Montreal, 1926. Mick is down on his luck until an old pal offers him a loaded revolver and a job: riding shotgun in a truck running booze across the border. Stateside Prohibition has opened up a market for certain amusements, vi
Arthur Brownjohn has never quite got anything right. Whatever he does, it always seems to go more than a little awry. The same could be said for the murder of his wife β a bungled, inferior affair despite his having consulting all the experts in the field of killings, executions and dastardly deeds.
Arthur Brownjohn has never quite got anything right. Whatever he does, it always seems to go more than a little awry. The same could be said for the murder of his wife a bungled, inferior affair despite his having consulting all the experts in the field of killings, executions and dastardly deeds. R
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