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E. Howard Hunt (1918–2007)

Autor von House dick

67+ Werke 584 Mitglieder 10 Rezensionen

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Hinweis zur Begriffsklärung:

(eng) P. S. Donoghue and Robert Dietrich are two of the pen names of E. Howard Hunt (of Watergate infamy), who wrote crime novels later in life. These names are combined into this author page. He also used the names Gordon Davis and David St. John; since there are other authors with those names the works are aliased to this page.

Reihen

Werke von E. Howard Hunt

House dick (1961) 126 Exemplare
Give us this day (1973) 19 Exemplare
The Dublin Affair (1988) 16 Exemplare
Diabolus (1971) 15 Exemplare
The Coven (1972) 15 Exemplare
The Gaza Intercept (1981) 13 Exemplare
Sonora (2000) 13 Exemplare
Guilty Knowledge (1999) 12 Exemplare
The Hargrave deception (1980) 11 Exemplare
Dragon Teeth (1997) 11 Exemplare
The House on Q Street (1959) 11 Exemplare
Steve Bentley's Calypso Caper (1961) 10 Exemplare
The Sorcerers (1969) 10 Exemplare
Angel Eyes (1961) 9 Exemplare
Mistress to Murder (1960) 9 Exemplare
ONE FOR THE ROAD (1954) 9 Exemplare
Return from Vorkuta (1965) 9 Exemplare
The Venus Probe (1966) 8 Exemplare
Young Men on Fire: A Novel (2003) 8 Exemplare
Murder in State (1990) 8 Exemplare
Limit of Darkness (1985) 8 Exemplare
East of Farewell (1942) 8 Exemplare
The Towers of Silence (1966) 8 Exemplare
Be My Victim (1956) 7 Exemplare
The Mongol Mask (1969) 7 Exemplare
The Sankov Confession (1989) 7 Exemplare
The Kremlin Conspiracy (1985) 7 Exemplare
Murder on the Rocks (1957) 7 Exemplare
Murder on Her Mind (1960) 7 Exemplare
Guadalajara (1990) 6 Exemplare
One of Our Agents is Missing (1967) 6 Exemplare
No Heaven (1985) 6 Exemplare
The Violent Ones (1951) 6 Exemplare
The Judas Hour (1959) 5 Exemplare
Stranger in town (1947) 5 Exemplare
Festival for Spies (1966) 5 Exemplare
Mazatlán (1993) 5 Exemplare
From Cuba, With Love (1974) (1974) 5 Exemplare
Bimini Run (1973) 5 Exemplare
The Berlin Ending (1973) 5 Exemplare
My Body (1973) 4 Exemplare
Whisper Her Name (1973) 4 Exemplare
Curtains for a Lover (1962) 3 Exemplare
Islamorada (1995) 3 Exemplare
Chinese Red (1989) 3 Exemplare
The Cheat (2020) 3 Exemplare
Sveket (1981) 3 Exemplare
On Hazardous Duty 2 Exemplare
Cozumel (1985) 2 Exemplare
Ixtapa (Jack Novak) (1994) 2 Exemplare
The bishop (1999) 2 Exemplare
The Paris Edge (1995) 2 Exemplare
Body Count (1992) 2 Exemplare
Cruel Is the Night (1955) 1 Exemplar
Maelstrom (1948) 1 Exemplar
I Came to Kill (1953) 1 Exemplar
Hotel Omicidi 1 Exemplar
Evil Time (1992) 1 Exemplar
All's Well 1 Exemplar
Izmir (Jack Novak) (1996) 1 Exemplar
End of a Stripper (1959) 1 Exemplar

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Bookmark Now: Writing in Unreaderly Times (2005) — Mitwirkender — 254 Exemplare

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Wissenswertes

Gebräuchlichste Namensform
Hunt, E. Howard
Andere Namen
Dietrich, Robert
Donoghue, P. S.
St. John, David
Davis, Gordon
Baxter, John
Geburtstag
1918-10-09
Todestag
2007-01-23
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
USA
Land (für Karte)
USA
Ausbildung
Brown University
Berufe
convicted Watergate burglar
CIA officer
Beziehungen
St John Hunt (Son)
Hinweis zur Identitätsklärung
P. S. Donoghue and Robert Dietrich are two of the pen names of E. Howard Hunt (of Watergate infamy), who wrote crime novels later in life. These names are combined into this author page. He also used the names Gordon Davis and David St. John; since there are other authors with those names the works are aliased to this page.

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

I love these old '50s adventure stories where every woman is a whore and every man is a hero. If only life were black and white like that, wouldn't it all be simpler? Great escape book!
 
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AngelaLam | Feb 8, 2022 |
murder, blood, blackmail, etc. in Washington hotel, forgettable
 
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ritaer | 4 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 19, 2021 |
Next we will be reading books by G Gordon Liddy and Charles Colson. E Howard Hunt is best known as one of Dick Nixon's "plumbers," a secret team of operatives fixing leaks, which included breaking into Daniel Ellsberg's office and forging State Department cables designed to make JFK look bad. Hunt masterminded the first Watergate burglary and served nearly three years in prison for his role in the scandal. In addition to being a criminal, Hunt served for twenty years as a CIA operative and even a station chief. He was highly involved in the Bay of Pigs fiasco and, as he died in 2007, hinted that LBJ had been involved in the JFK assassination.

Strangely enough, Hunt wrote many novels. Beginning in the early forties, he penned a number of spy novels under his own name and under various pen names. His spy novels were informed by his experience in the CIA and are considered quite intriguing for that reason. All told, Hunt may have published as many as 41 fictional novels and 4 nonfiction books over the course of fifty years.
House Dick was originally published in 1961 under the pen name Gordon Davis and published by Gold Medal. It is, quite unbelievably I might add, a terrific hardboiled book that I highly recommend. It has recently been republished by Hard Case. It stands up quite well with other books of the era. It is a quick- reading story that I found hard to put down.

The protagonist, Peter Novack, is, as the title suggests, the House Detective, at a large 350-room Washington, D.C., hotel. He is grumpy, sour, and, although, on the surface a bit crooked and corrupt, a guy who ends up doing decent things. The tone throughout the book is dark. The story is about a "a girl in a platinum mink coat walking toward the reception desk." "The girl was an ash blonde" and "walked with her head thrown back, her heels making subdued clicking sounds on the marble floor of the lobby." "[H]er eyes were as grey as the furs she wore." This is Ms. Paula Norton, who is the femme fatale of this story. She has a very wealthy sugar daddy. She also has a mean mobster she was once married to and who has found her again. And, Novack, tough as he is, falls for, hook, line, and sinker. The story is about a wealthy couple who stays at the hotel and reports and then unreports missing jewels. Mrs. Boyd "was a tinted brunette in the mid-forties with bon-bon jowls and arms like rolls of biscuit dough. Her fleshly feet were jammed into pointed slippers two sizes too small and her face was heavily powdered to improve an uncertain complexion."

Hunt can write descriptive phrases like nobody's business. The dialogue, the scenery, the tone, all works and all feels like your typical hardboiled detective novel. You have your femme fatale, your gangsters, your police detectives, your murders, your kidnappings, your stolen jewels, and the story that flows quite well through all its twists and turns. And, Hunt can write fight scenes quite well too: "The man gurgled and his eyes went wild. From the hips up his body started to shake. Novak slapped the other cheek. Harder and a little lower. A drop of blood appeared on the man's upper lip. His face was scarlet now, jaw muscles working like a skein of worms."

I never thought I would read a hardboiled detective novel by one of the Watergate burglars or that the novel would have been written, not while the burglar was cooling his heels in prison, but years before. Nor would I have thought that it would be just as compelling as many of the other Gold Medal or Fawcett books published at that time.
… (mehr)
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DaveWilde | 4 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 22, 2017 |
E. Howard Hunt. Now there's a name that brings back memories. And not particularly pleasant ones as a member of the “plumbers.” On the other hand, he served in the Navy during WW II on destroyers and as this book was written in 1942 while he was out there living the book.

It takes place on a destroyer on convoy duty. Each chapter is preceded by a short italicized section on preparing the ship, following by perspectives from members of the crew, each with a short bio. While clearly fictional, I suspect the characters had considerable basis from his experience.

Blacks had no place except as servants to the officers. Their world was “yessuh,” no matter whether they were seasick or had other difficulties. The captain was angry because their ship hosted the commodore who second guessed his every move. Others had come from farms. All felt the drudgery.

And I never realized until I went to sea how much you can hate something that you can’t beat … something that wins over you whenever you’re tired … something that won’t let you rest … where there is never anything but the feel of the spray and the shock of the waves and the blackness of night and the fog-gray days and always the sea. Always the sea and the tearing wind and no place ever to lie still while your heart pounds with the feel of the sea and your brain is tight with the smell of the sea and your belly is hollow with the fear of it, and always the ship goes on through the night and the days that are not day.

The theme and writing reminded me a little of Alistair MacLean. If you enjoy nautical fiction, you will like this book. Not up to Marley Mowat, or Herman Wouk, but good enough and of historical interest since it was written during the war it portrays.
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ecw0647 | Dec 1, 2015 |

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67
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½ 3.3
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