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Kiss Her Goodbye: An Otto Penzler Book (Mike Hammer Novels)

von Mickey Spillane, Max Allan Collins

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Returning to 1970s New York to investigate an old friend's alleged suicide, Mike Hammer is drawn into a hunt for a cache of Nazi diamonds and a beautiful missing woman who had been close to the victim in his final days.
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The pacing in this novel is absolutely perfect. Reading this, it's easy to
see how many of today's crime thrillers are but imitations of Spillane's
writing. There are no wasted words. The novel takes Hammer back into the depths of seventies New York, and from the Special VIP room of Studio 54 to the honeymoon suite of a major hotel with a sexy female attorney.
Hammer takes pleasure in killing and he's no slouch at it here with a
terrific body count. There's murders and drug smuggling and Nazi loot
and a shoot out with major implications. It was a flawless read and impossible to a discern who wrote whichpart. Great stuff.
( )
  DaveWilde | Sep 22, 2017 |
I have to say, I did not enjoy Kiss Her Goodbye as much as the previous Collins-completed "lost Hammer novel" from the sixties era, The Big Bang. This one brings Hammer into the '70s, and Mike Hammer is returning to New York after an extended absence in Florida, recovering from his previous exploits, to solve the apparent suicide of his mentor. Mike just isn't his old self, and Velda is nowhere to be found. It just wasn't the same---Hammer decrepit and on pain pills that cloud his mind, and I really missed Velda's presence.

But it all comes together in the end. Hammer comes around, solves the mystery, and dispenses his brand of satisfying (if somewhat questionable) justice. The mystery turns out to be a pretty good one, too...the solution isn't exactly what I expected at first, but all the loose ends are tied in and it makes sense. But there are a few slow stretches on the way there, when the story doesn't feel like it's really moving along. Still...stick with it to the end.

And to all those who feel like they have to say the Mike Hammer novels (including this one) aren't well written, by way of apology to the self-appointed literary establishment, in order to feel okay about indulging in this supposedly guilty pleasure, I say NONSENSE! Stylistically, Spillane, and to a somewhat lesser extent Collins imitating Spillane, is actually quite good---not always consistently, but when he's on, he's REALLY on and not many other writers can touch him...the imagery (and general sensory descriptiveness), the strong stylization such that you KNOW when you're reading Spillane (in a good way), the sense of immediacy like you're actually witnessing the events of the story---this is writing that frequently approaches artistry of the highest caliber (pardon the pun!). It's in the story department that this particular novel falls down, or at least staggers a little before picking itself back up and finishing with a characteristic flourish.

And the audio edition narrated by Stacy Keach (to whom the book is dedicated for his brilliant portrayal of Hammer in various media over the decades) is excellently produced. I'd definitely recommend it, even though this isn't the strongest Hammer novel on the whole. ( )
  AshRyan | Jul 26, 2012 |
I read the book when it first came out and forgot to catalog it. I picked it up a second time and the story came back to me. I enjoy the character of Mike Hammer and the writings of Mickey Spillane and Max Collins has done an admirable job of working within Mickey's style. Since the details of the story escape me, I'm going with this generic note that anything by Spillane is worth reading if you love detective stories, especially those in the old style. ( )
  phoenixcomet | Jan 11, 2012 |
I went through this phase in high school where I just inhaled super macho men's thrillers.  Mostly I alternated between Clive Cussler and Mickey Spillane, with some Stephen Hunter thrown in for variation.  As a result, I'm super sentimental about all three authors even though it's been more than a decade since I've read any of their books. 

I'd sort of forgotten about Mike Hammer until spotting the newest one on NetGalley and suddenly, that's all I wanted in the world.  As I said, it had been more than ten years since I last read a Mike Hammer novel, but from the first sentence, Kiss Her Goodbye felt just like what I remembered Hammer novels to be: punchy, violent, sorta sexy, grim, and dead fun.

The writing had everything I wanted (craved, even) from a Mike Hammer novel: smart, sly banter; straightforward mystery, sexy women, bad criminals, and a morally ambiguous hero.  Perhaps if I read an earlier Mike Hammer novel just before starting this one, I might have been able to discern where Spillane ended and Collins began, but in the two days it took me to finish this one, I didn't catch an off note or uncharacteristic response.  (In fact, the only change I noticed was with me: I'm a little more squeamish about the violence!) 

This can be read as a stand-alone novel for anyone new to Mike Hammer -- enough context is given to explain past characters and plots --  and certainly anyone familiar with the series will enjoy this offering. ( )
  unabridgedchick | Mar 17, 2011 |
Mike Hammer has been away from New York too long. Recuperating in Florida after a deadly mob shootout, the private eye learns that an old mentor on the New York police force has committed suicide. Hammer returns for the funeral—and because he knows that Inspector Doolan would never have killed himself. But Manhattan in the 1970s no longer feels like home. Hammer’s lovely longtime partner, Velda, has disappeared after he broke it off for her own safety, and his office is shut down. 

When a woman is murdered practically on the funeral home’s doorstep, Hammer is drawn into the hunt for a cache of Nazi diamonds that makes the Maltese Falcon seem like a knickknack, and for the mysterious beauty who had been close to Doolan in his final days. But drug racketeers, who had it in for the tough old police inspector, attract Hammer’s attention as well. Soon he is hobnobbing with coke-snorting celebrities at the notorious disco Club 52 and playing footsie with a sleek lady D.A., a modern female on the make for oldfashioned Hammer. Everything leads to a Mafia social club where Hammer and his .45 come calling, initiating the wildest showdown since Spillane’s classic *One Lonely Night*.

### Review

"The violent death of his old cop mentor calls Mike Hammer back to New York and more of the same death-dealing intrigue he first made his specialty in *I, the Jury* 64 years ago.

According to Capt. Pat Chambers, all the evidence indicates that Insp. Bill Doolan, retired and facing the end stages of cancer, shot himself in the heart. But Mike (*The Big Bang*, 2010, etc.) isn’t buying it, and it’s not long before new evidence bears him out. A waitress is killed in a senseless mugging only a few blocks from Doolan’s funeral. A friendly hooker who has dinner with Mike is struck by a hit-and-run driver who was obviously aiming for her companion. The waitress’s ex-boyfriend, who supposedly left town years ago, turns up dead. What can an aging private eye do? "I was older. I was jaded. I was retired," reflects Mike. "*But I was still Mike Hammer*." Naturally, he’s lionized by everyone in the Big Apple, from rookie Congressman Alex Jaynor to kinky ADA Angela Marshall to reformed crime-family scion Anthony ("don’t call me Little Tony") Tretriano, to hot Latina chanteuse Chrome, who sings in Anthony’s club, to Alberto Bonetti, the druglord whose son Sal Mike killed in self-defense. Sal will be followed into the great beyond by over two dozen souls, most of them sent hither by Mike.

Working from an unfinished novel by the late Spillane, Collins provides the franchise’s trademark winking salacity, self-congratulatory vigilantism and sadistic violence, topped off with a climax that combines the final scenes of two of Mike’s most celebrated cases." --Kirkus Reviews

### About the Author

MICKEY SPILLANE (1918–2006) sold hundreds of millions of books. He introduced iconic detective Mike Hammer to readers in 1947 with *I, the Jury*, and was named a Mystery Writers of America Grand Master in 1995.

MAX ALLAN COLLINS is the author of many works, including the best-selling graphic novel *Road to Perdition* and the Shamus-winning Nathan Heller novels. ( )
Diese Rezension wurde von mehreren Benutzern als Missbrauch der Nutzungsbedingungen gekennzeichnet und wird nicht mehr angezeigt (Anzeigen).
  Hans.Michel | Sep 13, 2013 |
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AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Spillane, MickeyHauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Collins, Max AllanHauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
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Returning to 1970s New York to investigate an old friend's alleged suicide, Mike Hammer is drawn into a hunt for a cache of Nazi diamonds and a beautiful missing woman who had been close to the victim in his final days.

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