Reviewed by: Keith Nixon
Genre: Crime / Noir
Approximate word count: 10-15,000 words
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Author:
Tony Black
is an award winning national journalist who covered a diverse range of stories
from crime to nightclub reviews. Tony then moved into writing crime novels,
with nine now published to critical acclaim.
More information
can be found about Tony Black on his website or blog.
Description:
Gus Dury is
a down at heel ex-reporter with a dark past. He’s kicking his heels in life
when Danny Murray, a runner for local gang boss Boaby ‘Shaky’ Stevens, asks Gus
to do a job for him – find an old friend, Barry Fulton. Gus is reluctant, but
£3,000 helps sweeten the deal. Gus quickly learns Barry has got involved with
Irish gangsters encroaching onto Shaky’s patch and, unless he finds him soon,
someone’s going to end up dead.
This
standalone novella is part of Black’s Gus Dury series, the other four (Paying For It, Gutted, Loss, and Long Time Dead) are full length novels.
Appraisal:
Long Way Down is a gem of a story. It’s
theoretically a quick read, however I found myself spending a lot longer than
normal with it simply because I wanted to stay immersed in the prose. This was
a challenge because the action starts on the first page, when Danny steps into
Gus’s sphere, and doesn’t let up.
The
characters are very strong, Gus himself clearly has a deep background with
references made to a difficult upbringing. He drinks, swears, fights – not
someone you’d want your daughter to bring home. But he’s resolute, loyal, tough
– someone you’d want at your back. The supporting cast of (few) friends and
(many) enemies are equally entertaining – Gus mixes with some dubious company.
A particular favourite is Mac the Knife, a man not to be messed with.
The dialogue
is sharp and at times witty, despite the gritty and grimly sharp Edinburgh
location which, is excellently described with a minimum of carefully chosen words
and some local vernacular. For example:
The bar was dark, dingy. In days
gone past there’d have been a pall of grey smoke you’d struggle to shine
headlamps through. Now the nicotine-stained walls and ceiling looked painfully
over-exposed – the woodchip papering would turn to writhing maggots after a few
scoops.
And another:
I picked out the smell of p*ss and
sickly-sweet Buckfast mingling on the grimy stairwell. Some of the young crew
had been in to tag the walls since my last visit, and despite being a respecter
of the creative urge I couldn’t help but think their efforts sucked balls.
Right into a hernia.
The only
‘disappointment’ with Long Way Down?
I finished it too quickly! Top drawer noir.
FYI:
Frequent strong
language.
Format/Typo Issues:
None.
Rating: ***** Five Stars.
1 comment:
I'm finding many authors are going to shorter books these days.
Ann
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