Collected Stories (2011, Flyboy707/Jerry eBooks)

Collected Stories (2011, Flyboy707/Jerry eBooks)
Authors
Westlake, Donald E.
Publisher
Flyboy707
Tags
flyboy707 , mystery , sci fi , crime
Date
2011-10-20T22:15:52+00:00
Size
0.64 MB
Lang
en
Downloaded: 67 times

This is a small collection of Donald E. Westlake's more well-known crime and science fiction short stories; as collected by Flyboy707.

No copyright 2011 by Jerry eBooks

No rights reserved. All parts of this book may be reproduced in any form and by any means for any purpose without any prior written consent of anyone.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Donald E. Westlake was born on July 12, 1933 in Brooklyn, New York City,

New York, USA.

Westlake, a former US Air Force pilot and one time actor, has become the

writer most associated with tales of organised crime. Indeed, in story after

story, he has demonstrated his particular belief that crime is actually not

very different from any other type of business enterprise-and the intelligent

criminal is just, one more example of ‘Organisation Man’.

In Westlake’s early novels like ‘Killing Time’ (1961), about the running

of a corrupt upstate New York town, he dealt with organised crime from the

inside with great objectivity; but over the years elements of humour and the

absurd have crept into his work in the shape of bungled robberies and inept

confidence tricks.

In 1962, by way of contrast, he adopted the pen name Richard Stark and

started a series of novels about Parker, a cold-blooded professional thief, who

was later transferred to the screen in ‘Point Blank’ featuring Lee Marvin

(1967).

Not content with this, Westlake invented a second major character, Mitch

Tobin, a guilt-ridden former New York cop turned private eye, whose adventures

appear under the name Tucker Coe.

More recently still, he has begun writing a number of capers about a

group of inept thieves led by criminal manqué John Archibald Dortmunder.

For this remarkable display of virtuosity, Donald Westlake has won

numerous awards, including three Edgars and a Grand Master Award from the

Mystery Writers of America, as well as an Oscar nomination for his screenplay

of Jim Thompson’s ‘The Grifters’. In ‘The Sweetest Man in the World’, written

in 1967, he mixes his deadpan humour and fascination with organised crime in

the tale of a clever fraud... and it’s even cleverer denouement.

Donald E. Westlake died of a heart attack on Wednesday, December 31,

2008. He was 75.