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Elmore Leonard Goes Hollywood
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18248 |
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BOOK WORLD
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10 / 1990 |
3,069 Words |
| Author
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Charles White Charles White has written about films, books, and popular
culture for the Chicago Sub-Times and other publications in
Chicago. |
GET SHORTY
Elmore Leonard
New York: Delacorte Press, 1990
292 pp., $ 18.95
In his latest novel, Get Shorty, Elmore Leonard turns to a location that is both new and old. Get Shorty is the first of Leonard's novels to be literally set in Hollywood. Figuratively, though, they've all been set there. From his first days as a writer, more than forty years ago, Leonard has been inspired by films and amused by their often ludicrous impact on the way we think. Get Shorty, an uneven mixture of satire and suspense, is suffused with Leonard's enjoyment of the cons, hustles, and dreams of a town where everybody is on the make.
Get Shorty has even less plot than most of Leonard's books. That doesn't mean that it and the others don't have plenty of action. They do. But his books rarely have intricate, carefully crafted plots that spur the action from beginning to end. Loose and improvisational, they follow the impulses of the characters, usually in three or four main story lines that work their way out over the course of the book, sometimes interacting, sometimes separately. Leonard's books are driven by no grand vision, but by the rhythm of their schemes and scenes, by the twists and dodges of the small-time hoods and drifters who populate his world.
Get Shorty begins in Miami, where a very minor gangster named Chili Palmer makes a pretty good living as a shylock - a loan collector for the mob. His job is to collect the vig, the weekly interest of 3 percent. At 150 percent interest a year, his clients
... (1996 of 17051 Characters)
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