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Bank Shot [Hardcover]

Donald E. Westlake
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster; First Edition edition (April 1972)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0671211803
  • ISBN-13: 978-0671211806
  • Product Dimensions: 21.1 x 14.2 x 2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,157,623 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Donald Edwin Westlake
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Product Description

Product Description

With the help of an unusual set of cronies, bank robber John Dortmunder puts a set of wheels under a trailer that just happens to be the temporary site of the Capitalists' & Immigrants' Trust and hauls it away. But when the safe won't open and the cops get close, Dortmunder realizes he's got to find a place to ditch the "bank". --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Donald Mitchell HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
John Dortmunder is a careful guy who is always looking for a reasonable way to make crime pay. Between major jobs, he's pulling the old "give me a deposit for the encyclopedia" con, working door-to-door in the suburbs. During the recession in the early 1970s, he can earn a pretty decent living doing this. But Mae (his live-in girl friend) knows that Dortmunder needs something to occupy his mind. So when the crazy ex-FBI agent kid shows up with a nutty scheme to steal a whole bank, she encourages Dortmunder to plan it out. From that humble beginning, the humorous complications just keep piling on in unexpected ways!

Donald Westlake is a master of setting up the absolutely ridiculous situation. He uses the Dortmunder character as a surrogate for the reader's perspective, so you can laugh at how you would react in the same situation. Like Jane Langton, he also likes to have fun with pointing out how people miss what is just under their noses.

The book is also a satire on all of those great theft stories, like The Thomas Crown Affair, in which little is what it seems. The difference is that this is The Thomas Crown Affair Meets the Three Stooges. Dortmunder's gang is as rag-tag a group as you can imagine, but they manage to keep stumbling forward.

I particularly admired how the same story element of the bank's mobility is reused time and again for different plot and humor developments. Mr. Westlake is a most imaginative writer!

One of the book's most interesting themes is that a piece of good luck is always met by a piece of bad luck, and vice versa. These reversals take the story off in all kinds of unexpected ways (not unlike the unfolding of The Sting).

The basic plot revolves around a quite clever idea, using a bank office located in a mobile home as a large version of the letter in "The Purloined Letter." If you were planning to steal a bank, where would you hide it? I know that my drives will never be the same in the future. I'll be looking for places to hide banks!

Mr. Westlake does a marvelous job of keeping the reader in suspense about how the story will end. I suspect that few will guess the book's final three scenes.

This audio cassette version of the book is very well in presenting the dry humor necessary to carry off the wonderfully witty fictional pictures Westlake draws in your mind.

After you finish this story, I suggest that you think about places where you could accomplish your goal better by taking on a larger goal. For example, if you want enough money to retire at age 55, how about setting a goal of being able to create more wealth whenever you want? That idea may sound ridiculous, but public companies can issue more stock . . . and have more cash . . . in all but the worst market environments. So starting a company that can go public could better fulfill your retirement goal than just focusing on the retirement goal itself. Where else can raising the bar be helpful?

Can you take your best shot to the bank?

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Was this review helpful to you?
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Definitely a classic 2 April 2003
Format:Paperback
Bank Shot has become one of my favourites a long ago. It is full of very alive characters, people with wit and luck - good and bad. The plot is masterful, the events hilarious. Highly recommendable reading. Not a vicious, terrible story of crime, but a humorous and warm tale of people and events that are outside the law, but not too far..
Comment | 
Was this review helpful to you?
By Donald Mitchell HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
John Dortmunder is a careful guy who is always looking for a reasonable way to make crime pay. Between major jobs, he's pulling the old "give me a deposit for the encyclopedia" con, working door-to-door in the suburbs. During the recession in the early 1970s, he can earn a pretty decent living doing this. But Mae (his live-in girl friend) knows that Dortmunder needs something to occupy his mind. So when the crazy ex-FBI agent kid shows up with a nutty scheme to steal a whole bank, she encourages Dortmunder to plan it out. From that humble beginning, the humorous complications just keep piling on in unexpected ways!

Donald Westlake is a master of setting up the absolutely ridiculous situation. He uses the Dortmunder character as a surrogate for the reader's perspective, so you can laugh at how you would react in the same situation. Like Jane Langton, he also likes to have fun with pointing out how people miss what is just under their noses.

The book is also a satire on all of those great theft stories, like The Thomas Crown Affair, in which little is what it seems. The difference is that this is The Thomas Crown Affair Meets the Three Stooges. Dortmunder's gang is as rag-tag a group as you can imagine, but they manage to keep stumbling forward.

I particularly admired how the same story element of the bank's mobility is reused time and again for different plot and humor developments. Mr. Westlake is a most imaginative writer!

One of the book's most interesting themes is that a piece of good luck is always met by a piece of bad luck, and vice versa. These reversals take the story off in all kinds of unexpected ways (not unlike the unfolding of The Sting).

The basic plot revolves around a quite clever idea, using a bank office located in a mobile home as a large version of the letter in "The Purloined Letter." If you were planning to steal a bank, where would you hide it? I know that my drives will never be the same in the future. I'll be looking for places to hide banks!

Mr. Westlake does a marvelous job of keeping the reader in suspense about how the story will end. I suspect that few will guess the book's final three scenes.

This audio cassette version of the book is very well in presenting the dry humor necessary to carry off the wonderfully witty fictional pictures Westlake draws in your mind.

After you finish this story, I suggest that you think about places where you could accomplish your goal better by taking on a larger goal. For example, if you want enough money to retire at age 55, how about setting a goal of being able to create more wealth whenever you want? That idea may sound ridiculous, but public companies can issue more stock . . . and have more cash . . . in all but the worst market environments. So starting a company that can go public could better fulfill your retirement goal than just focusing on the retirement goal itself. Where else can raising the bar be helpful?

Can you take your best shot to the bank?

Comment | 
Was this review helpful to you?
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