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Frumious Bandersnatch, The: A Novel of the 87th Precinct (Mcbain, ed)
 
 

Frumious Bandersnatch, The: A Novel of the 87th Precinct (Mcbain, ed) (Hardcover)

by Ed McBain (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: James Bennett Pty Ltd; 1st edition edition (Jan 2004)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0743250346
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743250344
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 15.7 x 3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 1,014,862 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

When the hottest hip-hop star nobody's ever heard of is kidnapped right in the middle of the launch party for her new video, the crime lands on the desk of 87th precinct cop Steve Carella and makes Tamar Valparaiso famous overnight. This might be the point--or not. In the capable hands of a master storyteller such as Ed McBain, who breathes new life and not a little wit into every one of his police procedurals, even a somewhat hackneyed plot is fresh and interesting. And even if the cultural references to Lewis Carroll don't intrigue you, the progress of Fat Ollie's new romance with a voluptuous cop likely will. --Jane Adams, Amazon.com --This text refers to the Paperback edition.


IRISH INDEPENDENT

"Up-to-the-minute, witty and clever." --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Is Ed Mcbain God?, 13 Jan 2004
By D Stuart "Scottish Terrier" (Edinburgh, Scotland) - See all my reviews
I first discovered Ed Mcbain more years ago than I care to admit.
He has written more than 50 books featuring the 87th Precinct and its squad of detectives. There have been some blips on the way, He who hesitates and Money,Money, but in general terms the books merit 5 stars. This is in contrast to some of his so called rivals, Patricia Cornwell, J Kellerman etc, who churn out a book a year from a more and more threadbare pallette. Bandersnatch crackles with energy from start to finish centring on the kidnap of a popsinger during the launch of her debut album. The 87th precinct detectives land the case with the help(?) of the FBI.The main protagonist is Steve Carella but there are cameo appearances from Andy Parker, Bert Kling Cotton Hawes, Lt Byrne and Fat Olly. Incidentally Olly is still looking for his book. This is a must read for fans.New readers get on the case asap.
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Missing Starlet, 10 May 2004
By Untouchable (Sydney, NSW Australia) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
The 87th Precinct is one of the most enduring series that I have ever come across, certainly the series that defined the modern police procedural. The series started in 1956 and now consists of over 50 books and is still going as strongly as ever, at its strongest when involved with the spadework that is the foundation of most police investigations.

The regular characters who have become very familiar over the many years are back again, reliable and solid detectives such as Steve Carella, Bert Kling, Cotton Hawes, Meyer Meyer, Arthur Brown and Andy Parker. Over the years their personalities and relationships have slowly been established, but they don’t really feature prominently in any one book. The focus is always on the crimes and the methods employed to solve them, so much so that each book could almost be read as a stand-alone.

The strength of the 87th Precinct books lies in the investigation techniques used to carefully piece together the puzzle of the crime. Whether it's an interview transcript in which the dialogue is fast, furious and very realistic or a search of telephone transcripts, the fascination is in the way the pieces begin to fall into place for the detectives. And on the detectives, I also enjoy the clipped dialogue between them as they work the case. It adds a certain edgy quality to the story giving a no-nonsense feel. It smacks of realism.

Of course, what isn't real is the city that the 87th Precinct can be found. Isola is the fictional setting for all books in the series, often billed as the big, bad city. It's fairly common knowledge, though that Isola is in fact Manhattan and it can be quite fun to try to work out the equivalent landmarks in and around New York City and equate them to McBain's Isola.

Tara Valparaiso is about to make it big as a pop diva, at least, that’s what Barney Loomis, head of Bison Records hopes. He’s hosting the launch of her new CD titled Bandersnatch and the hard sell is being made to attending media and important guests.

Partway through the performance of the song that should launch Tara to super-stardom, the party is rudely interrupted by a couple of masked men carrying guns. They boldly stride in and kidnap the budding songstress from under the noses of over 100 onlookers.

The part of the river that the kidnapping took place happens to fall under the jurisdiction of the 87th Precinct and the detective who happens to catch the call is Steve Carella. Long time readers of this series would probably agree that Carella is the best and brightest of the 87th Precinct detectives, certainly he’s the central character in most of the books and he takes the lead again here.

The case is only in the 87th Precinct’s hands for a short time before the FBI become involved and takes over. Carella however is enlisted to help on the task force at the request of Barney Loomis. As can be imagined neither the FBI nor Carella are thrilled at the prospect of working together and it isn’t terribly long before Carella walks out on the team turning the investigation into a head to head race between the FBI and the 87th Precinct to catch the kidnappers and find the girl.

It’s only when Carella leaves the FBI task force and begins investigating using the tried and true methods that have made the series so popular and long-lived, that the pace picks up. That's not to say the first half of the book was terribly slow, but it does seem to spend a good deal of time in setting up the adversarial atmosphere between the kidnappers and the law enforcement agencies.

One tiny annoyance was the portrayal of the FBI in this book. Painting FBI agents as egotistical fools has been done many times before, particularly when the police are the heroes, and so it happens again in this case. While I thought that this was a rather clichéd scenario which led to an obvious outcome, McBain has overcome it somewhat by giving the book a rather shocking ending by throwing in a touch of the unexpected.

For fans of the 87th Precinct series and also for newcomers, I recommend THE FRUMIOUS BANDERSNATCH as a terrific example of a police procedural, written by the master of the sub-genre.

There is a curious side story involving a semi-regular character named Oliver “Ollie” Weeks, a police detective who works at the 88th Precinct. Ollie is in the early stages of a new romance with a uniformed officer and the story constantly flashes to the progress of their various dates. I kept expecting Ollie's story to somehow be linked to the case but it never happened. It appears that the Ollie Weeks story was just meant to simmer and may perhaps be continued in a later book. This is just pure speculation on my part, though.

There were also signs that Ed McBain was poking a bit of fun at the series, particularly when it comes to the agelessness of his characters. In one scene, Cotton Hawes was entering a building and noticed some elderly people drinking cups of coffee and wondered what it must be like to grow older, to reach your fifties or sixties. Given that the series is bearing down on it's 50th year and Cotton Hawes has barely aged a year in all that time, it's no wonder he's starting to grow curious about the elderly. Meanwhile, the detectives now have the benefit of the latest technology such as mobile phones and the Internet to assist them. It's a fascinating paradox of time and technological advancement clashing with the timelessness of the characters. And I'm sure Ed McBain is having a chuckle in this book.

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1.0 out of 5 stars A disappointment, 21 April 2006
I've been a dedicated 87th precinct reader for many years but I found this book a disappointment. The usual characters were there but the plot was weak and far fetched. I found myself having to skim chunks in the hope that it would pick up but it didn't. Read 'The Big Bad City' instead. It's one hundred times better than this one.
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