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Kiss Me Quick

by Danny Miller

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1741,252,707 (2.67)1
Set in Brighton over the bank holiday weekend of 1964, an ambitious and handsome young detective named Vince Treadwell is sent down to solve a murder and catch the elusive and powerful gangster, Jack Regent. In the tangled web of the crime, Vince falls for Jack's beautiful girlfriend, Bobbie LaVita, and discovers the truth about their own dark pasts. Kiss Me Quick goes behind the headlines of rioting Mods and Rockers, and into the deadly world of a secret Corsican crime organization, a burgeoning drug trade, police corruption, pornography rackets, and the dark side of the music business. With its elaborate and compelling plot, a cast of deliciously treacherous and vividly drawn characters, this page turning thriller introduces us to the dangerous world of Vince Treadwell.… (more)
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Showing 4 of 4
Having read this on holiday, I was amazed on my return to goodreads to read the positive reviews for this book. I brought this one and its sequel for my kindle pile and I'm not sure I'll get around around to reading the second one.
Set in 60's Brighton [mainly] during the Mods/Rockers rivalry, it is an overlong, clunky non-thriller, focusing on a missing crime lord and his retinue. It is not really a police procedural and I found the hero (?) tiresome and the plot laboured. ( )
  johnwbeha | Nov 18, 2015 |
“The Rolling Stones? They won’t last.”

I’m pretty sure that the knowing smirk invited by comments like the one above is the only reason I occasionally read historical fiction.

‘Kiss Me Quick’ is set in 1960s Brighton and features mods, rockers, gangsters and a massively corrupt police force, so there’ll be drugs, violence, fighting and attempts at historical accuracy. Meh. This is another book that wouldn’t have gained my attention if it hadn’t been this month’s book group choice; although I like Brighton as a setting I’m not interested in gangsters and my only experience of reading Martina Cole (whose name is pretty much synonymous with London gangsters) did nothing to increase their appeal. Fortunately, I was surprised to find this quite an appealing read, though perhaps in spite of the plot. Speaking of which:

What’s it about?

When a headless, handless body washes up on Brighton beach, young detective Vincent Treadwell is sent down from London to investigate. This would be an excellent endorsement of his detective skills, if he weren’t being sent away from London primarily to stop him causing trouble for his fellow, rather less honest, coppers. Oh well, perhaps his honest nature will be better received by the Brighton constabulary? (Hint: nope.)

While looking into the murder, Vincent is also keen to discover the whereabouts of local gangster and legend, Jack Regent, whose notoriety made him the bogeyman of Vince’s Brightonian childhood. Jack himself is understandably elusive, but Vince is soon getting rather too close to Jack’s girlfriend, Bobbie LaVita. Can Vince find Jack? Or will Jack find him?

What’s it like?

Atmospheric, over-written, humorous, brutal. Horribly brutal. In the first chapter a woman’s throat is violently slit, but this is nothing compared to The Eye Thing. When I attended the book group meeting for ‘Kiss Me Quick’ I hadn’t yet managed to read more than half and was mystified by talk of ‘The Eye Thing‘. Suffice to say, I can now understand why the discussion was accompanied by shudders and head shakes. If you’re squeamish, you should probably look elsewhere for your crime fix. (One book group colleague couldn’t bear to read past page 10. Yikes.) Fortunately (or maybe worryingly?) reading so much crime writing in the last few years seems to have desensitised me somewhat and I didn’t feel the need to put the book down at all.

Something I found more difficult was adjusting to Miller’s style. I wasn’t surprised to discover he’s a screenwriter; the sheer volume of adjectives and other descriptive paraphernalia made some scenes feel unnecessarily drawn-out. Examples of verbiage abound: in the first few pages we find “sharp sodium wind” and “tall Georgian terraced town houses”, while “her long, shiny auburn tresses were wrapped around his hand like silk rope” and someone wears a “long perfectly tailored camelhair overcoat”. Whole paragraphs are devoted to the description of characters. Fortunately, this ceased to bother me after the opening chapters, though I’m not sure whether this is because I’d adapted to Miller’s style or because he became marginally more concise. I suspect the former.

I did enjoy Miller’s playfulness with language and timing: something appears “exotic, almost erotic”, which is surely just an excuse to play with the sounds of those words, and modern knowledge of what were contemporary musicians is used to help reveal which characters are genuinely insightful and which we should laugh at. The writing is also deliciously atmospheric:

“Clouds of reefer smoke hung in the air like incense, and the crowd moved with the kind of swampy rhythm that only potent ganja produces. They weren’t so much dancing to the music as dancing in the music.”

Miller almost forces you to picture the scene, which I quite enjoyed.

So is it good?

Despite finding Vince a broadly sympathetic character, I was surprised to learn that this book is the start of a series. Vince’s escapades seemed very firmly rooted in this particular set of circumstances and his relationship with club owner Bobbie often seemed more important than the crime he was meant to be solving. I’m not sure I’d be bothered enough to read a second installment, though I did quite enjoy reading this.

Speaking of crime solving, if you prefer straightforward murder > clues > solution type tales then this may not be the best story for you. By the end of the book the initial crimes have almost ceased to be relevant and there’s so much plot inbetween that it can be difficult to follow if you take too long a break between chapters.

The ending is suitably traditional (and therefore potentially irritating): the final 100 pages or so seem to largely involve criminals seeking to explain their actions and anticipating killing their potential victims rather than just getting on with the murder they’re meant to relish so much. We all know how this ends and I can assure you that if I ever wanted to knock someone off, I wouldn’t waste half so much time talking about it first.

Final thoughts

So is it worth reading? Yes, if you like wordy, descriptive crime novels with predictable plot developments. (Really predictable, if you’re even half paying attention.) It’s worth reading this for the atmosphere and the language, but not for the crimes. The title itself screams cliché, so don’t be surprised to find a few lurking within. Would I read it again? Probably not, but it was sufficiently enjoyable to read once. ( )
  brokenangelkisses | Feb 24, 2015 |
I was expecting a crime thriller along the lines of Jake Arnott's excellent He Kills Coppers, but Danny Miller's debut novel is more of a poor man's noiresque Raymond Chandler copy. Miller's vision of the dark and violent underbelly of his seaside home town is convincing if not appealing, but the narrative style keeps straying from 1960s Brighton to 1950s Hollywood. The trouble is that Miller only shows himself up by trying to ape Chandler and Hammett. His characters are recognisable - the handsome but jaded detective, the tough gangster's moll who falls for him, plus the supporting cast of larger than life criminals and corrupt policemen - but the writing and dialogue are lacking in wit, originality and, most importantly, punchy similes. 'A voice deader than the deadest of deadpans' and 'colder than gazpacho soup' don't quite make the grade.

Where Miller came undone for me was in trying to build his detective character, Vincent Treadwell, into a British Philip Marlowe or Sam Spade. Applying the arrogance and glamour of 1950s America to the seedy thuggery of London and Brighton in the 1960s doesn't quite work. I couldn't take Vince or his paramour Bobbie seriously because both were straight out of central casting, and the convoluted plot, full of drugs, pornography, underworld infighting and bent coppers, even lacked enough style to cover for the lack of substance. When I lose track of who's who and what's what in Chandler's novels, which happens frequently, I'm content to sit back and enjoy the show, but with Kiss Me Quick, I merely lost interest.

A fast-paced read full of violence and explosions, fans of James Bond will no doubt love Danny Miller's novel, but this will be Detective Treadwell's first and last casebook for me. ( )
  AdonisGuilfoyle | Aug 12, 2012 |
Yet another example amongst the books that I have read recently of a potentially engaging plot let down by inadequate writing.
Set in Brighton during the 1960s, against a backdrop of violent skirmishes between Mods and Rockers along the seafront this tells of Detective Vincent Treadwell's investigation of Jack Regent, a Corsican-born gangster who is striving to takeover the lucrative local drug and protection rackets. I felt very disappointed because this could have been so good but in the end reading it became almost a chore. ( )
1 vote Eyejaybee | Mar 17, 2012 |
Showing 4 of 4
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Thornley, PaulNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Set in Brighton over the bank holiday weekend of 1964, an ambitious and handsome young detective named Vince Treadwell is sent down to solve a murder and catch the elusive and powerful gangster, Jack Regent. In the tangled web of the crime, Vince falls for Jack's beautiful girlfriend, Bobbie LaVita, and discovers the truth about their own dark pasts. Kiss Me Quick goes behind the headlines of rioting Mods and Rockers, and into the deadly world of a secret Corsican crime organization, a burgeoning drug trade, police corruption, pornography rackets, and the dark side of the music business. With its elaborate and compelling plot, a cast of deliciously treacherous and vividly drawn characters, this page turning thriller introduces us to the dangerous world of Vince Treadwell.

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