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Blood on the Mink (Hard Case Crime) by…
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Blood on the Mink (Hard Case Crime) (edition 2012)

by Robert Silverberg

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1254216,987 (3.56)5
Somewhere in Philadelphia, a master engraver is turning out brilliant forgeries of U.S. currency plates for an organized crime gang - and the government wants to put a stop to it. But how can they get close enough to bring down the criminal enterprise from the inside?  By snatching a west coast crime boss' right-hand man and sending a federal agent undercover in the man's place. His assignment: pose as a buyer of counterfeit bills and try to get the engraver out. Which works fine - until he crosses paths with someone who knows the man he replaced...  A lost masterpiece from science fiction Grandmaster Robert Silverberg, published as a complete novel for the very first time!… (more)
Member:agmlll
Title:Blood on the Mink (Hard Case Crime)
Authors:Robert Silverberg
Info:Hard Case Crime (2012), Paperback, 224 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:****
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Blood on the mink by Robert Silverberg

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Showing 4 of 4
Blood on the Mink is a terrific pulp tale that fits well within the genre in the late fifties. It has gangsters and dames and shoot-outs and undercover agents. And, most importantly, it's a damn good story that is worth reading.

The story is about a Treasury agent whose job is to go undercover and infiltrate various criminal organizations that are out to counterfeit the U.S. currency. He goes from city to city pulling off this act and, as a consequence, has no home and no family for how could one maintain such in a career as this. Here, the agent goes undercover as Vic Lowney after agents grab him as his cross-country flight makes a stopover. The agent, dressed as Lowney, takes Lowney's seat on the plane and checks into the hotel under Lowney's reservation in Philadelphia. Of course, the one thought in every reader's mind is how can he get away with this without anyone being wiser. Apparently, most East Coast gangsters didn't know the West Coast gangsters and, without cell phones or the internet, all it took was an attitude and some street smarts, and "Vic" gets away with it. He is there to make a deal with the local hoods on moving some terrific forged currency on the West Coast. The Treasury Agent ("Vic") stalls while he tries to gather information on where the engraver and the presses are.

Silverberg does well in writing about mobsters and shoot-outs and femme fatales. This book, which also includes two shorter stories to fill out the book, is well worth reading.

The second selection in this volume is "Dangerous Dame" and it is a classic old style hard boiled gangster tale about a young hood out to the west coast to make a delivery. It is also a cautionary tale about women and wine.

The final selection in this volume is "One Night of Violence" and it too is an old school gangster tale about a traveling salesman who inadvertently gets caught in the middle of a gang war.
All three stories are good stuff. ( )
  DaveWilde | Sep 22, 2017 |
The author is my second favourite writer of SF and I read this one for the sake of completeness. Silverberg is not widely known for his crime novels but he knocked a few out in the last dying days of the pulp era when that market for Science Fiction had dried up. Pulp crime was not long in following but that wasn’t Silverberg’s fault. He is incapable of writing anything that is less than readable but this has the vices of its idiom in its lack of ornamentation, of its time in its casual sexism and of its place in an equally casual attitude to the use of guns.

Narrator Nick is a law enforcement agent whose speciality is in subduing his own identity and impersonating less major criminals in order to get to the main players. The plot involves the distributor of very good forgeries of five and ten dollars bills and the discovery and release from bondage of the engraver who made the plates for their manufacture. None of the characters lifts beyond the functional - or typical - but the plot is well-honed and provides the action its intended readership presumably craved.

The two accompanying short stories used to pad out this paperback are from the same era and in similar vein. Dangerous Doll riffs on the counterfeiting game and, as its title suggests, features a femme fatale, while One Night of Violence sees a travelling salesman get caught up in a gangland shootout. In this story I did wonder what on earth the “video set” in a late 1950s hotel lobby might have been. ( )
  jackdeighton | Aug 18, 2017 |
Delving into the Hard Case Crime archives I found this little gem originally published in 1962 by a pulp author who was primarily a Sci-Fi writer.

A Philadelphia set caper full of sex, violence, and triple crosses.

Nick aka Vic Lowney is a chameleonic federal agent whose job is to switch places and impersonate a California operative in order to take down a Philly outfit who specializes in forging money or ‘Queer’ (apparently is what it was called back in the day) Things quickly get out of control as other greedy hoods contact Nick to get their dirty paws on the forgery plates.

Crackling cool dialog, gun battles, and femme fatales, all neatly wrap in a short novel which includes an afterword and two short stories; ‘Dangerous Doll’ and ‘One Night of Violence’ all written by the author.

A fast paced entertaining read. With twist galore.
( )
  Verge0007 | May 21, 2017 |
A fun 'lost' crime novella (and pair of stories) by an author known for his SF. The novella itself is a decent pulp piece, but Silverberg notes in his afterword that he had been commissioned to write more stories featuring the main character, Nick, an agent who would assume a new undercover identity every story. The magazine that had commissioned the work went under, and thus the stories were never written.

The two stories accompanying the novella are also fine. The first story covers some of the same territory as the novella (both involve counterfeit money; I like the detail of making counterfeit 10s, because 1s and 5s wouldn't be worth the effort but bigger bills would be more likely to get noticed), and the second one has a nice twist at the end. ( )
  wjohnston | Apr 10, 2012 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Robert Silverbergprimary authorall editionscalculated
Koelsch, MichaelCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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FOR W.W. SCOTT, BUT FOR WHOM THERE'D HAVE BEEN NO BLOOD ON THE MINK
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It was cold out at Chicago International Airport.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Somewhere in Philadelphia, a master engraver is turning out brilliant forgeries of U.S. currency plates for an organized crime gang - and the government wants to put a stop to it. But how can they get close enough to bring down the criminal enterprise from the inside?  By snatching a west coast crime boss' right-hand man and sending a federal agent undercover in the man's place. His assignment: pose as a buyer of counterfeit bills and try to get the engraver out. Which works fine - until he crosses paths with someone who knows the man he replaced...  A lost masterpiece from science fiction Grandmaster Robert Silverberg, published as a complete novel for the very first time!

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