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In the Heat of the Night by John Ball
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In the Heat of the Night (original 1965; edition 2005)

by John Ball

Series: Virgil Tibbs (1)

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4141260,801 (3.97)72
It's the 1960s. A hot August night lies heavy over the Carolinas. The corpse--legs sprawled, stomach down on the concrete pavement, arms above the head--brings the patrol car to a halt. The local police pick up a black stranger named Virgil Tibbs, only to discover that their most likely suspect is a homicide detective from California--and the racially tense community's single hope in solving a brutal murder that turns up no witnesses, no motives, and no clues.… (more)
Member:AhmsTahOwSchool
Title:In the Heat of the Night
Authors:John Ball
Info:Impress Mystery (2005), Edition: Reprint, Hardcover
Collections:Your library
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In the Heat of the Night by John Ball (1965)

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It's hard to compare this book to the eventual film adaptation. But the movie makes clear the problems of the book: it is the promise of a premise.

The idea of an African-American detective solving a mystery in a racist Southern town is cool. But the book leaves too much on the table. Every interaction in the film is brimming with the subtext of discrimination. It also changes the profession of the murder victim--thereby adding a fantastic dash of class consciousness. And lastly, the sexism is more apparent, both in the murder victim's wife and in the abortion subplot. While some of these are evident in the book, it doesn't go as far as it should.

And, as a book it has a few shortcomings. Virgil isn't as strong as he should be, the interracial buddy duo isn't as cool as it could be, and there's one subplot too many. And most of all, the explanation shouldn't end the book. I'd like to see the hero return having changed.

Still, it deserves kudos for the forward thinking of the premise and a general sense of suspense in the mystery. Marginal recommendation. ( )
  JuntaKinte1968 | Dec 6, 2023 |
Gave it a 4.5 because while reading the images of Rod Steiger and Sydney Poitier and cast kept running in my mind. Great read. The book was tight with no fluff and no glossing over of the hard attitudes of Southerners on race. The grudging respect at the end of the book read well. Not sure if you could write this today. Found it by chance n the local used book store and I discovered there were more Virgil Tibbs novels. ( )
  JBreedlove | Feb 18, 2023 |
Flashback to 1960 and the horrible reality of Jim Crow. The dignity of Mr. Tibbs and the way he handles the slurs and injustice are at the heart of this novel, and Ball makes Tibbs the most intelligent and able character in the book. He goes a little overboard in drawing the distinctions between the Southern characters and Virgil Tibbs, but he has an important point to make and he makes it If you are ever doubting that race relations have made enormous progress in the last 50 years, read this book and feel the knot in your stomach when Mr. Tibbs comes into a diner and is denied a glass of milk. It is difficult to even imagine people actually feeling this way and yet so many did.

It is painful to read this book now but it matters to remember that it was a small book that made a big difference. It exposed us to ourselves, without any place to run and hide. I vaguely remember the furor when Sidney Poitier made Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner. People were outraged. It is the outrage that outrages us now. It is easy to carry the image of Mr. Poitier in my head while reading...who else could be Mr. Tibbs?

It has been decades since I saw the movie and reading the book has made me want to see it again. This was an interesting voyage into the past, a place we wax nostalgic for, but in some ways a place we would never want to occupy again.
( )
  mattorsara | Aug 11, 2022 |
It's probably not a good idea to try to read or listen to a book when you've seen the iconic movie a number of times. I find it hard to give the book a rating after I listened to what was like a radio play with different characters reading each of the parts. The story is timeless, and Ball's writing is visceral and real and a true indication of the times- 1960's in the Carolina's. Jim Crow is foremost in this area at this time, and what happens when a young, black homicide detective from Pasadena arrives in town when a murder has just been discovered is expected for the times. This is where we meet Virgil Tibbs, and it came back to me again how well Sidney Poitier played this part in the movie. I enjoyed hearing the drama all over again and I'm glad I took the time to listen to this classic. ( )
  Romonko | Sep 19, 2021 |
https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3323994.html

As is so often the case, almost everything about the book is better than the film. Our setting is in South Carolina rather than Mississippi; Tibbs is from California, not Philadelphia; the murder victim is not a local industrialist, but an Italian conductor brought in to run a music festival to make the crappy little bigoted town a more popular place, with a supporting cast of sympathisers including an attractive daughter. Also, we get more inside the heads of the protagonists, and it's the junior police office Sam Wood who Tibbs develops the relationship with, rather than his boss as in the film. Here is a didactic but well-written exchange between them:

Sam thought carefully for a minute before he asked his next question. “Virgil, I’m going to ask you something you aren’t going to like. But I want to know. How did they [the LAPD] happen to take you? No, that isn’t what I mean. I want to ask you point-blank how come a colored man got all those advantages. Now if you want to get mad, go ahead.”
Tibbs countered with a question of his own. “You’ve always lived in the South, haven’t you?”
“I’ve never been further than Atlanta,” Sam acknowledged.
“Then it may be hard for you to believe, but there are places in this country where a colored man, to use your words for it, is simply a human being like everybody else. Not everybody feels that way, but enough do so that at home I can go weeks at a time without anybody reminding me that I’m a Negro. Here I can’t go fifteen minutes. If you went somewhere where people despised you because of your southern accent, and all you were doing was speaking naturally and the best way that you could, you might have a very slight idea of what it is to be constantly cursed for something that isn’t your fault and shouldn’t make any difference anyhow.”
Sam shook his head. “Some guys down here would kill you for saying a thing like that,” he cautioned.
“You made my point,” Tibbs replied.

It's the first of six novels and four short stories, and I think I will keep an eye out for the rest. You can get it here. ( )
  nwhyte | Jan 22, 2020 |
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For Reverend Glynn T. Settle, whose authoritative knowledge and stimulating conversation contributed so much to the making of this book.
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At ten minutes to three in the morning, the city of Wells lay inert, hot and stagnant.
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It's the 1960s. A hot August night lies heavy over the Carolinas. The corpse--legs sprawled, stomach down on the concrete pavement, arms above the head--brings the patrol car to a halt. The local police pick up a black stranger named Virgil Tibbs, only to discover that their most likely suspect is a homicide detective from California--and the racially tense community's single hope in solving a brutal murder that turns up no witnesses, no motives, and no clues.

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