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Whip Hand by Dick Francis
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56448,508 (4.03)10
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New York: Harper & Row, c1979. 293 p. ; 22 cm. 1st U.S. ed

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Tags:mystery
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Showing 4 of 4
4.5, if I could. One of the more enjoyable Francis books I've read in a while, or maybe I was just more in the mood now. Sid Halley is a likable protagonist, as I guess they all are, and this one was thought-provoking, as usual. My favorite summer reading! ( )
  jphilbrick | Dec 3, 2009 |
An odd combination: a first-person narrator with occasional fits of astute self-awareness telling us the hard-boiled story of some interwoven detecting adventures. Sid Halley is an ex-jockey who has become a PI after suffering the loss of a hand in a racing accident. He's also an ex-husband who aparently chose his career over his marriage. Sid gets involved surreptitiously with the case of a trainer whose most promising horses have been underperforming at crucial times. He's also asked to investigate, confidentially, whether the racing security man overseeing syndicates is doing his job properly. On top of these, his father-in-law, with whom he gets along famously, asks Sid to help his ex with a problem she's gotten into. So we get to see Sid working on all these items at once, as well as the horrible treatment he receives from his ex-wife. Sid puts up with it because he thinks he deserves it.

Francis comments throughout about how different we look to others from how we see ourselves, and he ilustrates this pretty well. There is some intermittent psychological insight mixed with attempts to be a "hard guy" who ignores his feelings. It's almost as if the author couldn't decide how much to focus on this stuff. The story sticks to Francis's usual formula of a slow start and a hectic finish. Not great but an enjoyable read. ( )
  Jim53 | May 12, 2009 |
Another reread. Not one of my favorites. This one was written in '65 back when Dick was trying to be so hard boiled. I like the character of Sid and his father-in-law Charles, but everything else is so grim and no so psychological. It's okay to while away time but not something to pick up just for a good read. I have a harder time relating to Sid than most of the later heroes. The way he reacts to his disfigurement is odd, as is the way he just lets his marriage go. Too passive for my tastes, too unhappy. ( )
  Kaethe | May 27, 2008 |
Sid Halley #2, investigates a case of horse nobbling and scandal at the Jockey Club. Good suspense, one of my favourites. I like to re-read the Halley series every couple of years. ( )
  tripleblessings | Feb 1, 2007 |
Showing 4 of 4
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First words
I took the battery out of my arm and fed it into the recharger, and only realized I'd done it when ten seconds later the fingers wouldn't work.
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Wikipedia in English (2)

Dick Francis

Whip Hand

Book description
Wikipedia- The protagonist Sid Halley is an ex-jockey turned detective who lost his left hand due to an earlier racing accident and subsequent beating by thugs. He is approached by Rosemary Caspar, a trainer's wife, to look into problems at her husband's racing stables. Horses which did extremely well as two-year olds are unexpectedly failing as three year olds. In addition, Sid Halley's ex-father-in-law, Charles, asks Sid to try and find a man who has conned Sid's ex-wife Jenny and left her facing a possible jail sentence over a fake charity. Sid is also approached by both Lord Friarly, a racehorse owner and syndicate member, and Lucas Wainwright, the head of the security service at the Jockey Club, to look into certain syndicates and how they got through the Jockey Club's checking process.

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0449212742, Mass Market Paperback)

"Challenging....First class."
THE BALTIMORE SUN
Sid Halley, once a jockey, was now a private invesigator with only one good hand left after a horse fell on the other. His new life, though, could never erase the haunting memories of his past glories. But it was only when the wife of one of England's top trainers came to beg his help in preventing foul play at the race track that Sid Halley began to know what being haunted really was....

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:22 -0400)

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