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Kinds of Love, Kinds of Death

by Tucker Coe

Series: Mitchell Tobin (1)

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811328,350 (3.06)1
A disgraced ex-cop takes a job from a bereaved, gentlemanly mobster Six months ago, Mitchell Tobin lost his career--and with it, his identity. An honest cop drummed out of the force because of one terrible mistake, Tobin has spent six months watching his savings dwindle and his family fall apart. But no matter how badly he needs work, he doesn't want anything to do with Ernie Rembeck, a crime boss whose mistress has just turned up dead. The killer can only be someone inside the organization, and Rembeck wants him identified. Tobin agrees, under assurances that nothing illegal will be asked of him, but he soon finds that without a badge, right and wrong are nothing but words. Mitch Tobin is about to take on every heavy in the New York mob scene. He's finally found a purpose, but his safety is in serious jeopardy.… (more)
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I discovered Kinds of Love, Kinds of Death first on one paperback rack or another when the Charter edition appeared. I'd read Chandler and MacDonald by then, so a tale of an unlicensed private detective looked like an interesting one to peruse.

The edition was apparently issued in 1976, but I'm not sure it was that early that I ran across it. Paperbacks floated around in news service vans, finding their way to random corners of the universe in those days.

I didn't realize in that moment that Tucker Coe was a pseudonym for Donald E. Westlake, creator of Dortmunder, the hapless robber, and as Richard Stark, Parker, the much more grim and professional thief.

As I recall my dad read it around the time I did and liked it also, but recently I realized I could remember little more than the fact that Mitch Tobin, the ex-cop hero was building a wall around his back yard as he investigated a murder case.

As with many things I read when I was young, I suspect many of the subtleties of character were lost on me the first time around.

I still had the paperback amid private eye novels on my shelf, so I decided to re-read it the other day after plucking it out to share a photo with other Tsundoku types in a Facebook group, and it was great to revisit it with mature eyes.

Secrets and lies
The story seems deceptively straightforward at first. Tobin, booted off the force following his partner's death is approached to conduct a murder investigation even though he holds no investigator's license.

Tobin, we learn, was seeing a mistress while on duty and failed to provide backup for his partner on a police call that turned deadly.

Months into exile from the force though still married, Tobin's approached by a representative of "the corporation" for help. He's building the above-mentioned wall as a way of metaphorically putting his life back together and would rather keep building, but he sees the investigation as perhaps a path to some form of redemption, maybe both professionally and spiritually. His wife Kate's been supporting the family with extra shifts at a five and dime.

The mob of the Tobin world is indeed very corporate with dark-suited managers interacting with union representatives and quasi-legitimate business executives.

Corporate intrigue
Married mobster Ernie Rembek, sort of a regional manager for the corporation, has lost his girlfriend, Rita Castle. She left the apartment he provided with a suitcase full of cash. A note states she's found a "real man" to help spend it. Unfortunately for her, she got only as far as a mob-connected Allentown hotel before being murdered.

Ernie's a sentimental guy and wants Tobin to find the killer, even if he feels the need to turn the killer over to the authorities for justice to be done. While it's not ideal, Tobin agrees to the job and the payday especially after his wife gives it a blessing.

Soon he's set up in an office and interviewing others in the corporation who can't provide an alibi for the time of death.

For a while it seems Tobin's just going to be cataloging information and ferreting out the culprit, but then office explosions and other threats arise, and he begins to gain understanding and insight into Rita Castle that reveals all is not as it seems, not with Eddie or other corporation members.

With a plot that zigs and zags and many surprises, Kinds of Love, Kinds of Death turns into a character-rich mystery that proves just as 361 had before it, that Westlake was as comfortable with a circuitous murder case as he was with a heist or caper.

It stands up well to a contemporary reading. Only the dollar values and the view of the mob hint that it's from another era, and it can be had in an ebook edition.

A great entry in the private eye realm, and a solid mystery as well. ( )
  SidWilliams | May 10, 2018 |
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A disgraced ex-cop takes a job from a bereaved, gentlemanly mobster Six months ago, Mitchell Tobin lost his career--and with it, his identity. An honest cop drummed out of the force because of one terrible mistake, Tobin has spent six months watching his savings dwindle and his family fall apart. But no matter how badly he needs work, he doesn't want anything to do with Ernie Rembeck, a crime boss whose mistress has just turned up dead. The killer can only be someone inside the organization, and Rembeck wants him identified. Tobin agrees, under assurances that nothing illegal will be asked of him, but he soon finds that without a badge, right and wrong are nothing but words. Mitch Tobin is about to take on every heavy in the New York mob scene. He's finally found a purpose, but his safety is in serious jeopardy.

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