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The Big Fix by Ed Lacy
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The Big Fix (original 1947; edition 2009)

by Ed Lacy

Series: PlanetMonk Pulps (17)

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1311,523,207 (4.5)None
Here was an opportunity he couldn't refuse. One of Lacy's best boxing novels.
Member:appleby66
Title:The Big Fix
Authors:Ed Lacy
Info:Grotto Pulp Fiction (2009), Kindle Edition, 162 pages
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The Big Fix by Ed Lacy (1947)

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The Big Fix is a great little pulp crime thriller about a washed up “pug” – or boxer – whose stumbles into what appears to be a lucky break, spearheaded by a couple of con artists looking to make a literal killing on Irish Tommy Cork’s waning career (no spoilers here, this is all set up in chapter one). While watching a long con slowly unfold doesn’t make for a quick action novel, Lacy engages the reader from multiple character POVs, and weaves some backstories and subplots that are just as engaging, if not more so, than the main event. The human drama drives the novel far more than the insurance scam setup, and even readers not into boxing will find themselves waiting for that final bell! ( )
  smichaelwilson | Jan 22, 2018 |
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Epigraph
Here was a proposition he couldn't refuse.
Dedication
For Willie P—the noted sand-shark catcher
First words
On the night Irish Tommy Cork's murder was planned, nothing very much out of the ordinary happened. Tommy was in the ring, taking a pasting—as usual. Back to the ropes, almost sitting on the second strand, Tommy crouched, gloved hands up in front of his face like a leather fence. He was fighting a strong youngster who was now whaling away with both hands in a moment of wild enthusiasm. Most of his blows were blocked, or ducked by Tommy's weaving head, but those few that didn't miss landed with loud thud sounds on the kidneys, head, or in the stomach, visibly shaking up the pale “old man.”
Quotations
If Alvin's blind worship of “courage” made him fail to understand the stupidity and commercialized brutality of the fight racket, he could feel and understand the tragedy, the violence.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Here was an opportunity he couldn't refuse. One of Lacy's best boxing novels.

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