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41+ Works 819 Members 5 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Author Michael Z. Lewin was born in Springfield, Massachusetts in 1942. He studied chemistry and physics at Harvard University and taught high school science for three years before becoming a full-time writer in 1969. He is the author of the Albert Samson series and the Leroy Powder series. He show more currently lives in Bath, England. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Includes the name: Michal Lewin

Series

Works by Michael Z. Lewin

2nd Culprit : A Crime Writers' Association Annual (1993) — Editor & Contributor — 68 copies, 1 review
1st Culprit : A Crime Writers' Association Annual (1992) — Editor & Contributor — 62 copies
Ask the Right Question (1971) 61 copies, 1 review
The silent salesman (1978) 60 copies
Called By a Panther (1991) 57 copies
Missing Woman (1981) 54 copies
Out of Season (1984) 52 copies
The Way We Die Now (1973) 47 copies
3rd Culprit : An Annual of Crime Stories (1994) — Editor and Contributor — 44 copies, 1 review
The Enemies Within (1974) 43 copies
Night Cover (1976) 39 copies
Hard Line (1982) 32 copies
And Baby Will Fall (1988) 30 copies
Late Payments (1986) 28 copies
Underdog (1993) 22 copies, 1 review
Family Business (1995) 19 copies
Outside In (1980) 19 copies, 1 review
Eye Opener (2004) 13 copies
Cutting Loose (1999) 13 copies
Family Planning (1999) 9 copies
Oh Joe (2008) 7 copies
Family Way (2011) 6 copies
Rover's Tales (1998) 3 copies
Telling Tales (1994) 3 copies
Cigarettes 2 copies
Blodets bånd (1985) 1 copy
The Next Man (1976) 1 copy
Family Trio (2011) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Best British Mysteries 2006 (2005) — Contributor — 68 copies, 1 review
Murder for Halloween (1994) — Contributor — 61 copies, 2 reviews
A Century of British Mystery and Suspense (2000) — Contributor — 61 copies
Diagnosis Dead (1999) — Contributor — 59 copies
The Mammoth Book of Comic Crime (2002) — Contributor — 48 copies
London Noir (1994) — Contributor — 48 copies, 1 review
The Edgar Award Book (1996) — Contributor — 40 copies
The Mammoth Book of Best British Crime 9 (2012) — Contributor — 33 copies
Constable New Crimes 1 (1989) — Contributor — 28 copies
The Best British Mysteries 4 (2006) — Contributor — 25 copies, 1 review
The Verdict of Us All (2006) — Contributor — 24 copies
Motives for Murder (2016) 23 copies, 2 reviews
The Mammoth Book of Modern Crime Stories (1987) — Contributor — 21 copies
Royal Crimes (1994) — Contributor — 18 copies
The Mammoth Book of Best British Crime 11 (2014) — Contributor — 16 copies
Inward journey : Ross Macdonald (1987) — Contributor — 14 copies
Playing Dead (2025) — Contributor — 13 copies, 1 review
Winter's Crimes 20 (1988) 10 copies
Winter's Crimes 16 (1984) — Contributor — 8 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

7 reviews
I enjoyed my time in the shoes of a homeless man (with a plan!). I felt his self-dignity, even as he struggles with the ever re-opening wounds of his past, or finding a meal in a dumpster, as he works to be clean, neat, and accepted. The actual mystery plot seemed less important that moving along with the character living within it.
I first found Lewin through a series of short stories, most of which involved a family detective agency in Bath England. Shortly thereafter two books were released in that series. Both of which I rated quite highly, one 4.60, the other 5 whole stars out of 5. I was somewhat reluctant to slide into other books written by him. I didn’t want be disappointed. I would have leapt on and devoured another Lunghi Family book, but no third book appeared. Maybe if Lewin had other books set in England show more I might have reluctantly tested the water, but the Indianapolis author’s other two series were set in Indianapolis, and both had first books that were published in the 1970s. Twenty years before the Lunghi Family series.

Finally I acquired the first book in the Albert Samson series and gave it a chance. If the Edgar Award nomination for first novel is correct I would be jumping from his last adult series to his very first book (he had one or more young adult books appear after the second Lunghi family book).

The book started off interesting enough. Albert Samson puttering around his office/home, lazily going through his day. He hadn’t had a client in a while and didn’t really expect one that day. Close to closing time a young woman, Eloise Crystal, enters and finds him resting on a pillow at his desk. They have a little humorous exchange, and it eventually boils down to the client desiring Samson to find her biological father (to which Samson replied something along the lines of “shouldn’t you find him at home in bed with your mother?). Eloise believes that the man who claims to be her father, who was married to her mother prior to Eloise’s birth, and has raised her since that birth is not in fact her biological father.

Samson is quite reluctant to take the case, and the $100 retainer but he accepts it for one day. For his young female client needs to get back home before it is noticed she skipped school. The young woman is actually only 15.

With nothing else really to do, Samson lazily wanders around trying to figure out how to find a man who might have been with Eloise’s mother 15 to 17 years ago (Eloise originally said she was 17). He digs through back issues of the newspaper and eventually gets a taste for the case.

The book is slow paced. The main character is slightly less than fully formed, though more well rounded than might be expected for a first novel. Somewhere around the half way point I thought the book was bound to end up being what I had feared. Something of a disappointment, something of a let down. Likely to be rated no higher than, oh, 3.8 or so. Oddly enough, though, I got pulled into the story and while the middle was somewhat less solid, the beginning and end were quite strong. Quite an interesting little book, recommendable. Racking my brains thinking about it, I would put it down as a 4.40 star book.
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½
This book, like the other books by Michael Z. Lewin I have read, is lively and amusing. It's a tonic for what ails you!
A collection of mystery stories put together by the Crime Writers Association. The best of the bunch is by Donald Westlake. The rest is a random assortment with no thread connecting them. There are also a few cartoons thrown in that have nothing to do with mysteries. Not a very good collection but a few of the stories were worth reading.

Awards

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Associated Authors

Peter Lovesey Editor and Contributor, Contributor
Maxim Jakubowski Contributor
H. R. F. Keating Contributor
Ian Rankin Contributor
Susan Kelly Contributor
Alex Auswaks Contributor
Susan Moody Contributor
Margaret Yorke Contributor
Reginald Hill Contributor
Catherine Aird Contributor
Antonia Fraser Contributor
Robert Barnard Contributor
Sarah Caudwell Contributor
Madelaine Duke Contributor
Ruth Rendell Contributor
Celia Dale Contributor
Sara Paretsky Contributor
James Melville Contributor
Stephen Murray Contributor
Jean McConnell Contributor
Anthea Fraser Contributor
Carole Rawcliffe Contributor
Nancy Livingston Contributor
Sue Grafton Contributor
Tony Hillerman Contributor
Tim Heald Contributor
Peter O'Donnell Contributor
Eric Wright Contributor
Ellis Peters Contributor
Jonathan Gash Contributor
Eric Ambler Contributor
Penelope Wallace Contributor
Simon Brett Contributor
Terence Faherty Contributor
Alida Baxter Contributor
Dick Francis Contributor
Roger Ormerod Contributor
Val McDermid Contributor
Donald E. Westlake Contributor
Bill James Contributor
Joan Lock Contributor
Bob Lock Contributor
John Malcolm Contributor
Frances Fyfield Contributor
William G. Tapply Contributor
Mat Coward Contributor
Robert Brack Contributor
David Williams Contributor
Keith Heller Contributor
Michaela Link Translator
Elias Dominguez Cover artist

Statistics

Works
41
Also by
24
Members
819
Popularity
#31,141
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
5
ISBNs
139
Languages
4
Favorited
1

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