Blood Relatives

by Ed McBain

87th Precinct (30)

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A killer is out for blood, and it's up to Detective Steve Carella to bring him in--but a shocking surprise awaits when a survivor fingers the suspect in a lineup. "McBain has the ability to make every character believable--which few writers these days can do." --Associated Press "McBain forces us to think twice about every character we meet...even those we thought we already knew." --New York Times Book Review

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9 reviews
Evan Hunter is better known today as Ed McBain, because of the 87th Precinct series. He wrote Blood Relatives in 1975, nearly twenty years after the inaugural book in the series, Cop Hater. From the opening scene as a bloodied girl runs through the rain-darkened streets of Isola to get help, this one grabs you and doesn’t let go.

The tale Patricia Lowrey tells to the police leads them to her cousin Muriel, butchered by the man who tried to kill both of them. A line-up is arranged by Kling and Carella who discover they are working on the same case. But when Patricia fingers someone very strange in a line-up, Carella can't shake the feeling that something's all wrong here. Even once the boys of the 87th appear to be finally getting at show more the truth, Carella can't shake the feeling they aren't there yet.

This one delves more into the gritty underbelly of extended families than the mean streets of Isola, yet has that same noirish feel to it for which the series is famous. When a new piece of evidence falls into the lap of Carella by sheer happenstance - as it sometimes does in real life - a sad and twisted story finally leads him to the killer. Passages told through a young girl's voice in this one is some of the finest writing McBain ever did in this series. It humanizes the victim, and adds poignancy to this excellent police procedural.

Rather than attempting to flesh out every cop of the 87th in one book, or even two or three, McBain allowed the reader to become almost intimately acquainted with the cops of the 87th over time, just as we get to know someone over years in real life. It was a gamble which paid off, having such a diverse cast that readers came to know and love, and sometimes not love at all.

This one ends as it began, in the rain, as Carella walks away. Blood Relatives is a terrific entry in the series, despite some coincidence. There is a bit of a lag in the middle, but a huge and poignant payoff for readers at the end. Great and gritty stuff, with some nice writing from a female perspective. Worth a read for fans of hardboiled police procedurals.
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McBain is in full stride in this psychological thriller. Forget that the "real killer" is pretty easy to spot. The path to the end is so well-wrought, and there is real tension until the inevitable reveal. Although it is a thriller, and very much an 87th Precinct piece, with all the usual wonderful cop and detective banter and humor that makes this series so endearing, there are moments of really good writing that are the work of a mature novelist whose story-telling chops and brilliance of execution are on full display.
Fairly straightforward tale of jealousy, incest, pedophilia and homicidal insanity, all wrapped up in under 160 pages. Each of these mini-masterpieces is the template for countless TV episodes and B-movie screenplays, but they have never been delivered with more brutal concision than in these perfect paperbacks.
Another excellent 87th Precinct mystery

A really solid entry in the series. This has less comedy than some of the books, and features a single case and a single cop (Carella, of course). A bit like ‘Sadie When She Died’, it’s unrelentingly bleak, but also moving and very effective. The mystery is great too, and McBain kept me guessing to the final twist.
Just one case in this book, but it's a good one! A young gal is murdered on a rainy night after a party, and her cousin is the prime suspect! Or is it her co-worker? Or?

The first two pages of this book really drew me in! And, Chapters 8 and 9, Carella reading Muriel’s diary, are such a cool way to reveal the crime and it’s background! Well, except who-done-it, which Carella figures out in the following chapter. It's a nice paced, quick read and everything I've come to expect from this series! Thanks Mr. McBain!
i like ed mcbain and this is a quick, fun read. i only don't give it 3 stars because i thought that some of the writing was a little uneven, and because the killer was a little predictable. not the why of the murder and everything leading up to the motive, but who it was wasn't a surprise for me. overall still fun and still well written (except those couple of parts).
½
A young woman is killed and her cousin slashed. The cousin is sure she knows the killer, but then identifies a detective in the line-up, causing Steve Carella to re-examine the case. Then the cousin says her brother was the killer, and a diary reveals that the two were having an affair and he became jealous when the 17-year old girl began a platonic relationship with her boss at the bank. Count on Steve's doggedness to uncover the truth.

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364+ Works 32,454 Members
Ed McBain is a pen name for Evan Hunter who was born in 1926 in East Harlem, New York on October 15, 1926. Hunter was born with the name Salvatore Albert Lombino, and he legally adopted the name Evan Hunter in 1952. During World War II, Hunter joined the Navy and served aboard a destroyer in the Pacific. He graduated from Hunter College, were he show more majored in English and psychology, with minors in dramatics and education. He was a prolific writer who also wrote under the names of Ed McBain, Curt Cannon, Hunt Collins, Ezra Hannon, and Richard Marsten. His first major success came in 1954 with the publication of The Blackboard Jungle, which was later adapted as a film. He published the first three books in the 87th Precinct series in 1956 under the name of Ed McBain. He also wrote juvenile books, plays, television scripts, and stories and articles for magazines. He won the Mystery Writers of America Award in 1957 and the Grand Master Award in 1986 for lifetime achievement. He died of laryngeal cancer on July 6, 2005 at the age of 78. (Bowker Author Biography) Ed McBain is the only American to receive the Diamond Dagger, the British Crime Writers Association's highest award. He also holds the Mystery Writers of America's coveted Grand Master Award. His books have sold over one hundred million copies, ranging from his most recent, "The Last Dance", to the bestselling "The Blackboard Jungle", the screenplay for Alfred Hitchcock's "The Birds" & the bestselling "Privileged Conversation", written under his own name, Evan Hunter. He lives in Connecticut. (Publisher Provided) Ed McBain, aka Evan Hunter, wrote the screenplay for Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds and has written many novels. He is the only American to be awarded Britain's coveted Diamond Dagger Award, the highest honor a suspense writer can achieve. He lives in Connecticut. (Publisher Provided) show less

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title*
Verirahat
Original title
Blood Relatives
Original publication date
1975
People/Characters
Steve Carella
Related movies
Les liens de sang (1978 | IMDb)
Dedication
This is for Jeff and Anita Ash
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Mystery
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PZ4 .H945Language and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction in English
BISAC

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Members
325
Popularity
97,388
Reviews
8
Rating
½ (3.68)
Languages
9 — Czech, Danish, English, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Russian, Swedish
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
27
ASINs
7