Castle in the Air
by Donald E. Westlake
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In the funniest crime caper ever from Grandmaster Donald Westlake, four teams of international thieves race through Paris to steal a king's ransom from the walls of a disassembled castle.A DIRTY DOZEN WITH A FRENCH CONNECTION
When four groups of international heist artists team up to pull off the theft of the century – stealing an entire castle, and the treasure hidden in its walls –what could possibly go wrong? Well, consider this: none of the master thieves speak each other’s show more languages... and no one knows precisely where the loot is stashed... and every one of them wants to steal it all for him or herself. It’s MWA Grand Master Donald E. Westlake at his wildest, a breathless slapstick chase through the streets of Paris only one step ahead of the law – and each other.
. Thriller. Fiction. Mystery. show less
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Member Reviews
“We steal the entire castle.”
The castle is being shipped from Yerbadoro to Paris, and one dozen of the large blocks from the outer walls are hollowed out and filled with millions of dollars of valuables! It’s sort of like a Dortmunder story, but set in Europe and with fancier vocabulary!
The whole book has a slap-sticky vibe! Lots of misunderstandings because there are five different languages spoken amongst the gang! And the line of men knocking on Lida’s door, each with a different bottle of booze, is a pretty funny scene! It reads pretty quickly, so hang on!
The castle is being shipped from Yerbadoro to Paris, and one dozen of the large blocks from the outer walls are hollowed out and filled with millions of dollars of valuables! It’s sort of like a Dortmunder story, but set in Europe and with fancier vocabulary!
The whole book has a slap-sticky vibe! Lots of misunderstandings because there are five different languages spoken amongst the gang! And the line of men knocking on Lida’s door, each with a different bottle of booze, is a pretty funny scene! It reads pretty quickly, so hang on!
This book is written in a way that makes it sound as if the narrator is talking to you, like he is telling you the story. I think the casual tone and laid back way that things are said add to the humor of the situation. I also think that it is one of the reasons that the book is so easy and quick to read. Westlake has a knack for a good comic crime. And he makes watching this international group of thieves stealing a castle a lot of fun. The humor does get almost slap stick at times with all the people falling into canals and no one understanding anyone else because they all speak different languages, but it is also witty. The actual crime is not the end of the story here. You get to see it planned and then perpetrated but then you get show more to see after the crime where everything starts to fall apart. It’s fun to watch the group breakup and reform and morph along the way as you follow the money and try to figure out you is going to get what by the time everything is said and done. It’s an entertaining and quick story for anyone who likes a little fun with their crime. show less
Heist Capers
Review of the Hard Case Crime paperback edition (2021) of the M. Evans hardcover original (1980)
I've run out of the Donald Westlake/Richard Stark Parker series of hardboiled noir novels but wanted to follow-up by reading several of the other books which established the prolific crime author's reputation. Castle in the Air is light fare and involves a multi-international team of heisters seeking to locate the loot of a (fictional) South American dictator who is smuggling it into Europe by having it hidden inside the stone wall bricks of a dismantled castle which is to be re-assembled as a world exhibition pavilion.
Each of the teams are from separate countries (England, France, Germany, Italy) and initially are working in show more league with a master planner who is cooperating with a freedom fighter to return at least a share of the loot to the beleaguered country. Comic antics ensue as each team attempts to heist the entire haul for themselves with predictable karmic results.
Other Reviews
There is an extremely detailed review and plot summary (with spoilers obviously) of Castle in the Air at The Westlake Review, December 22, 2015.
Trivia and Links
This edition of Castle in the Air is part of the Hard Case Crime (2004-) series of reprints, new commissions and posthumous publications of the pulp and noir crime genre founded by authors Charles Ardai and Max Phillips. GR's Listopia is not complete (as of August 2021) and the most complete lists of publication can be found at Wikipedia or the Publisher's Official Site. show less
Review of the Hard Case Crime paperback edition (2021) of the M. Evans hardcover original (1980)
I've run out of the Donald Westlake/Richard Stark Parker series of hardboiled noir novels but wanted to follow-up by reading several of the other books which established the prolific crime author's reputation. Castle in the Air is light fare and involves a multi-international team of heisters seeking to locate the loot of a (fictional) South American dictator who is smuggling it into Europe by having it hidden inside the stone wall bricks of a dismantled castle which is to be re-assembled as a world exhibition pavilion.
Each of the teams are from separate countries (England, France, Germany, Italy) and initially are working in show more league with a master planner who is cooperating with a freedom fighter to return at least a share of the loot to the beleaguered country. Comic antics ensue as each team attempts to heist the entire haul for themselves with predictable karmic results.
Other Reviews
There is an extremely detailed review and plot summary (with spoilers obviously) of Castle in the Air at The Westlake Review, December 22, 2015.
Trivia and Links
This edition of Castle in the Air is part of the Hard Case Crime (2004-) series of reprints, new commissions and posthumous publications of the pulp and noir crime genre founded by authors Charles Ardai and Max Phillips. GR's Listopia is not complete (as of August 2021) and the most complete lists of publication can be found at Wikipedia or the Publisher's Official Site. show less
Paris, ca 1980.
Absurd historie om et kup, der skal udføres af 4 samarbejdende hold kriminelle. Den ene mere klicheagtigt skildret end den anden.
I Yerbadoro har præsidenten, Escobar Diaz McMahon Grande Pajaro Lynch, tænkt sig at stikke af med en solid bunke guld for folket er ved at være trætte af ham og konen, Maria Colleen San Salvador Porifirio Hennesy Lynch.
Der er en udstilling i Paris og Lynch skjuler penge og smykker i nogle udhulede store granitsten fra det slot, som han sender til Paris til genopbygning der.
En par rebeller, Lida Perez og hendes forlovede Manuel, har fået nys om dette og det samme har en forbryder Eustace Dench. Dench samler Herman Müller, Rudi Schlisselmann, Otto Berg, Sir Mortimer Maxwell, Bruddy Dunk, show more Andrew Pinkenham, Jean Lefraque, Renee Chateaupirre, Charles Moule, Rose Palermo, Angelo Salvagambelli, Vito Palone for at disse tilsammen kan nappe skatten.
Alle forsøger selvfølgelig at snyde alle de andre.
Gruppe A, tyskerne, finder skatten og stikker prompte af med den i en båd. De skjuler skatten, men gruppe C, franskmændene, finder den. Det ser gruppe D, italienerne, mens gruppe B, englænderne, stadig leder.
Gruppe C flytter stenene, hvilket D ser. Og så begynder det at gå galt.
Mortimer og Andrew kører i en stjålet London-taxi og bliver nappet af politiet. Bruddy og Charles kommer op at skændes og bliver nappet.
Rudi, Angelo og Vito, Eustace og Lida stikker af med stenene på en lastbil. Så stikker Eustace og Lida af fra resten kun for at blive overrasket af Hermann.
Lida og rebellerne ender at få skatten. Eustace får dog en klækkelig findeløn og bruger den på at købe en restaurant hvor alle de andre fra banden bliver ansat. Selv præsidenten slutter fred med oprørerne og alt ender i fryd og gammen.
Westlake får noget komik ud af at de fire bander ikke taler hinandens sprog overhovedet. Den slags er svært at oversætte uden at tabe komikken på jorden og det er da også mislykkedes her. Eller måske var det faktisk heller ikke morsomt på engelsk?
Bogen er dedikeret til skattevæsenet, så mon ikke det er et hurtigt skriveri fra Westlake's side for at slippe af med en skatterestance? show less
Absurd historie om et kup, der skal udføres af 4 samarbejdende hold kriminelle. Den ene mere klicheagtigt skildret end den anden.
I Yerbadoro har præsidenten, Escobar Diaz McMahon Grande Pajaro Lynch, tænkt sig at stikke af med en solid bunke guld for folket er ved at være trætte af ham og konen, Maria Colleen San Salvador Porifirio Hennesy Lynch.
Der er en udstilling i Paris og Lynch skjuler penge og smykker i nogle udhulede store granitsten fra det slot, som han sender til Paris til genopbygning der.
En par rebeller, Lida Perez og hendes forlovede Manuel, har fået nys om dette og det samme har en forbryder Eustace Dench. Dench samler Herman Müller, Rudi Schlisselmann, Otto Berg, Sir Mortimer Maxwell, Bruddy Dunk, show more Andrew Pinkenham, Jean Lefraque, Renee Chateaupirre, Charles Moule, Rose Palermo, Angelo Salvagambelli, Vito Palone for at disse tilsammen kan nappe skatten.
Alle forsøger selvfølgelig at snyde alle de andre.
Gruppe A, tyskerne, finder skatten og stikker prompte af med den i en båd. De skjuler skatten, men gruppe C, franskmændene, finder den. Det ser gruppe D, italienerne, mens gruppe B, englænderne, stadig leder.
Gruppe C flytter stenene, hvilket D ser. Og så begynder det at gå galt.
Mortimer og Andrew kører i en stjålet London-taxi og bliver nappet af politiet. Bruddy og Charles kommer op at skændes og bliver nappet.
Rudi, Angelo og Vito, Eustace og Lida stikker af med stenene på en lastbil. Så stikker Eustace og Lida af fra resten kun for at blive overrasket af Hermann.
Lida og rebellerne ender at få skatten. Eustace får dog en klækkelig findeløn og bruger den på at købe en restaurant hvor alle de andre fra banden bliver ansat. Selv præsidenten slutter fred med oprørerne og alt ender i fryd og gammen.
Westlake får noget komik ud af at de fire bander ikke taler hinandens sprog overhovedet. Den slags er svært at oversætte uden at tabe komikken på jorden og det er da også mislykkedes her. Eller måske var det faktisk heller ikke morsomt på engelsk?
Bogen er dedikeret til skattevæsenet, så mon ikke det er et hurtigt skriveri fra Westlake's side for at slippe af med en skatterestance? show less
Jul 18, 2011 (Edited)Danish
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ThingScore 50
Another over-the-top comic heist that Westlake, the universally acclaimed master of the subgenre, originally published in 1980.
added by Roycrofter
Author Information

270+ Works 27,812 Members
Author Donald E. Westlake was born in Brooklyn, New York on July 12, 1933. He attended colleges in New York, but did not graduate. He wrote more than 100 novels and 5 screenplays throughout his lifetime. He also wrote under numerous pseudonyms including Richard Stark, Tucker Coe, and Samuel Holt. Almost 20 of his novels were adapted into films and show more he created the television series, The Father Dowling Mysteries. He is a three-time winner of the Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America and was nominated for an Academy Award for his screenplay for The Grifters. He was also named a Mystery Writers of America Grand Master in 1993. He died of a heart attack on December 31, 2008 at the age of 75. (Bowker Author Biography) Donald E. Westlake has won three Edgar Awards & was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for "The Grifters". He lives in upstate New York. (Publisher Provided) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Castle in the Air
- Original title
- Castle in the Air
- Original publication date
- 1980
- People/Characters
- Eustace Dench
- Important places
- Paris, France
- Dedication
- And this one is for the guys and gals at the Internal Revenue Service.
- First words
- Eustace Dench, master criminal, paid the cabby with a legitimate five pound note, accepted his change, gave the man a twenty pence tip - not enough; the chap did not touch his cap - and turned away to take the delectable Lida... (show all)'s slender arm.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"You know," he said, "I would never have guessed it, but there is something pleasant about being an honest man."
- Canonical DDC/MDS
- 813.54
- Canonical LCC
- PS3573.E9
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Statistics
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- 164
- Popularity
- 199,026
- Reviews
- 4
- Rating
- (2.98)
- Languages
- 6 — Danish, English, Finnish, French, Italian, Swedish
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 15
- ASINs
- 5



























































