Nocturne

by Ed McBain

87th Precinct (48)

On This Page

Description

In Isola, the hours between midnight and dawn are usually a quiet time. But for the 87th Precinct detectives Carella and Hawes, the murder of an old woman makes the wee hours anything but peaceful--especially when they learn she was one of the greatest concert pianists of the century long vanished. Meanwhile 88th Precinct cop Fat Ollie Weeks has his own early morning nightmare: he's on the trail of three prep school boys and a crack dealer who spent the evening carving up a hooker.

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

9 reviews
For more crime, pulp and horror reviews visit:
Wordpress: https://criminolly.com/
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3516zdH-XqACeusCHCVk8w

I wasn’t planning to write a full length review of this entry in the 87th Precinct series, but it’s such an interesting example of McBain’s craft I felt compelled to once I’d finished it.
It’s very much a book of two halves. It’s common for these books to have two or more storylines, but I’m not sure the difference between two parallel plots has ever been as stark as it is here. There’s a cosy caper that feels a bit like the one of those 60s Hitchcock films with Cary Grant, with Carella and Hawes investigating the murder of an old woman and her cat, whilst the victim’s lounge show more singer granddaughter also chases down the facts. She is accompanied by a comic duo who are both her bodyguards and her lovers and the book contains a brilliantly funny sex scene, as well as some wonderfully farcical moments where both they and the cops keep nearly running into each other. I’m fact ‘Nocturne’ had me laughing out loud more than any other recent book in the series.
On the other hand, Fat Ollie Weeks investigates a crime spree perpetrated by 3 privileged white college boys in Diamondback, the predominantly black borough of the city. This storyline contains a number of moments of casual violence which are both nauseating and chilling. One murder is so murder so graphic and horrid that it matches anything you might read in a horror novel. It leaves that half of the book feeling like the lost Bret Easton Ellis novel between Less Than Zero and American Psycho
The huge gulf between the two plots left me wondering whether ‘Nocturne’ was a failed experiment on McBain’s part or a work of genius. I think I’ve ended up leaning towards the latter, with the contrasts that the book throws up feeling measured and deliberate rather than haphazard. If nothing else, McBain is highlighting the whole spectrum of humanity. That can lead to this being a very tough read at times, even though it is peppered with his trademark humour.
show less
Always good to be back in the 87th!
Two main stories in this one - a dead pianist and the Four Richards, the latter being the better story, in my opinion. McBain's strength is his dialogue, and when the detectives talk, the fun flies! Detective Carella is my favorite, and he doesn't disappoint in this! Still digging these tales!
½
Steve Carella and Cotton Hawes are working the graveyard shift when they catch two squeals: one is the murder of a poor elderly citizen (and her cat), which seems to be a botched robbery, but nothing is missing. The victim turns out to be a once renowned classical pianist, but is complicated when the detectives discover she had withdrawn $125,000 from her bank on the day she was murdered. And, the money is missing. Her estranged granddaughter gets a note to look in a locker, where her guys report there is only $5,000 and a note that this money is to help her career. Steve and Cotton follow a twisted path of the murder weapon to find the killer. At the end of their shift, a murdered prostitute is found in an alley. Eventually, ace show more detective "Fat Ollie" Weeks links her death to the killing of a pimp and drug dealer. Despite his feeling that the world is a better place without the two, Ollie tracks down the perpetrators to their unusual lair. I liked some of the imagery of Isola in this one. show less
Detectives Steve Carella and Cotton Hawes search for the killer of former world renown concert pianist, Svetlana Dyalovich. Shot in her apartment doorway by her killer, who would want this now little known, elderly woman dead? Her estranged granddaughter? Someone who knew she had just withdrawn $125,000 from the bank? Her granddaughter receives a letter from her grandmother telling her to go to a bus station locker to retrieve what turns out to be $100,000 but the men she sends keep most of it. She thinks someone else stole it.

Meanwhile, Ollie Weeks is trying to figure out who killed a young prostitute plus her pimp and the pimp's friend. All of this searching is taking place in a cold stretch of winter weather.

Another fast read from show more the master of fast reads. He does paint a dark portrait of the modern American city and its underbelly of poverty and crime. show less
I've tried 3 works by Ed McBain and so far at least, I am just not a fan. "Poison" earned from me only half of a star, and "Fuzz" just three. In "Nocturne", the characters are entirely flat and interchangeable and the dialogue is telegraphic with little trace of humanity or humor. As part of the action, a multi-participant sex crime is involved that is downright ugly in its nature and description.

The plot involves the murder of an elderly woman named Svetlana Dyalovich – once a renowned concert pianist – shot in her apartment along with her cat. In an unrelated crime, a young prostitute is picked up by three high school football players and a crack dealer (all four of whom are named Richard). Detectives Carella and Hawes search for show more the woman’s killer, while Detective Ollie Weeks seeks the killers of the prostitute as well as the woman’s pimp. In a subplot, Svetlana had left 130 thousand dollars to her grand-daughter Priscilla – most of which is stolen by Priscilla’s friends. As it turns out, the death of Svetlana was a mercy killing, done at her own request by a friend. The rapist football players are identified, but the reader isn’t permitted the catharsis of seeing them arrested, much less what they deserve. Overall, I’d describe the book as flat and lacking elements of interest. show less
½
It was very good. The boys of the 87th have an elderly, once famous pianist slain in what looks like a burglary. Ollie Weeks from the 88th precinct makes an appearance. I really like him; he's hilarious. He's a total jerk, not someone you would want to be friends with, but a good detective. Kinda like "House", on TV. Obnoxious but good at his job.
Some good humor. Partially unresolved ending.

Members

Recently Added By

Lists

Author Information

Picture of author.
368+ Works 32,523 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

Some Editions

Lamberti, Nicoletta (Translator)

Series

Belongs to Publisher Series

Work Relationships

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Nocturne
Original title
Nocturne
Original publication date
1997
People/Characters
Steve Carella; Cotton Hawes; Annie Rawles; Ollie Weeks
Important places
Isola, New York, USA
Dedication
This is for Rachel and Avrum Ben-Avi

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Mystery
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3515 .U585 .N63Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1900-1960
BISAC

Statistics

Members
438
Popularity
70,319
Reviews
8
Rating
½ (3.45)
Languages
9 — Czech, Danish, English, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Norwegian (Bokmål), Swedish
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
30
UPCs
1
ASINs
6