The Million-Dollar Wound

by Max Allan Collins

Nathan Heller (3)

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From a foxhole on Guadalcanal, shared with former champ Barney Ross, to the glitzy underworld of Hollywood in the ’40s, Nate Heller fights his memories and “the outfit.” Something happened at the Canal, something Heller’s blocking out. What he can’t block, though, is the wound he received -- the million-dollar wound, the one that got him home. Back in the States, and back in Chicago, he becomes involved once again with Frank Nitti during the gang boss’s last violent days and with show more the gangland attempts to take over the movie unions. The home front is every bit as violent as the war-torn Pacific, and even the solace of fan-dancer Sally Rand can do nothing to ease Heller, who is haunted by the death of a friend in Guadalcanal and surrounded by the mayhem of gangland murders.

Narrator Yuri Rasovsky has garnered numerous awards for his work in audio, including two Peabodys, two Audie Awards, and a Grammy. His uncle, the late Barney Ross, né Barnet Rasofsky, was lightweight and welterweight Champion of the World, a war hero, a crusader against drug abuse, and best friend of private eye Nate Heller.

. Fiction. Mystery.
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Member Reviews

3 reviews
Nathan Heller is Max Allan Collins' invention. Heller is a fictional
character who interacted throughout the twentieth century with
interesting figures and in controversial situations ranging from Eliot
Ness' war on organized crime to Marilyn Monroe's last days. As bizarre
and silly as the concept sounds in the abstract, in Collins' capable
hands, the concept actually works and works well.

In this novel, which is the third of the "Nitti" era Heller novels, Heller
and his buddy, ex-boxer Barney Ross, enlist in the marines. Both are
too old to enlist, but they lie about their age and enlist anyway. Collins
takes the pair through the drunken evening that ended with Heller enlisting and to Camp Pendleton, where they underwent basic show more training.
The pair then head out to Guadalcanal to an incredible play-by-play
foxhole fight with the Japanese army. The action is so intense, you
actually feel as if you are watching a war movie, not reading (or
listening) to a novel.

I had already read about how Heller "met" Monroe and the Kennedys
years later, but I assumed that Barney was just another character in
the story, not a real-life celebrity. Ross (aka Beryl Rosofsky) was
actually a world champion in three weight divisions and decorated
veteran of World War II where he fought Guadalcanal and killed nearly
two dozen enemy troops in one night. His father had wanted him to
become a rabbi, but after his father was killed resisting a robbery, Ross
became a street brawler and then a professional boxer. Never knocked
out in 81 fights, he finished his career with 72 wins and is consistently
ranked as one of the best fighters of all time.

The story then takes a wounded Heller (wounded in that great battle
at Guadalcanal) back to the states where he slowly puts together who
he is and is discharged so that he can testify against reputed mobster
Frank Nitti.

The rest of the book follows Heller through Chicago and Hollywood as
he deals with organized crime's entry into the Hollywood unions.
For me, the best parts were the war stories and Heller's recovery, but,
by all means, read the whole book, it's all good.
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There is a fairly good Nate Heller novel, with little of the excitement of the classic first two novels, but none of the dryness and improbabilities of the later stories.
I thoroughly enjoyed this novel and the two that preceded it. Nate Heller joins the short list of my favorite characters. I plan to continue with the series. Well written fiction and a good history lesson all rolled into one!!

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Author Information

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418+ Works 17,173 Members
Max Allen Collins was born in 1948 in Muscatine, Iowa. He is a two-time winner of the Private Eye Writer's of America's Shamus Award for his Nathaniel Heller historical thrillers "True Detective" and "Stolen Away". Collins also wrote the Dick Tracy comic strip begining in 1977 and ending in the early 1990s. He has contributed to a number of other show more comics, including Batman. Collins created his first independent feature film, Mommy, following a nightmarish experience as screenwriter on the cable movie The Expert. Collins has been contracted by DC Comics to write three tie-ins to his critically acclaimed graphic novel "The Road to Perdition", which was adapted into the feature film. Author of other such move tie-in bestsellers as "In the Line of Fire" and "Air Force One", he is also the screenwriter/director of the cult favorite suspense films "Mommie" and "Mommie's Day". (Publisher Provided) Max Allen Collins was born in Muscatine, Iowa on March 3, 1948. His graphic novel Road to Perdition, published in 1998, is the basis of the Academy Award-winning 2002 film starring Tom Hanks, Paul Newman and Daniel Craig. His other works include Road to Purgatory, Road to Paradise, Return to Perdition, Bye Bye, Baby, and Target Lancer. He won the Shamus awards for True Detective in 1983 and Stolen Away in 1991. He is completing a number of Mike Hammer novels begun by the late Mickey Spillane. He has collaborated with his wife Barbara Collins on three novels and numerous short stories. Their Antiques Flee Market won the Romantic Times Best Humorous Mystery Novel award in 2009. His comics credits include the syndicated strip Dick Tracy (1977-1993), Ms. Tree, Batman; and CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, based on the hit TV series for which he has also written ten novels. He has written tie-in books for several movies including Saving Private Ryan, Air Force One, and American Gangster, which won the Best Novel Scribe Award in 2008 from the International Association of Tie-in Writers. His non-fiction works include The History of Mystery and Men's Adventure Magazines, which won Anthony Award. He is also an independent filmmaker. He has written and directed five features and two documentaries, including the Lifetime movie Mommy and the sequel, Mommy's Day. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Awards and Honors

Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Million-Dollar Wound
Original publication date
1986
People/Characters
Nathan Heller; Frank Nitti; Eliot Ness; Paul "The Waiter" Ricca; Louis "Little New York" Campagna; Willie Morris Bioff (show all 8); Sally Rand; Robert Montgomery
Epigraph
Lucky indeed for America that in this theater and at that juncture she depended not on boys drafted or cajoled into fighting but on “tough guys” who had volunteered to fight and who asked for nothing better than to come t... (show all)o grips with the sneaking enemy who had aroused all their primitive instincts.
—Samuel Eliot Morison
History of the United States Naval Operations in World War II
Say a prayer for my pal Who died in Guadalcanal.
—Commonest of inscriptions among the hundreds of crosses in a cemetery on that island
If you don’t do like I say, you’ll get shot in the head.
—Frank Nitti
There’s no business like show business.
—Irving Berlin
Dedication
For George Hagenauer—
without whom Heller’s world
would be much smaller
First words
My name was gone.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Mystery, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3553 .O4753 .M55Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

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101
Popularity
318,765
Reviews
3
Rating
(3.92)
Languages
English, German
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
21
ASINs
2