On This Page
Description
Someone wants Gary Cooper to make a movie he isn't interested in making, and whoever it is wants him badly enough to get nasty about it.Cooper takes to the hills, accompanied by a writer named Ernest Hemingway, chased by men with blood in their eyes and murder in their hearts. The problem is that Cooper can't shoot straight and Hemingway can't operate without native bearers and an elephant gun.
Toby Peters can't shoot either, but he doesn't need help... much. Just give him a bowl of cereal show more and time to decide his next move and Toby will get everything straightened out. Now, if he can only keep Lombardi the gangster from making good on his threat to turn him into kosher hot dogs... .
. show less
Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
This time Toby has to protect Gary Cooper from a semi-retired gangster who wants to corner the LA cold cuts market... and make a movie, starring Cooper. Or else.
Toss in Ernest Hemingway getting manly and boxing with Toby, a Spanish freedom fighter with delusions of "fascisti" all around, Babe Ruth and some of his baseball friends, and assorted washed-up actors and filmmakers and a few small-time mobsters.
And one of them is willing to kill anyone who gets in the way of "High Midnight" being filmed, with Gary Cooper as the lead role. And when Cooper won't do it, he becomes the next target.
Toby is his usual loyal detective with a face bad guys can't resist punching. With his standard back-up, the midget Swiss translator, the show more ex-wrestler-turned-poet, and the messed-up (and generally messy) dentist.
The usual fun and adventure, mystery and famous faces, places, and times. I love Kaminsky's Toby Peters adventures, in large part because they never fail to transport me to their world. It's like being in The Big Sleep or Maltese Falcon. Always fun. show less
Toss in Ernest Hemingway getting manly and boxing with Toby, a Spanish freedom fighter with delusions of "fascisti" all around, Babe Ruth and some of his baseball friends, and assorted washed-up actors and filmmakers and a few small-time mobsters.
And one of them is willing to kill anyone who gets in the way of "High Midnight" being filmed, with Gary Cooper as the lead role. And when Cooper won't do it, he becomes the next target.
Toby is his usual loyal detective with a face bad guys can't resist punching. With his standard back-up, the midget Swiss translator, the show more ex-wrestler-turned-poet, and the messed-up (and generally messy) dentist.
The usual fun and adventure, mystery and famous faces, places, and times. I love Kaminsky's Toby Peters adventures, in large part because they never fail to transport me to their world. It's like being in The Big Sleep or Maltese Falcon. Always fun. show less
For the last few years I have been working my way through the Toby Peters series of mysteries by Stuart Kaminsky. These are not particularly spectacular in any way but I am a sucker for 1940s Hollywood and Toby Peter is a private detective that works in and around the film studios during the 1940s. In this outing he is assisting Gary Cooper who is being pushed into making a film that he has no interest in. What is interesting is who is doing the pushing as it appears to be a mafia boss.
Toby as always is stuck in the middle between the mafia, Gary Cooper, the desperate film crew that think that making this film with Gary Cooper is their ticket to fame and his surly brother, a cop who thinks that Toby is always in the wrong. Eventually show more Toby sorts through the beatings and bodies and figures out that this is a giant ruse and what someone really wants is for Gary Cooper to be killed.
While not my favorite of the series, I did enjoy this one. Gary Cooper comes across as a nice man who women loved and that men wanted to be like. As the story advanced we also get to meet Cooper’s friends Ernest Hemingway and Babe Ruth which added to the fun. I am looking forward to continuing on with the series. show less
Toby as always is stuck in the middle between the mafia, Gary Cooper, the desperate film crew that think that making this film with Gary Cooper is their ticket to fame and his surly brother, a cop who thinks that Toby is always in the wrong. Eventually show more Toby sorts through the beatings and bodies and figures out that this is a giant ruse and what someone really wants is for Gary Cooper to be killed.
While not my favorite of the series, I did enjoy this one. Gary Cooper comes across as a nice man who women loved and that men wanted to be like. As the story advanced we also get to meet Cooper’s friends Ernest Hemingway and Babe Ruth which added to the fun. I am looking forward to continuing on with the series. show less
"High Midnight" by Stuart Kaminsky is a winner all the way. Private investigator Toby Peter's client is none other than Hollywood star Gary Cooper, who is being pressured by a gangster to make a movie called "High Midnight" (this is before "High Noon") that Cooper doesn't want to make. Pretty soon bodies start piling up, and it is Peters who is the prime suspect after two of the bodies are found in his apartment. He must find the killer before he either gets killed himself or thrown into jail by his own brother, a Los Angeles cop.
Along the way, Peters bumps into Babe Ruth and Ernest Hemingway, the latter of whom gets involved in a gun battle along with Peters and Cooper, sort of a comic gunfight at the OK Corral.
Along the way, Peters bumps into Babe Ruth and Ernest Hemingway, the latter of whom gets involved in a gun battle along with Peters and Cooper, sort of a comic gunfight at the OK Corral.
Lombardi the gangstar, Lombardi's henchman Marco, Toby's brother Lieutenant Pevsner, and Toby's landlady Mrs Plaut and last but not least, Gary Cooper, who has hired Toby to investigate a blackmail which turns into murder and as Cooper is driven into the hills with a writer named Ernest Hemingway, who it seems can't actually handle things himself without "native bearers and a .500 express, and since Cooper can't shoot onlyToby's is left to come to the rescue. Great adventure, with glamorous Hollywood stars, High Midnight is another terrific Toby Peters Mystery with Stuart Kaminsky at his best..
I've read a few of the STUART KAMINSKY books featuring TOBY PETERS primarily because It evokes the forties era. I was a little boy in the early part of that era and it holds many warm memories for me. I'm a sucker for anything written using that time period. The books themself are easy to read with familiar characters of the era thrown in.
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
greasy film of cinematic fiction
36 works; 3 members
Author Information

126+ Works 7,305 Members
Stuart M. Kaminsky is head of the radio/television/film department at Northwestern University in Illinois. He is also a writer of textbooks, screenplays, and mystery novels. The more popular of his two series of detective novels features Toby Peters. Set in the 1930s and 1940s, the Peters books draw on Kaminsky's knowledge of history and love of show more film by incorporating characters from the film industry's past in nostalgic mysteries. Murder on the Yellow Brick Road (1978), for example, features Judy Garland while Catch a Falling Clown (1982) stars Emmett Kelley as Peters's client and Alfred Hitchcock as a murder suspect. His other critically acclaimed series chronicles the cases of Inspector Porfiry Rostnikov. Kaminsky's detailed studies of Russian police procedure combined with aspects of life in Russia have earned the Series an Edgar nomination for Black Knight in Red Square (1984) and the 1989 Edgar Award for A Cold Red Sunrise (1988). Stuart Kaminsky was born in Chicago in 1934 and died in 2009. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Some Editions
Series
Belongs to Publisher Series
Il giallo Mondadori (1741)
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title*
- Mezzanotte di fuoco
- Original title
- High Midnight
- Original publication date
- 1981
- People/Characters
- Toby Peters; Gary Cooper; Ernest Hemingway
- Important places
- Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 108
- Popularity
- 301,568
- Reviews
- 5
- Rating
- (3.50)
- Languages
- 5 — Dutch, English, French, German, Italian
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 17
- ASINs
- 3





























































