In at the Kill
by Emmett McDowell
Stark House Press, 2023*
In at the Kill—which began
life as one-half of an Ace Double in 1960 (paired with McDowell’s own Bloodline
to Murder)—is a medium-boiled mystery with a touch of humor, an
unscrupulous amateur sleuth, and a rip-roaring plot. Jonathan Knox is the proprietor
of the Green Barn. A Louisville, Kentucky, auction house “that flourished like
the proverbial green bay tree.” While checking the day’s mail and suffering the
results of a late-night Halloween party, Jonathan is interrupted by his pal, Lieutenant
Ben Harden Helm.
Ben
tells Knox a whacky story about a construction crew tearing up the sidewalk in
front of city hall, digging a hole underneath, removing ten bundles of wastepaper,
and then repairing everything good as new. When the construction company bills
the city for the work, no one in public works knows anything about the job. But
Knox, who has a photographic memory, recalls a tale about a batch of rare
stamps being buried under city hall’s sidewalk at the turn of the twentieth century.
With haste, Knox purchases the salvage rights to the wastepaper, which was taken
away from the site by a phony city inspector, and he drops everything to track down
the stamps. What starts out as a simple fraud, or so Knox believes, quickly
turns into blackmail and murder with Knox stuck in the middle of the whole ugly
affair.
In
at the Kill is
a sharp, funny, and entertaining post-World War 2 crime novel. Knox is marvelously
shady. He floats bits and pieces of truths, half-truths, and outright lies to every
character in the book, and when he gets so deep in the mud that it begins
sticking to him, he is willing to do almost anything to escape; except be labeled
as a blackmailer. There are red herrings and a twisty plot that never feels
overly busy. In at the Kill is a riot, in a very good way.
*In at the Kill
is the second book (of three) in Stark House Press’ Three Aces. The
other titles are: The Gilded Hideaway, by Peter Twist (1955),
and Heat Lightning by Wilene Shaw (1954). |
Click here for the Kindle
edition and here for
the paperback at Amazon.
Click here
to purchase Three Aces at Stark House’s website.
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