Hope to Die (Matthew Scudder Series #15)

Hope to Die (Matthew Scudder Series #15)

by Lawrence Block
Hope to Die (Matthew Scudder Series #15)

Hope to Die (Matthew Scudder Series #15)

by Lawrence Block

eBook

$8.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

The city caught its collective breath when upscale couple Byrne and Susan Hollander were slaughtered in a brutal home invasion. Now, a few days later, the killers themselves have turned up dead behind the locked door of a Brooklyn hellhole -- one apparently slain by his partner in crime who then took his own life.

There's something drawing Matthew Scudder to this case that the cops have quickly and eagerly closed: a nagging suspicion that a third man is involved, a cold, diabolical puppet master who manipulates his two accomplices, then cuts their strings when he's done with them. No one but Scudder even suspects he exists. And his worst fear is that the guy is just getting started ...


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780061801853
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Publication date: 10/13/2009
Series: Matthew Scudder Series , #15
Sold by: HARPERCOLLINS
Format: eBook
Pages: 400
Sales rank: 110,027
File size: 571 KB

About the Author

About The Author

Lawrence Block is one of the most widely recognized names in the mystery genre. He has been named a Grand Master of the Mystery Writers of America and is a four-time winner of the prestigious Edgar and Shamus Awards, as well as a recipient of prizes in France, Germany, and Japan. He received the Diamond Dagger from the British Crime Writers' Association—only the third American to be given this award. He is a prolific author, having written more than fifty books and numerous short stories, and is a devoted New Yorker and an enthusiastic global traveler.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter One

It was a perfect summer evening, the last Monday in July. The Hollanders arrived at Lincoln Center sometime between six and six-thirty. They may have met somewhere -- in the plaza by the fountain, say, or in the lobby -- and gone upstairs together. Byrne Hollander was a lawyer, a partner in a firm with offices in the Empire State Building, and he might have come directly from the office. Most of the men were wearing business suits, so he wouldn't have had to change.

He left his office around five, and their house was on West Seventy-fourth Street between Columbus and Amsterdam, so he had time to go home first to collect his wife. They may have walked to Lincoln Center -- it's half a mile, no more than a ten-minute walk. That's how Elaine and I got there, walking up from our apartment at Ninth and Fifty-seventh, but the Hollanders lived a little further away, and may not have felt like walking. They could have taken a cab, or a bus down Columbus.

However they got there, they'd have arrived in time for drinks before dinner. He was a tall man, two inches over six feet, two years past fifty, with a strong jaw and a high forehead. He'd been athletic in his youth and still worked out regularly at a midtown gym, but he'd thickened some through the middle; if he'd looked hungry as a young man, now he looked prosperous. His dark hair was graying at the temples, and his brown eyes were the sort people described as watchful, perhaps because he spent more time listening than talking.

She was quiet, too, a pretty girl whom age had turned into a handsome woman. Her hair, darkwith red highlights, was shoulder-length, and she wore it back off her face. She was six years younger than her husband and as many inches shorter, although her high heels made up some of the difference. She'd put on a few pounds in the twenty-some years they'd been married, but she'd been fashion-model thin back then, and looked good now.

I can picture them, standing around on the second floor at Avery Fisher Hall, holding a glass of white wine, picking up an hors d'oeuvre from a tray. As far as that goes, it's entirely possible I saw them, perhaps exchanging a nod and a smile with him, perhaps noticing her as one notices an attractive woman. We were there, and so were they, along with a few hundred other people. Later, when I saw their photographs, I thought they looked faintly familiar. But that doesn't mean I saw them that night. I could have seen either or both of them on other nights at Lincoln Center or Carnegie Hall, or walking in the neighborhood. We lived, after all, less than a mile apart. I could have laid eyes on them dozens of times, and never really noticed them, just as I very possibly did that night.

I did see other people I knew. Elaine and I talked briefly with Ray and Michelle Gruliow. Elaine introduced me to a woman she knew from a class she'd taken several years ago at the Metropolitan, and to a terribly earnest couple who'd been customers at her shop. I introduced her to Avery Davis, the real estate mogul, whom I knew from the Club of Thirty-one, and to one of the fellows passing the hors d'oeuvres trays, whom I knew from my AA home group at St. Paul's. His name was Felix, and I didn't know his last name, and don't suppose he knew mine.

And we saw some people we recognized but didn't know, including Barbara Walters and Beverly Sills. The occasion was the opening of New York's summer music festival, Mostly Mozart, and the cocktails and dinner were the festival's thank-you to its patrons, who had achieved that status by contributing $2500 or more to the festival's operating fund.

During her working years, Elaine made a habit of saving her money and investing it in rental property around town. New York real estate has been a can't-lose area even for people who do everything wrong, and she did most things right, and has done very well for herself. She was able to buy our apartment at the Parc Vendome, and there's enough income generated by her apartment houses in Queens so that, as far as money is concerned, neither of us needs to work. I have my work as a detective, of course, and she has her shop a few blocks south of us on Ninth Avenue, and we enjoy the work and can always find a use for the money it brings in. But if nobody hired me or bought paintings and antiques from her, we wouldn't wind up missing any meals.

We both like the idea of giving away a certain amount of what comes in. Years ago I got in the habit of stuffing ten percent of my earnings into whatever church poor box came along. I've grown a little more sophisticated in my giving since then, but I still find a way to get rid of it.

Elaine likes to support the arts. She gets to more operas and gallery openings and museum shows than I do (and fewer ball games and prizefights) but we both like music, classical and jazz. The jazz joints don't hit you up for contributions, they just call it a cover charge and let it go at that, but every year we write out a lot of checks to Lincoln Center and Carnegie Hall. They like to encourage us with perks of one sort or another, and this evening was one of them -- drinks, a sit-down dinner, and complimentary orchestra seats to the opening concert.

Around...

Hope to Die. Copyright © by Lawrence Block. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

What People are Saying About This

Marilyn Stasio

“A puzzler...So dry. So droll. So good for the native soul.”

Interviews

Frequent Flier
From the September/October 2001 issue of Book magazine.

Lawrence Block spends a lot of time abroad, but his characters don't often leave the Big Apple.

If Lawrence Block has the kind of kooky fetish you might expect of a hard-boiled fiction writer who used to make ends meet writing erotica, it might be his fascination with towns named Buffalo. He's visited more than 75, though he can't explain why.

"The effort of getting there is its own reward," says Block, a native of Buffalo, New York. "Being there isn't always such a much."

It's an apt parallel for Block's work. His sleight-of-hand plot resolutions, wry characterizations and whack-a-mole endings leave a stronger impression in the course of reading than in the course of memory. Still, they're fun jaunts.

Hope to Die continues the adventures of Matthew Scudder, the ex-NYPD detective turned private eye who's almost unrecognizable from the dour alcoholic he was in Block's first Scudder book 25 years ago. Nowadays Scudder fits crime-solving into a busy schedule of exclusive Manhattan society galas. Block's a well-to-do New Yorker, too, but he gets out of the city every chance he gets.

Block, who has written more than 50 books, is a Grand Master of the Mystery Writers of America, but currently he's hoping to join the Traveler's Century Club, whose members must have visited 100 countries. Block has been to 98t. Traveling serves mostly as a perspective cleanser to see New York with a fresh pair of eyes.

Block often applies second looks to other aspects of his work as well. He recently put his name back on previously pseudonymous works, including a racy artifact from his early erotica days, the novel Threesome. Plus, he's also writing the screenplay for Keller, which will feature Jeff Bridges in the title role, a stamp-collecting paid assassin from Block's recent books Hit Man and Hit List.

"So often novelists can't do a screenplay," says Bridges, who is also working as a co-producer on the film. "But Larry did a good job and it was a thrill to see what he came up with."

Next up for Block is another New York thriller. After that he'll probably tackle one of his series again, though he's not sure which one. ("The title is almost inevitable," he says. "After Hit Man, and Hit List, I think Hit Parade is irresistible.") One thing he is certain about, though: The next three countries he'll visit are Argentina, the Falkland Islands, and Antarctica. (Steve Wilson)

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews