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Fiddlers (2006)

Fiddlers (2006)

Book Info

Author
Genre
Series
Rating
3.81 of 5 Votes: 2
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ISBN
0156032783 (ISBN13: 9780156032780)
Language
English
Publisher
mariner books

About book Fiddlers (2006)

I had always heard that Ed McBain could craft a good story; FIDDLERS was my introduction to his style. To be honest, when I first started reading this book, I was unsure about it. There seemed to be too many things going on, too many characters. The initial plot, a serial (I would say mass murderer) killer is offing older people, seemingly all unrelated. This was a fascinating plot-line. The twists and turns, dead-ends, and mcguffins kept me turning pages. But the subplots, in my opinion, were weak. There's the story of a white cop and a black woman and thier wayward relationship; there's the story of a cop's daughter who's starting to bum around with the wrong crowd, indulging in the wacky-tabaccy; and there's the younger cop who is falling for an older woman, a woman who seems to be the only person in the world that truly understands who he is. Like a I said, weak. However, even with these weak subplots, the writing alone kept the story fresh. McBain is truly a narrative wizard. Add the fact that this novel is the 55th installment to the 87th Precinct series--a series that is lauded to have original stories and captivating characters--and one can't help but be impressed at the mere longevity of McBain's world.When the story does come together, nothing seems fabricated or added-on. Every scene was needed. I can appreciate that. I have a few more of the 87th Preceinct novels on my shelves, and I'll be sure to read them soon...just maybe not as soon as I planned. (HIGHLY RECOMMENDED for the police proceduaral enthusiast)

Alas, Fiddlers is the last book in Ed McBain's excellent 87th Precinct series, perhaps the greatest police procedural series of all time.As usual, there's a solid mystery to be solved by the group of detectives McBain's readers followed for over 50 years: Steve Carella, Myer Myer, Bert Kling and all the rest. Ollie Weeks makes a strong and heartening appearance. We not only see the detectives at work, but we get a brief glimpse into their personal lives.What was marvellous about McBain's 87th Precinct novels was how he could touch about contemporary conerns and trends and topics in very profound ways without straying from the main story. In this case, he tackles the trouble parents having keep their kids away from drugs, and race relations, among other things. But the joy of McBain's writing is that he doesn't preach at you or drown you in data. Instead, he simply shows how his characters are affected by these matters in the way so many of us are, just as part of the process of living.

Do You like book Fiddlers (2006)?

I finished this very last entry in McBain's 87th Precinct series with a strange sense of melancholy. For the past couple of years I've worked my way through most of the 55 titles in more or less chronological order, and the knowledge that after this there would be no further developments of his rich and motley cast was kind of sad. This one is a quintessential McBain yarn, starting from the multiple themes that derive from the title. The entire detective squad of the 87th becomes involved in a multiple homicide, the first of which is the killing of a blind violinist. There are all sorts of fiddlers and fiddling as the plot grows and deepens in complexity. There are familial, romantic and just plain hormonal relationships among the varied characters. McBain seems to have decided to show everybody in their best light-- even the obnoxious ones like Andy Parker and Fat Ollie Weeks seem softer-edged and on the verge of discovering redemptive traits, though Bert Kling remains a hard-luck lover right to the end. There's no sense of finality here. One could almost believe McBain hoped his characters would live on, continue to grow and have further adventures. (Personally I don't know how I'd feel about that. Salvatore Lombino, aka Evan Hunter, aka Ed McBain, was one of a kind). There is also a certain feeling of playing his characters and plot by the numbers. Maybe it was a good time for the boys of the 87th to go out at the top of their game.
—Tony Gleeson

(Abridged audio book)I liked the story and I realize that I enjoy all of the cops at the 87th precinct.Because this was abridged, there wasn't a lot of whys and wherefores discussing why the bad guy was doing what he was doing. Other than some jarring switches between scenes/characters which were a bit difficult to follow without a visual 'new chapter' or even 'new paragraph', the detective work flowed smoothly - no noticeable jumps in logic or convenient conclusions.The ending was pretty anticlimactic. Don't know if that was a result of the abridgement or if the author used up all the good stuff earlier in the story.
—Tracy

A series of killings stump the detectives of the 87th Precinct. The only things in common are the Glock pistol used, the relative old ages of the victims, and that each is shot twice in the face. The victims themselves seem unlikely. There is a blind violinist, a cosmetics saleswoman, a female college professor, a priest, and an old woman walking her dog. Piece by piece, the detectives, must find the links to the crime. As usual, this series is the “king” of procedural mysteries with excellent plotting and real-like characters. It has drama, humor and great crime-solving procedure. As always, the detectives themselves have their own personal problems and hang-ups that add spice to the story. Will Fat Ollie's romance come to fruition? We will never know. This is the final episode of the 87th Precinct series; McBain passed on in 2005, leaving a legacy of wonderful books, both as Ed McBain and Evan Hunter.
—Gerald Kinro

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