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Black Friday
  

Black Friday [Paperback]

David Goodis
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Paperback, Oct 3 1990 --  

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"David Goodis is the mystery man of hardboiled fiction. . . . He write of winos and barroom piano players and small-time thieves in a vein of tortured lyricism all his own. . . . He was the poet of the losers." --Geoffrey O'Brien

Product Description

From the author of Dark Passage and Shoot the Piano Player, a thriller about the dark ethics of crime, and the man unlucky enough to violate them.

With its chilling portrait of a doomed man sorting his way among the perverse loyalties of a criminal "family," Black Friday has all the earmarks of David Goodis's classics, Dark Passage and Shoot the Piano Player.  It is a haunting and often devastating foray into a world where no one has anything left to lose and survival itself is an act of malice.

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Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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 (2)
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Black Hearted Noir, Jan 27 2004
By 
cortright Mcmeel (baltimore, md United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Black Friday (Paperback)
I've always had a fixation on David Goodis, probably the most neglected and greatest crime writer to come out of the 50's. His prose beats Thompson and his characters are gloomier and darker than Chester Himes. Blonde on the Street Corner and The Street of No Return and Black Friday are all awesome character studies of down and out losers beset upon by booze, poverty and the mean streets of Philly. Goodis has no heroes in cheap suits. No Mike Hammer's or Sam Spade's talking sharp and banging their secretaries while they solve the crime minus a few bumps and bruises. It was said that Goodis wrote suicide notes, not crime novels. He was in Holloywood writing scripts for a few years but then went back to Philly and lived out his life pumping out crime novels while living above the garage at his parents house. He was a recluse on the level of JD Salinger and visited whores and walked the grey alleyways and haunted the smoky bars of Philly until he died...a good desolate noir life. Anyways, it is good to pay homage to guys like him -- a forgotten old crime dog who deserves an worthy epitaph in the Canon of American Crime Fiction.
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4.0 out of 5 stars D'you know David Goodis?, Oct 25 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Black Friday (Paperback)
Even if Black Friday isn't Goodis best, it is surely a good introduction to his dark and rich universe. Almost unknown in America before the 60's or 70's, Goodis is one of the best author of what French critics have call "roman noir", and possibly the missing link between Dash Hammett and Ray Chandler, and today's authors like Block and Ellroy. In Black Friday, Goodis write about his own great obsession: bad things happens to good poeple. It's the same story he tells over and over again, in Cassidy's Girl, or in Shoot The Pianist. The heroes is caught in a situation where there is almost no chance to escape. You'll read in two or three hours, praying for the poor guy (even if you'll know from the first page that he will fail). The book is also speaking of euthanasia, in a discreet but sensible way.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars D'you know David Goodis?, Oct 25 1998
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Black Friday (Paperback)
Even if Black Friday isn't Goodis best, it is surely a good introduction to his dark and rich universe. Almost unknown in America before the 60's or 70's, Goodis is one of the best author of what French critics have call "roman noir", and possibly the missing link between Dash Hammett and Ray Chandler, and today's authors like Block and Ellroy. In Black Friday, Goodis write about his own great obsession: bad things happens to good poeple. It's the same story he tells over and over again, in Cassidy's Girl, or in Shoot The Pianist. The heroes is caught in a situation where there is almost no chance to escape. You'll read in two or three hours, praying for the poor guy (even if you'll know from the first page that he will fail). The book is also speaking of euthanasia, in a discreet but sensible way.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Extraordinary Pot Boiler, Dec 28 2006
By Linda Wyatt - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Black Friday (Paperback)
This book is beyond the pale of any contemporary work and stands out over other earlier pulp fiction writers. The reader is nabbed and thrown brutely along with the protaganist, into a romantic and scary, Philadelphia of thugs and misery, freakish characters, true love and a town without a pity. It is one of the best reads for the genre I have ever encounterd. In fact, I believe that the other reviewers may be from France or other countries. I searched for the rights several years ago and found that someone in France owned it and it is not well known here. Get it and cherish it. Filmmakers: Lawrence Bender where are you?

2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Black Hearted Noir, Jan 27 2004
By cortright Mcmeel - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Black Friday (Paperback)
I've always had a fixation on David Goodis, probably the most neglected and greatest crime writer to come out of the 50's. His prose beats Thompson and his characters are gloomier and darker than Chester Himes. Blonde on the Street Corner and The Street of No Return and Black Friday are all awesome character studies of down and out losers beset upon by booze, poverty and the mean streets of Philly. Goodis has no heroes in cheap suits. No Mike Hammer's or Sam Spade's talking sharp and banging their secretaries while they solve the crime minus a few bumps and bruises. It was said that Goodis wrote suicide notes, not crime novels. He was in Holloywood writing scripts for a few years but then went back to Philly and lived out his life pumping out crime novels while living above the garage at his parents house. He was a recluse on the level of JD Salinger and visited whores and walked the grey alleyways and haunted the smoky bars of Philly until he died...a good desolate noir life. Anyways, it is good to pay homage to guys like him -- a forgotten old crime dog who deserves an worthy epitaph in the Canon of American Crime Fiction.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 3 reviews  4.3 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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