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Night and the City

por Gerald Kersh

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
1694161,212 (3.96)13
Harry Fabian has a dream to become the top wrestling promoter in London, but he has a problem: he needs money. Not too much -- only one hundred quid -- but it might as well be a million because he needs the money by the end of the week. What's more, it is the height of the 1930s Depression, he lives in London's Soho, he makes money from selling his girlfriend to men, and the police are arresting pimps like him to clean up the streets for the imminent Coronation of George The Sixth. Hunting for victims to blackmail and con out of money, Fabian moves through the clip joints, jazz clubs, wrestling gyms, bottle bars, and all-night cafes of 1930s London, spiraling further and further into the depths of immorality and depravity. And by the time his quest is over, Harry Fabian will have entered the tenth circle of the Inferno, dragging everybody he knows down with him...… (más)
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Come spend some time with the doomed. Kersh's tale of Harry Fabian, a pimp and small-time operator with big time dreams, and his cast of supporting players is vintage noir in most respects, except that the author's voice tends to drown out the characters, which casts the book in a whole different light. It isn't that Kersh doesn't have a lot to say and that what he says isn't interesting, it just makes for a book that is closer in spirit to The Grapes of Wrath than to The Big Sleep. The failure is that this cast of characters doesn't really deserve the Grapes of Wrath treatment - there isn't a real sympathetic soul among them.

Nevertheless, they will remain with you for a while - Ali, the mad Turk wrestler who is the center of the book's most exciting sequence; Helen, the shy virgin who, once bitten, sinks deeper and deeper into the world of the night and puts money before love; and of course, Harry Fabian, the small man whose mouth can never speak the truth that still flashes through his devious brain on occasion. Kersh makes it impossible to pity Fabian--he has no redeeming qualities whatsoever, and the only thing he believes in is himself--until perhaps even that isn't possible any more.

The book would have been more powerful if it had remained centered on Fabian and Kersh had saved his own thoughts for a book of philosophy. To see how well it might have turned out, read The Friends of Eddie Coyle by George V. Higgins. ( )
2 vota datrappert | Dec 24, 2010 |
The main character in this book is, more than anything else, Soho - London's seedy, sinister underbelly. It is, literally, the dark side of the city - most of the scenes take place betwen dusk and dawn. Kersh clearly knows the world he describes very well - some of the best passages in the book are those about the people who flow through the bars and back alleys.

The story focuses on Harry Fabian, a petty thug who lives off his prostitute girlfriend's earnings. From the outstanding opening sequence, it's clear that Harry is a bullshitter and a blusterer, who fools no-one except the hopelessly naive, and those who want to be fooled by the promise of easy money (including himself). Kersh is almost more critical of these last (who are drawn into Harry's circle from laziness, lack of self-control, and greed) as he is of those who deliberately set out to extract money from others.

I really enjoyed this book. The prose is sharp and stylish - especially the dialogue (which can be brilliantly telling), and the descriptions of people. The story is gripping and often menacing, although I felt that it pulled its punches at the end. Highly recommended. ( )
3 vota wandering_star | Feb 2, 2008 |
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Harry Fabian has a dream to become the top wrestling promoter in London, but he has a problem: he needs money. Not too much -- only one hundred quid -- but it might as well be a million because he needs the money by the end of the week. What's more, it is the height of the 1930s Depression, he lives in London's Soho, he makes money from selling his girlfriend to men, and the police are arresting pimps like him to clean up the streets for the imminent Coronation of George The Sixth. Hunting for victims to blackmail and con out of money, Fabian moves through the clip joints, jazz clubs, wrestling gyms, bottle bars, and all-night cafes of 1930s London, spiraling further and further into the depths of immorality and depravity. And by the time his quest is over, Harry Fabian will have entered the tenth circle of the Inferno, dragging everybody he knows down with him...

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