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The Bookmakers

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Just when he finally comes up with a fabulous idea for a novel about a burnt-out writer who decides to commit suicide, Mack Green discovers that his publisher, who thinks that the book works better as nonfiction, has hired a hit man to insure that idea.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 27, 1995
      The title is the first sly joke in this wacky romp in which a has-been novelist gets entangled in deception and slapstick with his agent, his publisher and the mafia. Chafets (Inherit the Mob) maintains an arch tone throughout the shaggy-dog tale of ex-literary wunderkind Mack Green, who, on his 45th birthday, gets a plot idea that he thinks will revive his career: an aging former literary star who, like Mack, has done little but drink and chase women for years, writes a yearlong diary before returning to his midwestern hometown to kill himself. Mack's book shapes up nicely, but Mack, often a tad obtuse, doesn't know that Artie Wolfowitz, his publisher and ostensible friend, has been sabotaging Mack's sales for 15 years, ever since he found out that Mack had bedded his wife. Nor does he know that his agent, Tommy Russo, who's also an ordained priest, has given his 10% of the book to his bookie, to settle a debt. The bookie, Herman Reggie, engineers a secret movie deal and tries to make Mack's book even more of a roman a clef than Mack intends--by contracting with a 4'6", 200-plus-pound hit man called Afterbirth to complete the ``suicide.'' And Wolfowitz, trying to concoct a plagiarism scandal that would seal Mack's literary doom, hires a hack to write another suicide diary. The plots and double crosses unfold with a mix of cheerfulness and suspense; the many colorful characters are great fun; and the schemings of Wolfowitz and Reggie are delicious. Author tour.

    • Library Journal

      April 1, 1995
      A formerly successful novelist, Mack Green, decides to write a novel as a suicide diary and commit suicide when it's finished. After getting wind of the project, agents and editors all want a piece of the action, especially if the work turns out to be nonfiction. Chafets (Inherit the Mob, LJ 8/91) has created a fascinating array of offbeat characters who include dwarves, priests, and pro-suicide scions, and the pace of his smoothly written book is as fast as a bullet. The publishing industry takes a bit of drubbing here, but it's well deserved. Recommended.--Robert H. Donahugh, formerly with Youngstown & Mahoning Cty. P.L., Ohio

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  • English

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