Showing posts with label Dick Francis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dick Francis. Show all posts

Saturday, January 2, 2021

Proof – Dick Francis, 1984 ★★★½

Whisky Business

Life can change cruelly and suddenly for reasons infinitesimally small. What can you do when this happens to you?

For liquor merchant Tony Beach, the answer comes in the form of an odd quest to uncover a conspiracy involving counterfeit spirits, hijacked trucks, and a little murder.

And being this is a Dick Francis novel, some racehorses, too, though not so much as we might expect.

Saturday, September 17, 2016

High Stakes – Dick Francis, 1975 ★★½

Hard-Charging Mystery Hangs on at the Turn

If you know Dick Francis already and want more of his mystery fiction, here’s another gripping if formulaic excursion into the underside of life, connected in this case rather firmly to Francis’s home turf, the world of horse-racing.


If you are a Francis novice, High Stakes isn’t exactly the type to make you a fan.

A feeling of being run through the motions hangs over this crime novel, not unlike finding yourself inside one of the wheel-driven devices with which, we come to discover, the main character has made himself a mint.

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Knockdown – Dick Francis, 1974 ★★

Putting the Blood in Bloodstock

Dick Francis wrote very well. I feel confident in stating this, in part because I have read some fine Dick Francis novels and in part because he kept me reading this, a novel by no means fine. It is the mark of a superlative novelist to hold a reader’s attention even when firing blanks.

Knockdown begins with exactly that, a knockdown attack on our protagonist while he arranges a horse sale. As this is the livelihood of Jonah Dereham, he is both concerned and confused.

Why would a pair of thugs beat him up over the title to a non-sensational horse? And why would they attack him again when he acquires its replacement? Is it business? Is it personal? In time, Dereham discovers it is a bit of both.