Fiction Editor Michael Griffith: What I’m reading now? I realize I’m late to the party—Elmore Leonard calls it “the best crime novel ever written” and says it “makes The Maltese Falcon read like Nancy Drew,” and my fortieth-anniversary edition features an introduction by Dennis Lehane, who tabs it “the game-changing crime novel of the last fifty years”—but this week I’ve read for the first time, and with steadily mounting amazement, George V. Higgins’s The Friends of Eddie Coyle. A tale told almost exclusively in dialogue, and content to have the plot emerge from and be subordinate to the conversation, it seems an obvious precursor both of The Wire and of everything that’s most interesting in Quentin Tarantino movies. If the sentence “Jesus, I forgot how bad a thing a cheese sandwich is to eat” thrills you as much as it does me—and thrills you far more than a car chase would—this is the crime book for you.
About The Author
Cincinnati Review
Since its inception in 2003, The Cincinnati Review has published many promising new and emerging writers as well as Pulitzer Prize winners and Guggenheim and MacArthur fellows. Poetry and prose from our pages have been selected to appear in the annual anthologies Best American Poetry, Best American Essays, New Stories from the South, Best American Short Stories, Best American Fantasy, Best American Mystery Stories, New Stories from the Midwest, and Best Creative Nonfiction. Learn More
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