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316 pages, Paperback
First published July 12, 2011
To Hank, the crime blotter was not simply a sadly neglected literary genre but a profoundly and uniquely American one as well. … If approached with the proper attitude, the crime blotter was a reflection of the entire culture at that particular moment in history. It said all that needed to be said about who we were and how we lived.
Spider-Man He Ain’t: Dieter Jeffries imagined he would be the cleverest burglar ever by (allegedly) crawling across the rooftops of the 8th St. brownstones in Park Slope last Monday afternoon and entering his intended victim’s home through the skylight. Unfortunately the 21-year-old Jeffries forgot to take one thing into consideration. When Andrew Braddock and his wife, Josephine, returned home that evening, they (allegedly) found Jeffries still unconscious on the kitchen floor, surrounded by the shattered glass of the skylight. Nothing, obviously, had been taken, and officers soon arrived on the scene. While in jail, Jeffries might want to consider a new diet.
"He stared at the woman seated at the table eight inches away from theirs, the one who'd been on her cell phone from the moment she walked in.
Hank turned to Annie, and without lowering his voice he said, 'You know I'm gonna kill her before the evening's over. Just beat her to death with my empty glass here.' He lifted the glass an inch for emphasis. The woman's two children, probably ten and eight years old, looked at him with a mix of fear and hope in their eyes.
'Yeah, your mother's an asshole,' Hank told them.
Annie finished her own drink and gestured to the waitress as she passed. 'This thing is really bothering you, isn't it?'
'What thing's that? This cow here?' He tipped his head toward the next table."
Hank Kalabander is hard man to like. His speech is a fire hose of foul language, ethnic slurs, sexist comments, and words that would make GLAAD very unhappy. His track record with women isn't so great, and even he doesn't respect his job as a writer of the crime blotter for The Hornet, Brooklyn's finest shopper newspaper. However, when rumors of a "Gowanus Beast" (like Bigfoot, but local) induce mass hysteria in the borough (and then metropolitan New York), suddenly you feel for Hank as the only sane man left in the city. "Colorful" characters abound, with unlikely names such as Rocky Roccoco and Sherwood Nutskin.
Memoirist and novelist Knipfel's (Slackjaw; Noogie's Time To Shine) latest book is recommended for those readers with the darkest sense of humor and a high tolerance for carnie slang