For a brief time after high school I lived in a cabin in the woods with another guy. Our neighbors who allowed us to build a cabin on their property had a nice personal library I would raid for reading material. One of the items was Donald Westlake's “The Hot Rock”, a funny caper novel about a hapless group of criminals who keep trying to steal a diamond and failing, over and over again, coming up with increasingly outlandish plans. I was giggling throughout, and occasionally burst out laughing. This greatly annoyed my roommate who couldn't get away without going outside and walking around the wilderness. I couldn't help it, though; I couldn't stop laughing.
Flash forward fifty years (yeah, I'm old). I've now read all of the Dortmunder novels, of which “The Hot Rock” was the first, and many of Westlake's other funny novels. However, this one got away from me. So I was delighted to find it reprinted by Hard Case Crime after being out of print for 30 years.
In this one, the first person narrator is a practical joker who became one because his last name is a dirty slang term (without an umlaut) and developed revenge skills against his tormentors. Unfortunately, one of his practical jokes gets some people hurt and he is sentenced to a stint in prison. He falls in with a group of prisoners who have the ability to go in and out of prison, and they plan a bank robbery because they have the perfect alibi – they're already in the slammer! Our hero is not really a crook, but can't get out of the robbery, so uses his practical joking skills to foil the robbery – again and again.
Westlake did work to a type of formula (the foiled crime plot), but he's so clever and funny that you don't mind, even when you see where he's going. I found myself giggling again, which is rare for me when reading.
This book was published in 1974 so there are now a lot of period items (like pay phones) in it, also the attitude toward prison is a little too breezy for comfort, but Westlake was working to a formula as I said and wants to keep it light. It's not like he doesn't know about the harshness of prison – the Attica prison riots happened just three years earlier. But he knows the kind of story he wants to write, and he's very good at it.