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Dutch Shea Jr

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A man struggling desperately to escape the past is plunged into a future over which he has no control

405 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1982

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Dunne

32 books

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5 stars
24 (21%)
4 stars
33 (30%)
3 stars
40 (36%)
2 stars
9 (8%)
1 star
4 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Jonathan.
994 reviews54 followers
March 12, 2017
Not sure how much I liked this. It made me laugh on occasion, but cringe a lot. I presume the almost never-ending racist comments by a lot of the male characters (who are mostly lawyers, judges or cops) is an indication of how Dunne viewed the legal profession at the time, although there is no comeback, and most of the black characters are defendants in court cases. All a bit uncomfortable really, or maybe I just didn't get it. It was a clever plot however, a seedy pimp lawyer taking centre-stage with a complex set of circumstances that are drawn together to provide a good ending.
Profile Image for John DiConsiglio.
Author 50 books6 followers
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November 23, 2023
Dutch, we hardly knew ye. Somehow this sardonic 1982 pulp found its way into my then-adolescent hands & charmed me with its colorful menagerie of pimps, prostitutes & cops-on-the-take. (I shoulda been reading Little House on the Prairie, but the damage was Dunne.) Dutch is a fatalistic lawyer on the edge, juggling “raffish” clients while holding off lovers, the law & family secrets. Dunne was no hack. A celebrity journalist & screenwriter, he & wife Joan Didion were staples of Cavett & Carson. Dutch offered priceless lessons for a young writer: Get the details right & never be boring.
Profile Image for Simon Wang.
102 reviews2 followers
August 13, 2024
i picked this book up after reading the year of magical thinking by joan didion (dunne's widow)

i really liked the bleak hopelessness of the main character as well as the way he fixates on his past while refusing to examine it
i liked a lot of the stylistic choices regarding dialogue and the sort of rhythm of the text

a turn of phrase that really marked me is "chemotherapy for a metastasizing memory"

lots of bigotry throughout the book and entire sections that made my skin crawl
Profile Image for David Olsen.
Author 8 books19 followers
September 30, 2017
I had very different expectations for this book. It was slow, and had a sort of pointless meandering plot. Also, lots of antiquated racist characters. Maybe these were more prevalent in the eighties.
Profile Image for Saxon.
48 reviews35 followers
October 26, 2013
"'Hell, yes,' Marty Cagney said. 'So he's only thirteen, the kid, but what the hell, it's a good age to learn there's people who'll go through your pockets, you give them half a chance. It's a good day, you learn something like that. And, anyway, he's such a hotshot, he shouldn't leave his coat on the floor, and the pants. I pick them up, then I got the right to go through them. And what do I find in the pocket but a list. Very neat. One, two, three, four. The nuns teach him that at St. Gerald's. They know all the disco steps, the nuns these days, but they still teach neatness. One, get a haircut. That's the first thing on the list. Two, get bike fixed. So far, so good. Three, Granddad's birthday present. I figure the kid's not so bad, he's got it down on his list to get me a present. Four, jerk off. In his own handwriting. Let me ask you, Dutch, you think he thought he was going to forget? I was a kid, it wasn't the sort of thing slipped my mind. I didn't have to put it on a list either. The nuns those days, they saw your list, four, jerk off, they'd send you down to Father Kavanagh in the principal's office, and he'd look at number four on your list and he'd break your spleen. It's a new world, Dutch. You know what I did? I wrote five, go to confession, and stuck it back in his pocket, the list.'"
Profile Image for Maria.
120 reviews4 followers
November 23, 2011
Um, wowie holy zowie. I am surprised by how much I enjoyed this. It was crazy intricate and bloody-rare and not at all what I usually enjoy. I'll have to read this several times over to pick up the little things I'm sure I missed.
Profile Image for Kevin.
274 reviews
August 20, 2012
I can’t claim that this is a great novel, so I’m a little at a loss to describe the irrational pleasure it gives me, unless to ascribe it to the pleasure Dunne takes glorying in the seedy details of the mise en scène that he draws for his alter ego, the “pimp lawyer” Dutch Shea, Jr.
Profile Image for John.
1,789 reviews46 followers
August 12, 2015
Not sure if it was my dislike for this type of lawyer or the fact that it was a bore for me was the reason for not liking it. I kept putting it down saying I would not go back to it but I did go back to it over a months time. I should have left it unread.
Profile Image for Adam.
316 reviews23 followers
May 14, 2014
A rather ridiculous tale about a downtrodden defense attorney. I would never have come across this book if it weren't cited for a rather intriguing paragraph in Barbara Babcock's seminal article on public defense, "Defending the Guilty."
Profile Image for Mickey Mantle.
147 reviews4 followers
February 22, 2009
Interesting...I was told to read this book by a lawyer...The fixation of the lawyer with this book kind of baffles me...
It is a great read..not earthshaking.
Profile Image for Kerry.
39 reviews1 follower
April 22, 2009
Yet more artistry. Why does no one appreciate this man's talents? The protagonist is cauterized by alcohol, death and love.
Profile Image for Lisa Martin.
30 reviews4 followers
August 13, 2010
I read this book for literature class in college (early 80s) and couldn't find one redeeming thing about it.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews