Okay, well! There’s the only re-read of an 87th Precinct novel I have ever done. And it was a pleasure!
A few notes:
My 5 favourite books in the series are as follows:
Ice
Lady, Lady, I Did It!
Fuzz
See Them Die
Lightning
Let’s Hear It For The Deaf Man might very well be my sixth fave…and a re-read - which none of the others benefit from - has only solidified my opinion of the book as Top 10 material: I don’t think any other series entries featuring the recurring villain the Deaf Man would make my Top 10. Two is plenty.
In a dogfight, maybe Let’s Hear It For The Deaf Man is actually better than Fuzz, when it comes to which Deaf Man book is actually the cleverest. Let’s Hear It For The Deaf Man probably has the best Deaf Man caper in terms of entertainment value, shock value - unless you can figure out what the photos mean, and then really mean, that the Deaf Man is sending to Carella and the rest of the cops of the 87, as hints of what he’s planning to do. I did not make the mental leap necessary to deduce what this go-round of ‘fair play and hints’ was all about, so at the climax of the novel, all I could do was sit back and be amazed at how a master criminal can tell details of his plan and yet still be the ultimate trickster at the same time.
But if Fuzz tops Let’s Hear It For The Deaf Man, it’s the cutting back on the fun and games aspect, and making it all more harrowing, with the Deaf Man at his most evil. In Fuzz, the scheme to grab a shitload of money rests on murders, and the Deaf Man has no problem with this. By comparison, all the other Deaf Man books in the series seem a little…tame, a little bit comic-book, compared to the stakes and slaughter. Fuzz is perhaps also the most chaotic, the most bizarre in structure, especially when things go off the rails, either for the cops or the evil mastermind.
But enough about Fuzz. Let’s Hear It For The Deaf Man is, to my mind, the brilliant one. The brilliant crime. The brilliant plan to make off with a stolen fortune, and prove the cops incompetent at the same time. This was perhaps the third or fourth 87th Precinct novel I recall reading, and it was the first time I met the Deaf Man, even though two earlier novels did feature him (The Heckler; Fuzz). I know that I read Lady Killer around this time - not one of my favourites, and I will always think of it as sort of a “poor man’s Deaf Man-like” novel - with the villain taunting the cops about an upcoming murder - and the clues being rather obvious. I also find Eight Black Horses - a later Deaf Man novel - to be the weakest, perhaps being too simplistic and obvious, like Lady Killer with its bush league Deaf Man wannabe, to dazzle me.
The six appearances by the Deaf Man - in six novels spread wide throughout the series - sort of sit in their own corner of the reality McBain is peddling. Larger-than-Life, super-smart, recurring criminal masterminds are the stuff of comic books and less believable spy movies. Holmes and Moriarity, Nero Wolfe versus Arnold Zeck in the so-called Zeck trilogy (love those books!!). Bond and Blofeld. It’s all a bit…outside the normal parameters of reality. But it’s cooked up for fun.
Besides what I’ve already mentioned, Collin Wilcox’s police procedural series featuring Lt. Hastings gives us a Deaf-Man-worthy entry, with Doctor, Lawyer…; perhaps not surprisingly, Doctor, Lawyer…is my favourite from the Frank Hastings books (the series as a whole is a fond favourite from my younger years, but overall it cannot match the 87th Precinct level of quality). After that, a very eccentric police procedural series called the Yellowthread Street series, by William Marshall, has several books that might appeal to people who specifically like that Deaf Man vibe. No recurring villains in the Yellowthread Street realm…but William Marshall’s plots are, as a rule, deliberately zany, over-the-top and hyper-energized - so fans of Deaf Man villainy should seek out Sci-Fi, Roadshow, maybe even Perfect End, Frogmouth, and most especially Thin Air (which is, you guessed it, my favourite in the Yellowthread Street series!)
The Deaf Man and his ilk…tasting too much like fiction, for a normally gritty, realistic police procedural series? Oh, chill…let’s just go for it, every now and then!