Payback Is Forever
Payback Is Forever
Ratings1
Average rating4
This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
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WHAT'S PAYBACK IS FOREVER ABOUT?
Miller's a thief, a fairly successful one. This comes in handy because he's not as successful when it comes to gambling. He needs to pay a debt, so he takes a job with a couple of strangers. They betray him, the job goes wrong, and Miller (and the cash) escape without his partners. They don't know his name or home base, so he figures he's safe for a little bit.
He's soon contacted by a figure from his past, Rick Redfield:
“I’ve entered into an arrangement with some… men of violence, shall we say. Which means I need the services of the most violent man I know. Which is you.”
“I’m no bodyguard.”
“No. You’re capable of terrible acts, and that’s the necessary thing here. Besides, bodyguards ask too many questions.”
With the promise of a large payday on the horizon, Miller's in—and soon finds himself involved with some Nazis who escaped from Germany in the waning days of the war, Nazi hunters, and a few more dead bodies than Miller was prepared to deal with.
SUPPORTING CAST
Miller and most of the characters that he deals with are of a fairly typical sort—you'll recognize the types easily. They're interestingly-drawn and well-used, but they're types.
Then there's Jill Reilly—she's Miller's love interest and is a secretary in the Medical Examiner's office. Given the proper circumstances, she'd probably make a pretty good Examiner herself—but between the education, she'd need, and the rampant chauvinism in the office, that's probably not going to happen. Reilly feels like she's got one foot in the Girl Friday type, but with a rebellious streak that keeps the other foot out of the type.
The other character that stands out as not fitting into a typical mold is Scott, Redfield's friend who acts as a liaison to the outside world when Redfield needs to stay out of the light. He's a timid, uncertain man—who needs to use a ventriloquist's dummy, Colonel Longshanks, to communicate those things that are too much for Scott to handle. Miller has no patience for either of them—but can force himself to work with Scott. The Colonel on the other hand...
There was a moment where I wondered if Scott/Colonel Longshanks would over-take Monkey Man as my favorite strange Kolakowski character. He didn't, but that he was in the running says something about the character development in this short novel.
THE HIDDEN AGENDA
If what I've described seems pretty straight-forward, it is. If anyone's read Kolakowski before, that's not how he rolls. Right?
There is something else afoot here. I don't know that it added much (if anything), but it didn't hurt anything either. Maybe if I was in a different mood when I read this I'd have a more positive take on the "something else," but right now, I can take it or leave it.
The material with Miller, the Nazis, Nazi Hunters is enough to focus on and keep you entertained. If you happen to get the rest of it, that's gravy.
SO, WHAT DID I THINK ABOUT PAYBACK IS FOREVER?
This feels like the kind of pulpy thrillers from the 1960s and 70s I've read—just in a post-WWII setting with a dash of Nathanael West thrown in. It's a surprisingly effective combination, and I'd have read another 200 pages of it without blinking. Although I do think this lean, mean, streamlined approach is far more effective.
Miller's absolutely the kind of character you want in this setting—his morality is stuck in the gray—it's a pretty dark gray, but he's not a full-on villain. And he's thinking about reforming, at least a little.
There were two scenes—or parts of scenes—that make this more than a quick, fun read. There's a visual in the last big gunfight that's so ridiculous, so comical, in the middle of a big action scene that makes you want a film version immediately (but it may be better in your imagination).
Before that there's another scene that I can't describe—you start it assuming X might happen, and yet when X does happen you still sit up and pay attention because you can't believe that Kolakowski actually did that. And then over the next 3 or 4 paragraphs, the shocking scene becomes something so unexpected that you have to read it a couple of times to make sure you read it right. Cackling while you read it every time makes the comprehension a little difficult.
A solid, stylish thriller with Kolakowski's style and sense of character is exactly what I needed to read last week, and Payback is Forever delivered. Do yourself a favor and pick it up.
Originally posted at irresponsiblereader.com.