Latest Update 30 March 2003 by Bob Ames
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The above information is from the online catalog of the Minuteman Library Network and my own collection.---Bob
For Joan: Gloriana
From the hardcover edition:
"In Sudden Mischief, Parker's stouthearted hero unwillingly takes a case that tests his sleuthing skills--and his commitment to the woman he loves.
Brad Sterling--former Harvard football player, ne'er-do-well, and Susan Silverman's long-out-of-touch ex-husband--is, by all appearances, a successful business man. But when he is charged with sexual harassment in the course of running a vast fundraiser called Galapalooza, he turns to Susan for help. Though Brad denies the charge he's desperate, behind in alimony and child support to other exes, and on the verge of dissolution. When Spenser reluctantly agrees to the case, he finds Brad denies everything. Sterling claims everything is fine--he is free of debt and free of problems.
While the harassment charge begins to look more and more specious, Spenser begins to sense there is something wrong with Galapalooza, when leads to charities turn into dead ends. Susan, meanwhile, becomes steadily more problematic as she wrestles with demons reinvigorated by the resurrection of her ex-husband. As the questions mount, Brad disappears, a body is found, and a shadowy mob connection begins to coalesce. Spenser finds himself fighting a two-front war: against some very bad men on one hand, and an increasingly difficult Susan, struggling with her own resurrection, on the other.
Dark, contemplative, and morally complex, Sudden Mischief is a brilliant meditation on the meaning of justice, love, and passion.
Sudden Mischief is featured on the Penguin Putnam Inc. World Wide Web site at www.penguinputnam.com
Significance of the dedication: Gloriana is the title character in The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser, a poet who spells his name with an "s" like the Boston Gumshoe.
Significance of the title: Fortunately it's right there in the book:
"Be well aware,"quoth then that Ladie milde,
"Least suddaine mischiefe ye too rash provoke"
-The Faerie Queene
Chapter 5: "If a tree falls in the forest..." - and there's no one around to hear it, does it make a sound? One of those tiresome philosophical questions. The answer is yes. Deal with it. See Oft Quoted
"Carl Rogers was an American psychologist. His nondirective approach had a great impact on the practice of psychotherapy. Rogers was born in Oak Park. Ill on Jan. 8, 1902. In 1942 Rogers became the first therapist to record and transcribe therapy sessions verbatim, a practice now standard. He published his ideas and clinical results in several books. Rogers taught at the University of Chicago and the University of Wisconsin at Madison. He was a fellow at the Center for Studies of the Person. He became widely known with his book, 'On Becoming a Person.'
http://www.ben.esu6.k12.ne.us/s-scie/car.htmlI found it appropriate here that he mentioned Carl Rogers since Spenser waits until Susan comes to terms with the problem herself."
"RBP really should steer clear of French! It hurts! Monde being a masculine singular noun, the adjective should be haut, without the e. Would mean 'high society' were it a French idiom. Actually, in French, the expression 'le monde' is enough. One does not add the adjective 'haut'. A deb, for example, is making her debut in "le monde", though it is about as 'haut' as it can go. Also often encountered in the phrase 'demi monde', meaning that area where high society and the underworld overlap e.g. the original Moulin Rouge, where such as Toulouse-Lautrec and his high society pals mingled with the most common hookers and hoofers."
"There is a section in the first part of The Waste Land in which Eliot's speaker pictures himself on London Bridge as a procession of the dead is moving past
Indeed, it's part 1, The Burial of the Dead/ Unreal city. See Poetry
After great pain, a
formal feeling comes--
The Nerves sit ceremonious, like Tombs--
The stiff Heart questions was it He, that bore,
And Yesterday, or Centuries before?
The Feet, mechanical, go round--
Of Ground, or Air, or Ought--
A Wooden way
Regardless grown,
A Quartz contentment, like a stone--
This is the Hour of Lead--
Remembered, if outlived,
As Freezing persons, recollect the Snow--
First--Chill--then Stupor--then the letting go--
(Me again) He next uses it in Hugger Mugger chapter 48.
BTW I would also like to thank Iain Campbell, who pointed out the same two quotes a week or so later but before I posted the above update.
"Well, Macbeth murdered Duncan, the Scottish king and after that
hallucinates because of his guilt. But it was actually Lady Macbeth who
always saw blood on her hands (she incited Macbeth to murder the king)
and coined the saying 'Out, damned spot!' Act V, scene 1.
Which reminds me, RBP used this before in Mortal Stakes, chapter 26, when he stood under the shower after he killed Wally and Doerr. 'Out, out damned spot.'"
Well noted, Simone.
Susan is pretty good to have around in a tense situation. And mighty handy with a brick.
Ah, the passage of time. Spenser has a club soda and a salad for lunch because alcohol or a heavy meal would necessitate a nap. Remember when three beers with lunch was just about right?
"She looked doubtful. Doubtful was a cute look for her.
'Well,' she said, 'I'm not sure...'
I gave her my card. The one that had my name and address but no references to me being a sleuth.
- 'Tell him his ex-wife sent me.'
Now she looked slightly embarrassed. Also a cute look. I suspected that she practiced all of them in a mirror and discarded any that weren't cute."
"Jimmy brought the beer.
- 'Irish,' Hawk said.
'His name is James Santo Costagnozzi,' I said.
- 'Bad luck,' Hawk said. 'To look Irish when you are not.'
'Unless you're trying to pass,' I said.
- 'Nobody trying to pass for Irish,' Hawk said.
'Is that an ethnic slur?' I said.
- 'Believe so,' Hawk said."
"'Saw your ex-husband this morning,' I said.
- Susan lifted her head from my shoulder and shifted slightly on the couch.
'Don't call him that,' she said.
- 'Okay, I went to see the artist formerly known as Silverman today.'"
"The driveway, which curved up to the right and out of sight behind the house, was covered with red stone dust, and there were a lot of flower beds, inert in the loveless March sunlight. I parked at the top of the hill in a big turn-around, beside a red Mercedes sport coupe and a silver Lexus sedan. There was enough room left over to park a couple of tour buses and a caviar truck."
"'Francis Ronan,' I said.
...
- 'Working for or against?' she said.
'Probably against,' I said.
- 'That figures,' Rita said.
'Why does that figure?' I said.
- 'Sir Lancelot asks you about a dragon, you don't figure they're working together.'"
"A Stoneham Police car drove up Main Street and pulled into the parking lot of the hardware store. A cop got out and walked into the store. In a few minutes he came out and stood by his car and gave me a cop look across the street. Cops on a two-man force in East Tuckabum, Iowa, will give you the same you-looking-for-trouble look that prowlies do in the South Bronx. Probably some sort of electro-magnetic force generated by the conjunction of gun and badge."
"It was a lovely December day, brisk and sunny. Unfortunately it was the first week in April."
"Showered, shaved, wearing a crisp white shirt, with my jeans pressed and new bullets in my gun, I arrived at the office a little past noon, carrying a ham and egg sandwich and two cups of coffee in a brown paper bag. I took off my raincoat and my new white Red Sox cap, sat at my desk, and ate my sandwich and drank my coffee with my office door invitingly open and my feet up on the desk so anyone going by could see that I had some new running shoes. Except for the fact that I had absolutely no idea what I was doing, I was the very model of a modern major shamus."
"'You're not computer literate?'
- 'Been keeping company,' Hawk said. 'With a woman works for a software outfit. One night she show me the wonders of the Internet.'
'Your reward probably for being such a studly,' I said.
- 'Studly be its own reward,' Hawk said. 'Anyway, that more than I want to know about computers.'
'You don't groove on the information highway?"
- Hawk snorted.
'What I like,' I said, 'is how this wondrous artifact of science is primarily useful as a conveyance for dirty pictures.'
- 'Of ugly people,' Hawk said.
'Sadly,' I said."
"'Quirk tell you anything last night?' Hawk said.
- 'They hadn't ID'd him yet,' I said. 'Nobody wanted to search the body.'
'Let the ME do it,' Hawk said.
- 'That's what Quirk said. Stiff had a gun, though. If fell out of his pocket when they were taking him away.'
'So maybe he ain't from the United Way,' Hawk said.
- 'Or maybe he is,' I said."
"'Were we going to share those onion rings?" Susan said.
- 'Of course,' I said. 'I was only picking out the fattening ones to save you.'
'And so fast,' Susan said.
- 'Just doing my job, little lady.'"
"When Mattie Clayman hung up, I called the AG's office and asked for Public Charities. It took a little while, but they had no record of anybody from their office going to see anyone at AIDS Place.
- 'You're sure?' I said.
There was a pause while the woman on the phone thought about being sure.
- 'We are a government agency,' she said finally.
'Which means you are not sure of anything,' I said.
- 'Maybe.'"
"She reached into her matching purse and took out a checkbook and a big gold fountain pan.
- 'How much?' she said.
'To spend the night with me?' I said. 'I usually get one thousand.'
- 'Don't be coarse,' she said. 'How much for the photographs.'
'Oh, those are free,' I said. 'You want the one with my body oiled, or the all-natural one?'"
"I slipped into the driver's seat in case we needed to be quick and tried to find jazz on the radio and failed. Besides all the current music, there was classical and there was a couple of music-of-your-life stations. I had long ago decided that Gogi Grant singing "The Wayward Wind" was not the music of my life, and I settled for a classical station."
"'Guys like these two don't usually assault strangers on the street for the hell of it,' Kearny said.
- 'I know,' I said. 'Doesn't make any sense, does it.'
'It would make a lot more sense if this was related to you nosing around in somebody's business who didn't want you nosing around in his business,' Kearny said.
- 'It sure would,' I said.
Open and earnest, a law-abiding citizen eager to help the police. Kearny looked at me like he didn't think I was so open and earnest, and maybe even like I wasn't helping the police. Cops get cynical."
"Hawk and I were shooting at an indoor range in Dorchester. I had three handguns, my everyday short S&W .38, the .357 I used for big game, and the Browning nine which I kept for those exciting times when five or six shots just aren't enough. Hawk had a long-barreled .44 Magnum which will, probably, bring down a crazed bull elephant. Since you rarely run into a bull elephant in Boston, I always suspected Hawk carried it for effect."
- "In the parking lot Hawk said, 'Maybe the numbers the same but my groupings were tighter.'
'Shooting with that blunderbuss, for crissake, you shouldn't even have a grouping. You ought to put one round right on top of another.'
'Groupings still tighter,' Hawk said.
'If we'd both been shooting at a live target, either one of us would have killed him,' I said.
'Sure,' Hawk said.
He didn't say anything else until we were in his Jag heading downtown on Blue Hill Avenue.
'I'd of killed him deader,' Hawk said softly.
'Sure you would have,' I said.
The quality of mercy is not strained."
"We were nearly through our beer when Tony Marcus came down the hall with his bodyguard. Some people think a huge bodyguard will discourage people. Tony's would have discouraged the Marine Corps. He barely fit through the hallway.
- 'That's Junior,' Hawk said. 'He got his own zip code.'"
You cannot teach a man anything; you can only help him find it within himself.--Galileo
"In A Catskill Eagle <chapter 38>, once Susan has been rescued from Russell, Spenser and Susan are talking and Susan asks Spenser if he had any siblings and he said no. She then says 'I was the youngest' ... In Sudden Mischief <chapter 6>, when Spenser and Susan are talking about Susan's past, Susan says 'They were childless until me.'"
Much the same way that Spenser went from having had a mother in the earlier books to her having died during childbirth when Parker had a better idea years later.
"The hooker Velvet's real name is Kim Pak Soong. i.e. the patronymic is KIM, the given names are Pak Soong. Koreans (and other Asians) put the patronymic first, not last as is the Western habit.
However, as she leaves, in Ch.42, Spenser says: "Thank you, Kim". Making, in all probability, a Spenserish personal gesture, indicating that hooker or not, she is deserving of good manners. She looks at him, startled (probably not used to the good manners.) However, he uses 'Kim' as if it were the short form of 'Kimberley', not realizing it is her family name. Just a little slip. Maybe Parker doesn't have a lot of Asian contacts?
This name problem arose again during the Olympics, when Lee and Park and Kim and other Asian names came up, and announcers got quite confused as to who was what."
I'm ashamed that this one slipped by me. My ex-wife is Korean and her name went from Che Hae Ryon to Hae Ryon Ames
so I am thoroughly familiar with the forms of address involved. To
be culturally correct Spenser should have said "Thank you Pak Soong."
Parker and his doppelganger Spenser may have marched across a lot of
Korean real estate but they don't seem to have picked up a lot of details.
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