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Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin (USA 2007) From the Publisher: "Archer-Macdonald are working together at their peak, piecing together a most modern American tragedy, making literature out of the thriller form, gazing more clearly than ever into the future as it rolls through the smog." -- Newsweek Traveling from sleazy motels to stately seaside manors, The Ivory Grin is one of Lew Archer's most violent and macabre cases ever. Traveling from sleazy motels to stately seaside manors, The Ivory Grin is one of Lew Archer's most violent and macabre cases ever. "Ross Macdonald must be ranked high amongst American thriller writers." -- The Times Literary Supplement Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin. A Lew Archer Novel. Vintage Crime / Black Lizard, ISBN: 0307278999 (July, 2007), 240 p., $12.95.
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Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin (USA 1988) From the Publisher: "Ross Macdonald's work has consistently nourished me.... have turned to it often to hear what I should like to call the justice of its voice and to be enlightened by its wisdom, delighted by its imagination, and, not incidentally, superbly entertained." -- THOMAS BERGER "The most important successor to the Chandler/Hammett tradition, as well as the writer who elevated the hard-boiled private-eye novel to a new 'literary' form."-- MARCIA MULLER "[The] American private eye, immortalized by Hammett. refined by Chandler, brought to its zenith by Macdonald." -- The New York Times Book Review "A more serious and complex writer than Chandler and Hammett ever were." -EUDORA WELTY The lady flashed a diamond on each finger and a dimpled smile. But the olive-drab smudges under her eyes told Lew Archer she wasn't young anymore. His experience told him she was lying. And his empty wallet told him a hundred swallow. So Archer had only himself to blame when he wro looking for the girl she wanted found... And discovered a grisly love triangle where the price of desire added up to three: one body stabbed, one body shot and one body burned a crisp, dark brown. Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin. A Lew Archer Novel. Bantam Books, ISBN: 0553273523 (August, 1988), 256 p., $3.95.
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Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin (USA 1984) From the Publisher: ROSS MACDONALD Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin. A Lew Archer Novel. Bantam Books, ISBN: 0553238043 (January, 1984), 249 p., $2.95.
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Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin (USA 1971) From the Publisher: Inside: Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin. A Lew Archer Novel. Bantam Books #N6774 (September, 1971), 249 p., ¢95.
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Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin (UK 1970) From the Publisher: California Gunplay... Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin. London: Fontana 1970, Fontana Books #2407, 191 p., 5/- (25p).
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Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin (USA 1967) From the Publisher: Back cover: Lew found her easily enough, but before the day was over, Lucy was dead. Lew gave back his retainer and set out on his own investigation. The case got tougher and nastier as he dug for the facts. One violent murder led to another. Everyone connected with this triple-crossing blonde was marked for murder! Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin. New York: Pocket Books, 1967, Pocket Books #50291, 198 p., ¢50.
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John Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin (UK 1957) From the Publisher: JOHN ROSS MACDONALD is the pseudonym of Kenneth Millar, who has written several successful thrillers and short stories and book reviews under his own name; his wife also writes thrillers. Canadian and Pegasus, Scots-Dutch stock, he spent his early life in Canada, studied at two Canadian universities and received his Ph.D. from the University of Michigan. He lives in Santa Barbara, California. John Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin. A Lew Archer Detective Story. London: Pan, 1957, Pan Books #410, 191 p., 2'-.
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John Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin (USA 1952) From the Publisher: 1950 1951 Front and back flap: But over the years since his Black Mask days the private eye has acquired a glaze of boredom. His world has degenerated slowly into a narrow show of tabloid glamour and G-man intrigue, dulling a powerful popular form seemed headed for the literary ash-heap. But when John Ross Macdonald's first mystery novel was published three years ago, critics looked up and flatly stated that here was "a writer of hard-boiled prose with a difference," who promised to give the private detective "a new lease on life." Praise for Macdonald continued on the publication of his second book, and last fall, when his third, The Way Some People Die, came out, Anthony Boucher of the New York Times "stuck his neck out," as he said, and acclaimed it: "the best novel in the tough tradition that I've read since 'Farewell, My Lovely'... and possibly since 'The Maltese Falcon'... the top hard-boiled novel of the year." What is it about Macdonald's books that makes veteran critics tend to lose their restraint? Just this: though writing in the tough tradition and retaining its pace, vividness, and spade-calling realism, he has not accepted its limitations. Macdonald's characters have psychological depth, his stories have social range and moral dimensions. Instead of action for action's sake, diluted with cynical sentimentality, here is human compassion for the broken patterns of life. Here is keen observation of contemporary society, writing of freshness and distinction. In The Ivory Grin, Archer, the private eye who sees deeper than most, presses another murder investigation to a strange, moving conclusion. A dozen lives are laid bare, as, in the end, is the criminal secret that links them all together. It is a book for those who are weary of gin-mill mysteries punctuated with automatic bumps on the head -- a book to refute the too widely credited charges that the detective has passed his peak in American fiction. back cover: John Ross Macdonald: The Ivory Grin. A New Mystery Novel. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1952, 240 p., $2.50.
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