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The Friends of Eddie Coyle
The Friends of Eddie Coyle
Author: George V. Higgins
Dillon and the Man and Jimmy Scal and Billy Wallace and Paulie LeDuc... some people call them punks, hoods, hitmen, murderers. They are all that. They are the friends of Eddie Coyle.
ISBN: 377250
Publication Date: 6/1973
Pages: 218
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Publisher: Bantam Books
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio Cassette, Audio CD
Members Wishing: 0
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felixxx999 avatar reviewed The Friends of Eddie Coyle on + 14 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
An excellent hard-boiled tale that takes place in the early 70s in the Boston area. I found the book a quick read filled with authentic-sounding criminal dialog. Higgins was an assistant DA at one time and it's clear that he knew a lot about crime and the criminals that performed them. It was also nice that he mentioned a number of real-life locations like the Red Coach Grill in Braintree, Ma.
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rickumali avatar reviewed The Friends of Eddie Coyle on
In the movies, there's a tendency to romanticize crime. For fans of such movies, this book might serve as a cold shower reminder that crime is not fun, and it's most certainly not a game. Set in and around Greater Boston, the book follows a few criminals and a few law enforcement types going about their work. There's no glamor at all. Instead, the book washes the reader in stark dialogue, with even sparser narration. I found myself reading parts of this book out loud, just to hear that great dialogue out in the air. "The Friends of Eddie Coyle" is a fantastic deep dive into the mind of the modern two-bit criminal, and it's very much worth a read.


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