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Exploring the Essential Features of “Lee Child (Kindle) With John D MacDonald – The Empty Copper Sea: Introduction”
The Empty Copper Sea: Introduction by Lee Child: Travis McGee, No.17 Kindle Edition
âMacDonald had a huge influence on me . . . Reacher is like a fully detached version of Travis McGeeâ LEE CHILD
Travis McGee isnât your typical knight in shining armour. He only works when his cash runs out, and his rule is simple: Heâll help you find whatever was taken from you, as long as he can keep half.
As a boat captain, Van Harderâs reputation is his most valuable possession. But his wealthy employer has gone missing, presumed dead, and people are pointing the finger. They say he was drunk at the helm when his employer went overboard.
But Harder insists he doesnât drink . . . at least, not any more. And he wants his reputation back. But who would believe him? To help him, Travis McGee must do the impossible: prove that a dead man is actually alive . . .
First published in 1978, The Empty Copper Sea features an introduction by Lee Child
JOHN D. MACDONALD: A GRAND MASTER CRIME WRITER
âThe great entertainer of our age, and a mesmerizing storytellerâ â Stephen King
âTravis McGee is my favourite fiction detective. Heâs great because he has a philosophical side â he will fight a bunch of mobsters in a car park and then have a muse about life, the universe and everythingâ â Tony Parsons
âA dominant influence on writers crafting the continuing series character . . . I envy the generation of readers just discovering Travis McGeeâ â Sue Grafton
âThe consummate pro, a master storyteller and witty observer . . . The Travis McGee novels are among the finest works of fiction ever penned by an American author and they retain a remarkable sense of freshnessâ â Jonathan Kellerman
â. . . my favorite novelist of all timeâ â Dean Koontz
âA master storyteller, a masterful suspense writer . . . John D. MacDonald is a shining example for all of us in the fieldâ â Mary Higgins Clark
âWhat a joy that these timeless and treasured novels are available againâ â Ed McBain
âThereâs only one thing as good as reading a John D. MacDonald novel: reading it again . . . He is the all-time master of the American mystery novelâ â John Saul
From Booklist
*Starred Review* Travis has hit the doldrums as number 17 begins. His casually hedonistic life no longer satisfies. The question of What next? occupies his mind, obscuring the sun, infecting his relationship with best friend Meyer, and turning the parade of amiable beach bunnies at Bahia Mar Marina from pleasant backdrop to irritating reminder of the triviality of his life. Then Van Harder, an old boating pal, arrives on the deck of The Busted Flush with a tale of woe. Harderâs career as a yacht captain for hire has been ruined by an incident in which he passed out at the helm and his boss was apparently thrown overboard and died. Harder believes he was drugged, but the official verdict was drunkenness. Will Travis prove otherwise and recover his friendâs good name? Trav reluctantly agrees, as uninspired by the task at hand as he is by the rest of his life. In the course of looking into Harderâs plight, however, Travis meets Gretel Howard, and everything changes: âI felt as if I had shucked some kind of drab outer skin. . . . I could breathe more deeply. . . . The Gulf was a sharper blue. There was wine in the air. . . . I was full of juices and thirsts, energies and hungers, and I wanted to laugh for no reason at all.â MacDonald has been lauded for his craftsman-like plotting and for his perceptive takes on the sociology of Americaâand especially Floridaâin the sixties and seventies, but rarely has he received the credit heâs due for his ability to plumb human relationships. That talent is on view throughout the series, sometimes between the lines and always bobbing along beneath the head-banging plot, but in Empty Copper Sea, it takes center stage. Trav successfully restores his friendâs good name, but he does it without the usual confrontation with an evil antagonist. Sure, thereâs some peripheral head-banging, but the focus here is on Travâs growing involvement with the initially reluctant Gretel (her previous experiences with tasting wine in the air have turned quickly to vinegar). In fact, in an odd sort of way, this is more a romance than it is a mystery, and itâs a deeply textured, whopping good one. But itâs still a Travis McGee novel, and we know as we close the book on a remarkably happy endingâalmost without the usual melancholyâthat the reptilian underbelly of humanity could rise from the swamp at any moment. It does exactly that in number 18, The Green Ripper. âBill Ott âThis text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.
Review
Praise for John D. MacDonald and the Travis McGee novels
âThe great entertainer of our age, and a mesmerizing storyteller.ââStephen King
âMy favorite novelist of all time . . . All I ever wanted was to touch readers as powerfully as John D. MacDonald touched me. No price could be placed on the enormous pleasure that his books have given me. He captured the mood and the spirit of his times more accurately, more hauntingly, than any âliteratureâ writerâyet managed always to tell a thunderingly good, intensely suspenseful tale.ââDean Koontz
âTo diggers a thousand years from now, the works of John D. MacDonald would be a treasure on the order of the tomb of Tutankhamen.ââKurt Vonnegut
âA master storyteller, a masterful suspense writer . . . John D. MacDonald is a shining example for all of us in the field. Talk about the best.ââMary Higgins Clark
âA dominant influence on writers crafting the continuing series character . . . I envy the generation of readers just discovering Travis McGee, and count myself among the many readers savoring his adventures again.ââSue Grafton
âOne of the great sagas in American fiction.ââRobert B. Parker
âMost readers loved MacDonaldâs work because he told a rip-roaring yarn. I loved it because he was the first modern writer to nail Florida dead-center, to capture all its languid sleaze, racy sense of promise, and breath-grabbing beauty.ââCarl Hiaasen
âThe consummate pro, a master storyteller and witty observer . . . John D. MacDonald created a staggering quantity of wonderful books, each rich with characterization, suspense, and an almost intoxicating sense of place. The Travis McGee novels are among the finest works of fiction ever penned by an American author and they retain a remarkable sense of freshness.ââJonathan Kellerman
âWhat a joy that these timeless and treasured novels are available again.ââEd McBain
âTravis McGee is the last of the great knights-errant: honorable, sensual, skillful, and tough. I canât think of anyone who has replaced him. I canât think of anyone who would dare.ââDonald Westlake
âThereâs only one thing as good as reading a John D. MacDonald novel: reading it again. A writer way ahead of his time, his Travis McGee books are as entertaining, insightful, and suspenseful today as the moment I first read them. He is the all-time master of the American mystery novel.ââJohn Saul âThis text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
One
Van Harder came aboard the Busted Flush on a hot bright May morning. My houseboat was at her home mooring, Slip F-18 at Bahia Mar, Fort Lauderdale. I was in the midst of one of my periodic spasms of energy born of guilt. You go along thinking you are properly maintaining your houseboat and your runabout, going by the book, keeping a watchful eye on the lines, the bilge, the brightwork, and all. But the book was written for more merciful climates than Florida, once described to the King of Spain by DeSoto, as âan uninhabitable sandspit,â even though at the time it was inhabited by quite a lot of Indians.
Suddenly everything starts to snap, rip, and fall out, to leak and squeal and give final gasps. Then you bend to it, or you go live ashore like a sane person.
Crabbing along, inch by inch, I was replacing the rail posts around the whole three sides of the sun deck, port, starboard, and stern, using a power drill and a power screwdriver to set the four big screws down through the stainless flange at the foot of each post. I had sore knees, a lame wrist, and a constant drip of sweat from nose and chin. I wore an old pair of tennis shorts, and the sun was eating into my tired brown back.
It had been six, maybe seven years since Iâd seen Van Harder. He had owned the Queen Bee III in charter-boat row. He had been steady and he could find fish, and so had less trouble finding customers than a lot of the others. I knew he wasnât going to overwhelm me with a lot of conversation. I knew heâd had some bad luck, but that was a long time ago. A frugal man, he had saved his money and finally sold the Queen Bee III to Ranee Fazzo, had acquired a shrimp boat and a large debt, and had moved around to the other coast.
I finished the post, walked over, and mopped my face on the towel. We sat on the two pilot chairs, swiveled away from the instrument panel to face astern, toward all the shops and towers of Bahia Mar, both of us shaded by the folding navy top.
Van Harder was a lean, sallow man. Tall, silent, and expressionless. I had never seen him without a greasy khaki cap with a bill. Florida born for generations back, from that tough, tireless, malnourished, merciless stock which had scared the living hell out of the troops they had faced during the War Between the States. His eyes were a pale watery blue. He was about fifty, I guessed.
âThey tell me Fazzo is fishing out of Marathon now,â he said.
âDoing okay, from what I hear.â
Silence.
âMeyer still around?â
âStill around. He had some errands over in town today.â
Silence.
âGuess you heard I lost the Queen Bee Number Four. Shrimp boat. Sixty-five foot.â
âYes, I remember now. Wasnât that four years or so ago?â
âTwo month shy of five year. Run down by a phosphate ship headed for Tampa. Forty mile west of Naples. Three in the morning. Lost two men. One of them had the helm. No way to tell what happened.â
âInsurance?â
He spat over the rail, downwind, with excellent accuracy and velocity. âEnough to pay off what I owed on her. Got a job hired captain on another shrimper. Bigger. New. Hula Marine Enterprises.â
âHula?â
âThatâs the h and u off the front of Hubbard and the l and a off the front of Lawless. Hubbard Lawless. Hula run six shrimp boats at the time, and seven by the time they sold out a couple of years ago. What happened was Hub seen the handwriting on the wall, and he sold out to Weldron, which is a part of Associated Foods, own markets and all. I could have stayed on with Weldron, like most of the others did, except the ones so old they would have been in retirement too quick, and Weldron wouldnât take them. But Hub Lawless, he offered me a job skipper of the Julie. Real nice cruiser.â
âIâve seen her over at Pier Sixty-six, way out at the end. Nice.â
âDutch built. Big twin diesels. Fast. Good range. White with blue trim. Howâd you know it was the same Julie?â
âI remember that name. Lawless. I asked who the owner was.â
âIf it was a year ago, I was captaining her. Year ago April. Had some time to come over here and see who was around, how things were going. Didnât happen to run into you then, McGee.â
âBut this time you looked me up.â Not quite a question, but at least a leading remark. It sailed right by him. No response. I slumped in the chair, chin on my chest, ankles crossed, staring patiently at my big brown bare feet, at some paler cleat marks on the outside of the left ankle, and at the deep curving ugly scar down the outside of my right thigh.
âFunny thing about it all,â he said, âwas that Hub took me on because he knowed I was steady. The captain he had before, I wonât mention no names, he got into the whiskey and he took a cut for himself when he ordered supplies, and he had brought women aboard when Hub was off on business trips.â
âWhy do you say thatâs funny?â
âFunny meaning strange how it came out, is all. I become a born-again Christian when I was twenty-eight years old. Clawed my suffering way up out of the black depths of sin to walk in love and brotherhood with our good Lord Jesus. Now Hub knew that. And he respected that. Until that night he never had no women aboard except his wife and his daughter.â
âWhat night?â
He turned and gave me a long, watery blue stare. âThe night Hub Lawless got drownded! What night you think I was talking about? There wasnât a newspaper in Florida didnât have the whole thing in it.â
âWhen did it happen?â
âMarch twenty-two. Fell off the Julie somehow.â
âIâve been gone since early March, Van. I got back a week ago. Duke Davis had a party down in the Grenadines on that big ketch of his, the Antsie, and he had a bad fall and tore up his back, and he cabled me to come down and help him bring the Antsie all the way home. I didnât have any time to read the papers or listen to the news.â
âThought you look darker than I remembered.â
âWhatâs this all about, Van?â
He gave it about thirty seconds of thought before answering. âI know maybe more than I should about the time you heâped out Arthur Wilkinson when he was way down, and it was right after you heâped him, he married Chookie McCall. What I heard that time was that if somebody lost something important to them, youâd try to get it back, and if you did, youâd keep half what itâs worth.â
âThatâs close enough. So?â
He leaned toward me, just a little. I sensed that this was something he had thought about very carefully, turning it this way and that, not certain whether he was being a fool. His wisdom was the sea. So he took onto himself more dignity.
âThey is stolen from me my good name, McGee.â
âI donât see how or whatââ
âNow you wait a minute. I got marked down as a drunken man, a fool who lost the owner overboard and nearly lost his vessel. They had an inquiry and held I was negligent. I havenât got my papers and I canât work at my trade. I have talked it over with Eleanor Ann, who has got a nursing job there in Timber Bay, and she says if it is what I want to do, sheâll help out. I would say that by and large, my good name is worth twenty thousand dollars anyway, so what Iâll do, Iâll give you a piece of paper. You can word it any way you want, and Iâll sign it. It will say that if you can find some way to show it wasnât my fault at all, I will pay you ten thousand dollars, not all at once, but over whatever time it takes me to make it and pay it.â
Everything he had was wrapped up in that request: his pride, his dignity, his seafaring career, his worth as a man. And I sensed that this was the very last thing he had been able to think of. Travis McGee, the last chance he had.
âYou better tell me exactly what happened.â
âYouâll make the deal?â
âAfter you tell me what happened, I will sit around and think about it, and I will probably talk to Meyer about it. And then I will tell you if I think I can help at all. If I canât, Iâm wasting your time and mine.â
He thought that over slowly, pursed his lips, and gave a little nod of acceptance. And told his story.
At about four in the afternoon of March twenty-second, Hubbard Lawless had phoned the Julie from his country office out at the grove and asked if the cruiser was okay to take a night run on down to Clearwater. It was a pointless question because Van Harder always kept the Julie ready to go. Van reminded Mr. Lawless that the mate, DeeGee Walloway, had been given time off to go up to Waycross, Georgia, where his father was close to death with cancer of the throat. Lawless said there was no need for the mate. There would be four in the party, and one of them would be available to handle the lines, if necessary, and they could certainly serve their own booze and peanuts.
Harder thought it would be four businessmen; he had often made short trips up and down the Florida coast when Lawless wanted to meet with people without attracting too much attention. The boat made a good place to hold a conference. It couldnât easily be bugged, a fact that politicians seemed to appreciate.
They came aboard at nine. They came down to the marina dock in John Tuckermanâs big blue Chrysler Imperial. John Tuckerman was a sort of unofficial assistant to Hub Lawless. He didnât seem to hold any particular office in any of Hubâs many corporations and partnerships, but he always seemed to be around, laughing, making jokes, making sure of air reservations, hotel reservations, dockage space, hangar space, and so on. They brought two young women aboard. Half the ages of Hub and John Tuckerman. Tight pants and airline carry-ons. Perfume and giggles.
Van Harder didnât like it one bit. The Julie was a family boat, named after Mr. Hubâs wife. Women like those two didnât belong aboard. Harder knew from what people said that Hub Lawless was very probably a womanizer, but until that moment, when the two came aboard the Julie, it had been just talk as far as Harder was concerned. When he had been doing charter fishing, he had been known to turn back and come roaring to the dock and refund the unused part of the charter if people started messing around aboard the Queen Bee III. He couldnât exactly refuse to make the run to Clearwater, but he did not want to stay on as captain of a floating whorehouse.
Still puzzling over what to do. Harder took the Julie on out of South Cedar Pass. It was an unseasonably chilly night, with a northwest wind and the sea foaming white across the bars that bracketed the tricky channel inshore of the sea buoy. Once he was in good water, he set the course for a point offshore of Clearwater, put the steering on automatic pilot, and watched the compass carefully to see if, in the following sea shoving against the stern starboard quarter, she would hold at that speed without too much yawing and swinging and searching.
As was their custom, when Hubbard Lawless felt the Julie settle into cruising speed, he built Harderâs single drink, a tall bourbon and water, and brought it up to him. Harder decided it was a poor time to speak to Mr. Lawless about the women. He did not feel that the single drink was in conflict with his religious convictions. It never led to another.
âNot long after I drank it down, I remember I had a buzzy feeling in my head, and then it was like the Julie climbed a big black wave that curled over at the top. I woke up sick and confused. I didnât know where I was, even, but we were tied up back at the regular dock. Hack Ames, heâs the Sheriff, he was kicking me awake and yelling at me. He didnât want to try to pick me up, I stank so from having throwed up on my clothes. I reached up and got hold of the rail and pulled myself up, but I was so dizzy I couldnât dare let go. I couldnât make out what all the yelling was about.â
âWhat had happened?â
âJohn Tuckerman testified at the inquest. He said one of the girls felt a little sick and went topside to get some air and went hurrying below again to tell them. I was unconscious on the deck. Hub and Tuckerman came up and they checked me and thought I looked pretty bad. They thought maybe I had a stroke or some damn thing, so the best thing to do would be get me to shore. They had both run the boat, but neither one of them had come back in South Cedar Pass at night with a sea running. The way they worked it out, Hub Lawless went way up on the bow while Tuckerman eased it in. They steered at first by the city lights, and then by the sea buoy, and slowed way down to hunt the next marker. The girls stayed below, out of the cold wind. The boat was rocking and pitching in the chop. Hub was hanging on and trying to spot the sandbars. Tuckerman said that all of a sudden Hub pointed to the right. Tuckerman thought he meant turn hard right, and thatâs what he did. The instant he hit the hard sandbar, he knew Hub Lawless had been pointing out the problem, not pointing out where to steer. The jolt tore Hubâs grip loose and he went overboard off the bow. The waves were picking the bow up and dropping it back onto the bar so hard Tuckerman knew he had to back off or start to break up. He put it in hard reverse and yanked it back off, and he couldnât find the switch to turn on the overheard searchlight so he could hunt for Hub. He threw a life ring over, slinging it toward the bar, hoping Hub could find it. He didnât know how to work the ship-to-shore, and even if he did, he didnât dare leave go of the wheel and the throttles. He yelled for the women and they finally heard him and came up to help look for Hub. It was a wild dark night and the only thing he could think of to do was try to find the markers and find his way in and get help. I stayed passed out through all of it and didnât come out of it even partway until, like I said, Hack Ames was aboard trying to kick me awake.â
About the Author
John D. MacDonald (1916-1986) MacDonald was born in Sharon, Pa, and educated at the Universities of Pennsylvania, Syracuse and Harvard, where he took an MBA in 1939. After war service in the Far East he wrote hundreds of stories for the pulps and over seventy novels, including the 21 in the Travis McGee sequence
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