Cassidy's Girl by David Goodis
Cassidy's Girl" offers a portrayal
of lost people in forgotten streets of Philadelphia in the years
following WW II. The characters in the story are tormented and fallen.
They struggle with alcohol and with their own demons. They say that a
man needs a woman to go to hell with. Cassidy had two. One was Mildred,
the wife who kept him chained with ties of fear and jealousy and
paralyzing sexual need. The other was Doris, a frail angel with a
100-proof halo and a bottle instead of a harp. With those two, Cassidy
found that the ride to hell could be twice as fast. Cassidy's Girl has
all the traits that made its author a virtuoso of the hard-boiled: a
fiercely compelling ploy; characters who self-destruct in spectacularly
unpredictable ways; and an insider's knowledge of all the routes to the
bottom.
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