EatingToday.info
How you eating today ???

Dog Eat Dog: A Novel

Posted in Paperback  by admin
August 19th, 2008

Binding: Paperback
Creator: William Styron
ASIN: 0312168187
Manufacturer: St. Martin’s Griffin
Average Customer Review: (From 12 total reviews)
List Price: $14.95
Amazon Price: $3.49 (19 new 21 used available)
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours (Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping)

 

Price is accurate as of the date/time indicated. Prices and product availability are subject to change. Any price displayed on the Amazon web site at the time of purchase will govern the sale of this product.

 

 


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com:
Ex-convict Bunker proved he could write a strong, dark thriller with his first book, No Beast So Fierce. For his latest effort, he returns to the same kind of story — smart but doomed ex-cons doing the only kind of thing they know how to do. Troy Cameron came from a wealthy Beverly Hills family before reform school and San Quentin knocked off some of the polish. Now he has linked up with a pair of psychopathic colleagues to prey on other criminals. In Bunker’s hands, the material takes on a great deal of energy and even sympathy for the devils.

Product Description:

Dog Eat Dog, Bunker’s fourth novel, follows Troy Cameron, a reformatory graduate like Bunker. A terrifying and brutal narrative, the novel tracks his lawless spree in the company of two other reform school alumni, Diesel Carson and Mad Dog Cain. Dog Eat Dog is a novel of excruciating authenticity, with great moral and social resonance, and it could only have been written by Edward Bunker, who has been there.

Customer Reviews

A Classic Novel, Does Fall A Little Flat At the End by Casadejunqueinc
After reading Edward Bunker’s autobiography Education of a Felon, I was looking forward to reading his fiction books.

Dog Eat Dog is brilliant on so many levels. I read it straight through all at once, because I wanted to know what was going to happen next, and I couldn’t put the book down.

After finishing the book, I tossed it into my Goodwill donation box, because I probably won’t read it a second time, unlike his autobiography, which I’ve read so many times that the cover is falling off the book.

So why was I ultimately disappointed in this book, even though I would still recommend it? With the best anti-heroes, you’re rooting for them even when they’re the bad guys. As I was reading this novel, I kept thinking about the characters in Steinbeck’s Tortilla Flat, who are similar to the characters in Dog Eat Dog in a few ways. As far as society, they’re worthless. Drunks, drug addicts and criminals. Yet by the end of Tortilla Flat, the reader is totally on the side of the bums, even though they don’t do anything except drink, steal and sleep with women. The characters are so compelling that you care what happens to them.

In the end, this novel disappoints because the reader never develops any kind of personal investment in the lives of the characters. It’s still worth reading just because the writing is top-notch, and this makes an interesting companion read with Bunker’s autobiography.

In Bunker’s world, there are no happy endings by Henry W. Wagner
Three teenagers–Troy Cameron, Gerald McCain, and Charley Carson–meet in school and become life long friends, believing that nothing can stop them as long as they stick together. I can think of at least two novels with similar launching points, Celebrity and The Last Convertible, but neither can match the brutality and power of Edward Bunker’s latest, Dog Eat Dog. You see, the school that brings this trio together is a California reform school. Troy is in the early days of his chosen career as a master thief, and Gerald and Charley, also known as “Diesel” and “Mad Dog”, have chosen to follow him wherever he leads.

Years later, the three are still together, and, despite having spent most of their lives in prison, still looking for a big score. Troy, fresh out of San Quentin, approaches his buddies with what he thinks is a foolproof plan–from now on, their victims will be their fellow criminals. Dressed as policemen, they rip off a local drug dealer. Emboldened by their success, they enter into a deal with Chepe, a powerful crimelord, agreeing to kidnap the son of Mike Brennan, a smuggler who owes Chepe money. During the kidnapping attempt, Mad Dog lives up to his name and needlessly shoots and kills a man, who they later discover was Mike Brennan. Their plan in ruins, they return the child to his mother. Enraged, Chepe demands that Troy and Diesel kill Mad Dog. Faced with Chepe’s displeasure, the two decide they must terminate their associate.

Fans of violent, hard-hitting crime novels will love Dog Eat Dog. Bunker, a former criminal who lived the way his characters do, writes from life experience in spare, but literate prose. As William Styron states in his introduction, Bunker deals with two themes: “…the wretched abandonment of our children…” and “…the perpetuation of violence and cruelty…”. He portrays a brutal world, where loyalty is a matter of convenience and sudden death is a fact of life. If you were unnerved by Reservoir Dogs or Pulp Fiction, stay away from Dog Eat Dog. If you like realistic, gritty portrayals of urban reality, pick it up. But be ready–in Edward Bunker’s world, there are no happy endings.

Mistaken Identity by Gary Griffiths
That ex-con Edward Bunker clearly has his following is indisputable, but leave me out of the “Dog Eat Dog” pack. I’ll give credit to Bunker for some originality: rare is the novel that casts the bad guys as heroes. And if writing a novel with neither a plot nor an ending is original, then score points for that also. But setting that aside, one wonders exactly what the author was trying to accomplish as he chronicles the meanderings of three life-long criminals up and down the California coast.

Bunker’s fractured odyssey starts out with teenagers Troy Cameron, Gerald “Mad Dog” McCain, and Charlie “Diesel” Carson in reform school, establishing roots in their chosen profession of crime. The story picks up again years later, a few days before Troy, the brains of the operation, is about to be paroled from San Quinton. Troy, unrepentant to the core, gathers the gang and shows his genius by coming up with the brilliant idea of - drum roll - robbing drug dealers! The reader is supposed to believe that this is some breakthrough in the history of vice - that we’ve all just emerged from caves and have never heard of drug lords, drug wars, street gangs, and the rest of the subterfuge that runs with the drug trade. Ever the mastermind, Troy determines a failsafe strategy - he’ll track the target’s movements ahead of time, thereby knowing exactly where and when to strike! Regrettably, Bunker renders dialogue as mind-numbing as the non-story, and can’t seem to figure out whether he wants us to like, feel sorry for, or despise his three stooges of crime.

But even this could be passable were it not for Bunker’s feeble attempt at making excuses for his thugs, who he casts as the victims - victims of parental neglect and jack-booted oppression under the guise of “three strike” laws - for in Bunker’s world, the bad guys are misunderstood and the cops are sadists. Banal where it should have been brutal and simply silly instead of sobering, “Dog Eat Dog” feels like an answer to a question no body cared to ask. Skip this one and try Charlie Huston for bona fide grit tautly told.

Fantastic! by C. Elgin
This is a gritty novel. This book is almost without parallel and unlike any other crime fiction that I have had the pleasure to read. Don’t think about it, buy it and read it. This is the best author writing hard-core fiction alive. This is Chandler’s protégée if you had to name one; only he is taking the side of the criminal here. This novel is hard, its like getting into a bar fight and being smacked around a few times.

I am not too much up on giving away the plots in my reviews, especially if I enjoyed the book. Let me just say that this novel is hard to start. I think that is because it is so unusual. It kind of reminded me of Motherless Brooklyn in that way. The characters do not allow for very much in the way of empathy with the reader. But the writing does suck you in after a few pages and then you are hooked on a hard ride.

Quentin Tarantino has said that Block is one of his many inspirations, and that is why I pick this novel up a few years ago. In fact I think Block was Mr. White or some color in his ‘Reservoir Dog’s’ flick. So if you saw that film that is a good indicator as to what you will be confronted with here. Only instead of the restrictive nature surrounding a film (2 hours) Block takes his time and develops a character study any hard boiled writer should envy.


Similar Products



 

 

Tags:

Related Posts

Leave a Reply