NB: A version of this post also appears on Existential Ennui.
I unveiled the bulk of the Westlake—or rather, Richard Stark—Scores I acquired from Alan White Fine Books in one great big splurge of a bloated blogpost on Wednesday, but I kept one back because it dates from slightly earlier in the Parker series.
Published in the States by Pocket Books in 1965, The Jugger is the sixth entry in the series. The cover art is by Harry Bennett, who illustrated the covers of all eight of the Pocket Parkers, from The Hunter (1962) to The Handle (1966), and though there’s a general sense among Parker fanatics that there’s something a bit off about the novel itself—fueled, in part, by Westlake himself; more on that in a moment—I’m of the firm belief that the cover is one of Bennett’s best efforts on the Parkers. I like the abstraction of the midground—that jumble of flat colors denoting signage—and the way Bennett’s placed the figures and the rest on a white background, using the negative space for Captain Younger’s shirt. Clever, confident stuff. And as is often the case with Bennett’s Parker covers, you get a bonus sketch on the back too:
In an Austin Chronicle interview excerpt on the Violent World of Parker dedicated page for The Jugger, Westlake identifies the book as “one of the worst failures I’ve ever had,” pointing to the way he “spoiled” the novel “by having [Parker] do something he wouldn’t do,” i.e. going to the aid of his “mailbox,” Joe Sheer. Except as Trent notes in the subsequent review, he doesn’t; as the novel itself makes clear: ” . . . he had come up to this rotten little town to find out if it was going to be necessary to kill Joe Sheer or not.” Westlake’s misremembered disapproval of The Jugger might be part of the reason some Parker enthusiasts aren’t keen on the book, but perhaps a bigger part is the unusual nature of the thing, at least in comparison to the bulk of the Parkers. As Ed Gorman points out, it’s not a heist thriller but “a kind of psychodrama.” Viewed in that light, and on its own merits rather than as a decent book in an exceptional series, it stands revealed as a cold, mean mini-masterpiece.
Mind you, despite my sweeping generalizations about Parker fans’ feelings about The Jugger, you don’t actually have to look that hard to find folks who appreciate it for what it is; witness the glowing reviews at Pulp Serenade, Kevin’s Corner, and especially this thoughtful, perceptive one at Olman’s Fifty. In fact, on reflection, it’s looking increasingly like Westlake was the only person who didn’t rate it . . .
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I’m so torn on Westlake not liking this one!
And that is a fantastic cover, both on its own merits (as you so well argue), but also because it really captures the sinister mood of the book and constant oversized (but ultimately overinflated) threat of the local sheriff.
The Jugger is actually one of my favorite Parker’s because it differs from much of the basic formula of the series while still staying entirely true to the core of the character. I found it to be extremely interesting and highly suspenseful. I think DEW’s memory was a bit faulty when it came to this book.
You hit the nail on the head, Cluelo. I was going to write the same thing, almost verbatim, but you got here first.;-) lol
Great minds…
So is it a myth that Donald Westlake did originally write Parker as going to help Joe Sheer then in a later edition rewrote it? I thought maybe I had read that somewhere.
Total myth. As far as I know, Westlake misremembered the actual reason he gave Parker for visiting Joe.
The Jugger is aswesome. So sad it resulted in Made in USA.
I have the same memory of Parker’s motaiitvon that Chad describes. Godard’s MADE IN USA is an interesting take on the novel, although it usually gets short shrift as a “Parker movie.” Ed, I don’t recall the scene you mentioned as being in THE JUGGER. It’s been a while since the read the book. But the description sounds like a scene in THE OUTFIT; in the movie version, the woman making the accusation was played by Sheree North, and I think her hillbilly husband was played by Bill McKinney.
I love this book. It was one of the first Parker books I read while they were out of print, having just read the first three, and admired Westlake having a heist-less story with a mess of suspense. There’s a few moments in this book with Parker at his calculated coldest. Still, (SPOILERS, FOR PETE’S SAKE) I love how I approached the last couple of pages, thought of a few plot holes, and then the last chapter has everything fall into place. Well, fall apart completely, actually.