Cinderella Sims
The Classic Crime Library, Book 14
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Narrated by:
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Theo Holland
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By:
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Lawrence Block
About this listen
There's no glass slipper in this fairy tale - just a damsel in distress, a bag of cash, and a whole lot of dead bodies.
Reporter Ted Lindsay is trying to forget his ex-wife, and New York City's tough streets are just what the doctor ordered. They're also filled with alluring women, but only one catches Ted's eye. Cinderella Sims is not only beautiful, she's on the run and she needs Ted's help. She's got a bag full of cash and some very angry people staking out her apartment. Before long Ted's forgotten his heartbreak and is launched into the dark streets of crime with Cindy at his side.
The author speaks:
“Look, this wasn’t my idea.
Three or four years ago, Bill Schafer suggested that I might give some consideration to republishing a book of mine called $20 Lust, which had originally appeared under a pen name. I recalled the book he meant, but dimly; I had, after all, written it in 1960. But I didn’t need to remember it all that vividly to know the answer to his suggestion.
No, I told him.
A little later I suggested he might want to publish a fancy edition of Mona, the first book under my own name; it had come out as a paperback original in 1961, and we could celebrate its fortieth anniversary with a nice limited edition hardcover.
Bill was lukewarm to the notion, but had an alternative proposal; how about issuing a double volume, containing Mona and $20 Lust? Once again, I didn’t have to do a lot of soul-searching to come up with a response.
No, I told him.
Time passed. Then Ed Gorman, the Sage of Cedar Rapids, used an ancient private eye novelette of mine in a pulp anthology. When it came out he sent me a copy, and, while I didn’t read my novelette - I figured it was enough that I wrote the damned thing - I did read his introduction, which I found to be thoughtful and incisive and generous. I e-mailed him and told him so, and he e-mailed me back and thanked me, adding that my early work was probably better than I thought.
And, he added, "I really think you ought to let Bill Schafer publish $20 Lust.
I felt as though I’d been sucker-punched. Where the hell did that come from?
So I got in touch with Bill. I suppose I could at least read it, I said, except I can’t, because I don’t have a copy. Three days later, a battered copy arrived in the mail. I looked at the first two pages, and I looked at the last two or three pages, and I heaved a sigh. Heaved it clear across the room, and would have heaved the book, too, but instead I hollered for my wife.
Bill Schafer wants to reprint this, I said.
Great, she said.
Not necessarily, I said, and explained the circumstances. I’d like you to read this, I said, or as much of it as you can without gagging, and then tell me it’s utter crap and I’d surely destroy what little reputation I have if I consent to its republication.
Suppose I like it?
Not to worry, I said. I’ll sign the commitment papers, and I’ll make sure they take real good care of you.
Well, she liked it. And Bill Schafer published it, and a lot of people liked it, and my agent sold it in France, where even more people liked it. Shows what I know. And it’s now my pleasure to include it in the Classic Crime Library.
Cinderella Sims was originally intended to be my second crime novel for Gold Medal, to follow Grifter’s Game (aka Mona). At some point along the way I lost faith in it, and wrapped it up in a hurry, and sold it to Nightstand Books. Hope y’all enjoy it!
©2016 Lawrence Block (P)2020 Lawrence BlockWhat listeners say about Cinderella Sims
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- col2910
- 14-07-20
On balance more to like than dislike
Another Lawrence Block oldie from almost sixty years ago and one which I liked while harbouring some reservations about totally siding with the main character Ted. Early on in the book after receiving the news that his marriage is over Ted commits an unpardonable act against his wife which I found abhorrent.
For the rest of the book, I quite liked his adventures; his move to New York, the grief he felt at the news of his wife's death, his close encounter with the nymphomaniac and his somewhat comedic and fortuitous escape albeit achieved by another act of violence against a woman - maybe hypocritically I found it less offensive than the previous one, his crossing paths and subsequent infatuation with Cinderella Sims and their adventures together - in and out of the sack and on a cross country trip trying to elude and then best a gang of counterfeiters....... sex, violence, trust and mis-trust, false moves and mistakes, near misses, close escapes and violent encounters before an eventual triumph.
Main character behavioural niggles aside one that kept me entertained while I was listening too it. A bit grim and gritty in places, a bit erotic in others. Definitely of it's time.
I do like the story of it's journey back into print.
3.5 from 5
Read - (listened to) June, 2020
Published - 1961
Page count - 212 (4 hrs 40 mins)
Source - Audible download code from David one of LB's assistants.
(I do have a previously purchased copy on my Kindle.)
Format - Audible
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- Norma Miles
- 05-06-20
Me Tarzan, you Jane.
An early book by the masterful Block, this story would have been more enjoyable with less of the sleazy sex scenes but still succeeds decades later because of the deliciously sardonic writing bolstering the reasonable crime story line.
Ted Lindsey was a respected reporter when his wife of two years left him for someone else only then to be killed in a car accident. Advised by his doctor to move away to a new environment, he begins a new, different, life alone in New York. Until he sees a girl who completely turns his head and subsequently pulls him into a world of danger, corruption and murder. Told in the first person, the reader has insight into all of Ted's hopes, fears and general observations such as, 'poverty is not without it's charm, but then neither is money' and, 'the spots in front of my eyes had spots in front of them'. Ted is not a bad man but he's certainly no angel and his attitude to women would nowadays be problematic. But, let's face it, this is a crime story and to make his more 'cuddly' would not have been viable.
This book was narrated by Theo Holland, who has read a number of Lawrence Block's earlier works. And he does it so well, fully assuming, in this case, the identity of Red as he tells his story. My copy of Cinderella Sims was a free download from FABC, offered to anyone interested without obligation. My thanks to the rights holder for making this possible. I really enjoy Lawrence Block's writing and recommend this story but with the warning that this reflects some attitudes not acceptable over a half century later as well as including several semi erotic sex scenes
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