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Memory (Hard Case Crime) Mass Market Paperback – April 5, 2011

4.0 out of 5 stars (115)

THE CRIME WAS OVER IN A MINUTE – 
THE CONSQUENCES LASTED A LIFETIME

Hospitalized after a liaison with another man’s wife ends in violence, Paul Cole has just one goal: to rebuild his shattered life. But with his memory damaged, the police hounding him, and no way even to get home, Paul’s facing steep odds – and a bleak fate if he fails…

This final, never-before-published novel by three-time Edgar Award winner Donald E. Westlake is a noir masterpiece, a dark and painful portrait of a man’s struggle against merciless forces that threaten to strip him of his very identity.

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About the Author

Donald E. Westlake is widely regarded as one of the great crime writers of the 20th Century. He won three Edgar Awards and was named a Grandmaster by the Mystery Writers of America.  Many of his books have been made into movies; Westlake also wrote the screenplay for "The Grifters," for which he received an Academy Award nomination.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Hard Case Crime
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ April 5, 2011
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 336 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0857683454
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0857683458
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 6.1 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 4.16 x 0.99 x 6.75 inches
  • Best Sellers Rank: #4,224,403 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.0 out of 5 stars (115)

About the author

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Donald E. Westlake
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I think I'd best treat this as an interrogation, in which I am not certain of the intent or attitude of the interrogator.

I was born Donald Edwin Westlake on July 12th, 1933 in Brooklyn, New York. My mother, Lillian, maiden name Bounds, mother's maiden name Fitzgerald, was all Irish. My father, Albert, his mother's maiden name being Tyrrell, was half Irish. (The English snuck in, as they will.) They were all green, and I was born on Orangeman's Day, which led to my first awareness of comedy as a consumer. I got over the unfortunate element of my birth long before my uncles did.

My mother believed in all superstitions, plus she made some up. One of her beliefs was that people whose initials spelled something would be successful in life. That's why I went through grammar school as Dewdrip. However, my mother forgot Confirmation, when the obedient Catholic is burdened with yet another name. So she stuck Edmond in there, and told me that E was behind the E of Edwin, so I wasn't DEEW, I was DEW. Perhaps it helped.

I attended three colleges, all in New York State, none to much effect. Interposed amid this schooling was two and a half years in the United States Air Force, during which I also learned very little, except a few words in German. I was a sophomore in three colleges, finally made junior in Harpur College in Binghamton, NY, and left academe forever. However, I was eventually contacted by SUNY Binghamton, the big university that Harpur College had grown up to become. It was their theory that their ex-students who did not graduate were at times interesting, and worthy to be claimed as alumni. Among those she mentioned were cartoonist Art Spiegelman and dancer Bill T. Jones, a grandfaloon I was very happy to join, which I did when SUNY Binghamton gave me a doctorate in letters in June 1996. As a doctor, I accept no co-pay.

I have one sister, one wife and two ex-wives. (You can't have ex-sisters, but that's all right, I'm pleased with the one I have.) The sister was named by my mother Virginia, but my mother had doped out the question of Confirmation by then--Virigina's two and half years younger than me, still--and didn't give her a middle name. Her Confirmation name was Olga, the only thing my mother could find that would make VOW. The usual mother-daughter dynamic being in play, my sister immediately went out and married a man whose name started with B.

My wife, severally Abigail Westlake, Abby Adams Westlake and Abby Adams, which makes her three wives right there, is a writer, of non-fiction, frequently gardening, sometimes family history. Her two published books are An Uncommon Scold and The Gardener's Gripe Book.

Seven children lay parental claims on us. They have all reached drinking age, so they're on their own.

Having been born in Brooklyn, I was raised first in Yonkers and then in Albany, schooled in Plattsburgh and Troy and Binghamton, and at last found Manhattan. (At least I was looking in the right state.) Abby was born in Manhattan, which makes it easier. We retain a rope looped over a butt there, but for the last decade have spent most of our time on an ex-farm upstate. It is near nothing, which is the point. Our nearest neighbor on two sides is Coach Farm, producer of a fine goat cheese I've eaten as far away as San Francisco. They have 750 goats up there on their side of the hill. More importantly, they have put 770 acres abutting our land into the State Land Conservancy, so it cannot be built on. I recommend everybody have Miles and Lillian Cann and Coach Farm as their neighbors.

I knew I was a writer when I was eleven; it took the rest of the world about ten years to begin to agree. Up till then, my audience was mainly limited to my father, who was encouraging and helpful, and ultimately influential in an important way.

Neophyte writers are always told, "write what you know," but the fact is, kids don't know anything. A beginning writer doesn't write what he knows, he writes what he read in books or saw in movies. And that's the way it was with me. I wrote gangster stories, I wrote stories about cowboys, I wrote poems about prospecting-in Alaska, so I could rhyme with "cold"-I wrote the first chapters of all kinds of novels. The short stories I mailed off to magazines, and they mailed them back in the self-addressed, stamped envelopes I had provided. And in the middle of it all, my father asked me a question which, probably more than any other single thing, decided what kind of writer I was going to be.

I was about fourteen. I'd written a science-fiction about aliens from another planet who come to Earth and hire a husband-wife team of big-game hunters to help them collect examples of every animal on Earth for their zoo back on Alpha Centauri or wherever. At the end of the story, they kidnap the hero and heroine and take them away in the spaceship because they want examples of every animal on Earth.

Now, this was a perfectly usable story. It has been written and published dozens of times, frequently with Noah's Ark somewhere in the title, and my version was simply that story again, done with my sentences. I probably even thought I'd made it up.

So I showed it to my father. He read it and said one or two nice things about the dialogue or whatever, and then he said, "why did you write this story?"

I didn't know what he meant. The true answer was that science-fiction magazines published that story with gonglike regularity and I wanted a story published somewhere. This truth was so implicit I didn't even have words to describe it, and therefore there was no way to understand the question.

So he asked it a different way: "What's the story about?" Well, it's about these people that get taken to be in a zoo on Alpha Centauri. "No, what's it about?" he said. "The old fairy tales that you read when you were a little boy, they all had a moral at the end. If you put a moral at the end of this story, what would it be?"

I didn't know. I didn't know what the moral was. I didn't know what the story was about.

The truth was, of course, that the story wasn't about anything. It was a very modest little trick, like a connect-the-dots thing on a restaurant place mat. There's nothing particularly wrong with connect-the-dots things, and there's nothing particularly wrong with this constructivist kind of writing, a little story or a great big fat novel with nothing and nobody in it except this machine that turns over and at the end this jack-in-the-box pops out. There's nothing wrong with that.

But it isn't what I thought I wanted to be. So that question of my father's wriggled right down into my brain like a worm, and for quite a while it took the fun out of things. I'd be sitting there writing a story about mobsters having a shootout in a nightclub office-straight out of some recent movie-and the worm would whisper: Why are you writing this story?

Naturally, I didn't want to listen, but I had no real choice in the matter. The question kept coming, and I had to try to figure out some way to answer it, and so, slowly and gradually, I began to find out what I was doing. And ultimately I refined the question itself down to this: What does this story mean to me that I should spend my valuable time creating it?

And that's how I began to become a writer.

- Ancram, NY (2001)

Customer reviews

4 out of 5 stars
115 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find this book to be a compelling read with masterful writing and existential overtones. They appreciate the narrative style, with one customer describing it as a brilliant character study.
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8 customers mention readability, 8 positive, 0 negative
Customers find the book to be a compelling and interesting read, with one customer noting it as one of Donald E. Westlake's best works.
...as a writer, per se, you may find this quite interesting and even worth reading. I certainly did....Read more
...The result is a fascinating book about the nature and importance of memory and our utter dependency on it....Read more
Loved this book, very different than most hard-boiled novels.Read more
Not fast moving but chilling and ultimately awesome.Read more
6 customers mention narrative style, 6 positive, 0 negative
Customers appreciate the narrative style of the book, noting its existential overtones and richly evocative nature, with one customer highlighting its underlying moral currents.
...It isn't now. It is a beautifully written, sensitive narrative, of a young man, Paul Cole, who was...Read more
...(when men labored for a dollar an hour and dined on pie) is richly evocative....Read more
...Unlike his later "caper" novels, Memory is serious and Kafkaesque....Read more
...Instead, it is a challenging piece of literature, with existential overtones. If you simply like reading action stories, this is not for you....Read more
6 customers mention writing quality, 5 positive, 1 negative
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, with one noting it's a brilliant character study.
...It isn't now. It is a beautifully written, sensitive narrative, of a young man, Paul Cole, who was...Read more
...I found it depressing personally, not typical Westlake, but still masterful writing.Read more
...that are among the best there are, and he could also write hard boiled mystery novels that are as good as anything we have - this is an excellent...Read more
...manuscript by the late great Donald E. Westlake, is a brilliantly written character study of what losing one's memory really means....Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on January 10, 2012
    Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Paul Cole is a New York actor, on the road in an unspecified locale that's a long way from Manhattan. He beds a beautiful woman, is discovered by her husband and is beaten with a chair. He survives the beating (the husband agrees to pay half of his medical bills) but suffers severe memory loss. The syndrome includes some partial amnesia as well as short-term memory loss. Paul must somehow put his life back together by searching the records of his past and making elaborate notes concerning his every step (so that, for example, he can find his way from place to place and remind himself of appointments).

    The result is a fascinating book about the nature and importance of memory and our utter dependency on it. Paul cannot afford to return to New York after his (deserved) beating, but he becomes a sympathetic character because of his plight. We watch him as he searches for employment and struggles to save enough money for a bus ticket home.

    The starkness of his situation results in a stark narrative. At times we wonder whether the book is some sort of allegory. Is Paul really in hell? Purgatory? Has he stumbled into the Twilight Zone? And, thus, we ask ourselves what it is that we are reading--a crime story? A supernatural story? A psychological thriller? A realistic exploration of something that could happen to any of us?

    By the end of the book we will discover the answer to that question and the answer will not be to everyone's liking. It has been said that there are two kinds of endings--happy endings and endings from which we learn something, happily. Both are possibilities here. Personally, I found the book riveting. Presumably it is a trunk novel that Westlake couldn't publish when it was written, but the time in which it was written (when men labored for a dollar an hour and dined on pie) is richly evocative. We have walked into the world of James M. Cain and other classic noir writers.

    Readers will note that the book is receiving very mixed responses from Amazon reviewers. While it will not be to everyone's taste this is Donald Westlake's last book, an ambitious book of nearly 400 pp. and a bargain from Hard Case Crime. Check it out.
    5 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 26, 2023
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    This is not a crime story, not a mystery type of plot, and there is no humour. It is a brilliant portrait of a man who has memory problems after an accident (not like dementia or amnesia).
    It is brilliant even so, hence 4 stars.
    I found it depressing personally, not typical Westlake, but still masterful writing.
  • Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2011
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Memory, an early, unpublished manuscript by the late great Donald E. Westlake, is a brilliantly written character study of what losing one's memory really means. In too many books and movies, the amnesiac hero is a romantic figure, surrounded by loving and supportive friends and doctors; in such stories, the amnesia is little more than a mystery to be solved. But, as Westlake shows, loss of memory is really a loss of self, of knowledge, of ability, of friends, of family, of what and who we are. It is an involuntary rebirth. In portraying a man who has lost his memory, Westlake delves into what memory does for us: it is our imagination, our creativity, our reality, for without our memories, what are we? More importantly, who are we?

    Paul awakes with no memory after being assaulted with a chair by a cuckholded husband. After recovering in a hospital he is ushered out of town by an indignant detective who holds a low view of touring actors--which Paul happens to be. He lands in a small town where he finds a job, makes friends, becomes a kind of substitute son to his landlords, and even finds love. But he is haunted by his past, by who he "really" is. He finally decides to return to New York, guided by information in his wallet, to an apartment, friends, an agent, his acting profession, all of which he remembers only vaguely, as in a dream. What happens to him there and what he eventually decides to do next is heartbreaking.

    In Memory, Donald Westlake has created a harrowing portrait of what it is to be lost, as a child is lost, without the resources that we depend on every day to find our way back. Written early in his career but not published (possibly because of its themes and denouement) Memory may be Westlake's masterpiece.
    8 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2017
    Format: Kindle
    This is one instance where the Hard Case Crime imprint is a misnomer ... it sets you up for a thriller, but delivers a psychological drama, a character study. "Memory" isn't a typical Donald E. Westlake novel (I'm not certain such a thing exists, as all his books are unpredictable). The drama arises from Paul Cole's struggle to reignite his memory, to regain his past identity. You'll probably wonder when (or if) the hardboiled plot twist will surface, and it never does, since Westlake is telling a different story.
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 10, 2019
    Format: Kindle
    'Memory' by Donald Westlake was a very boring read for me. It's basically a story about a young actor who gets beaten up and as a result loses his memory. He then proceeds to wander around, struggling badly to remember anything and usually doesn't succeed. Halfway through the book I began to lose interest in his situation, and there wasn't even a satisfying ending to make up for the boredom.

    Bottom line: I really wonder how this total yawn of a novel got published. Not recommended.

Top reviews from other countries

  • Ian D.
    5.0 out of 5 stars Memorable (pun intended)
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 10, 2019
    Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
    I thoroughly enjoyed this book, which is by no means a typical Westlake in that it is not a crime book. Yes, there is a crime at the very beginning - an assault - that leads to the main character's (Paul Cole) concussion and subsequent memory problems. But thereafter, the book follows Cole's attempts to get his old life back on track, and specifically the difficulties his increasingly unreliable memory causes him in this endeavour.

    On the surface it can seem as if nothing very interesting is happening; indeed, if you were to open the book anywhere at random and read a few pages then Cole might be just walking aimlessly around the streets, or having a mundane domestic interaction with his landlady, or listening to his workmates conversation in the pub, or watching an acting class, or...well, you get the idea. In themselves these episodes might seem trivial and uninteresting, but in context each of them is part of Cole's psychological journey, and his observations show how his self-awareness is increasing even as his memory continues to let him down. This is a subtle portrayal of determination and frustration by a master storyteller branching out temporarily from his comfort zone, which demonstrates why many of his crime novels - for example the Mitch Tobin books published under the pseudonym of Tucker Coe - are about so much more than just the mystery itself.
  • Ishita Patel
    5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
    Reviewed in India on September 11, 2017
    Nice book
  • basque
    5.0 out of 5 stars Terrifying
    Reviewed in Canada on November 22, 2016
    Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
    This is not a pulp crime book. It's a mix of The Castle and 50's-60's Modern Writing. Don't let any of that turn you off tho. It's a very compelling story loaded with paranoia, rage, frustration and heart wrenching desperation and left me on the edge of my seat. I'm not familiar with the rest of Mr. Westlake's work but I'm going to make it a point to read every word I can find.
  • EmmaWilliams44
    5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 20, 2016
    Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
    an achingly beautiful book.
  • M T A
    1.0 out of 5 stars I didn’t like the book at all
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 5, 2017
    Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
    No problem with the seller -arrived earlier than expected date and in pristine condition.
    Sadly, I didn’t like the book at all. Dull, slow and not the same style as his other novels. I gave it the benefit of the doubt up to page 196, then skipped to the end and was glad I did. If you enjoy slow, meandering, one note texts then this is the novel for you. Otherwise, try Slayground by the same author - pacey and entertaining.