Jump to content

Black Alley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Black Alley
AuthorMickey Spillane
LanguageEnglish
GenreFiction
PublisherDutton
Publication placeUnited States
Published in English
November, 1996
Pages320


Black Alley (1996) is Mickey Spillane's 13th novel featuring tougher-than-thou New York City private investigator Mike Hammer, and the last one he completed before his death in July 2006. Following the author's demise, the first of "five substantial Mike Hammer manuscripts,"[1] The Goliath Bone, was completed by his friend and colleague Max Allan Collins and published in 2008. Additional books based on Spillane's unfinished manuscripts have since been released, including Lady, Go Die! (2012), Complex 90 (2013) and King of the Weeds (2014). King of the Weeds is a direct sequel to Black Alley.[2]

Plot summary

[edit]

The novel begins with Mike Hammer recovering in Florida from bullet wounds he received during his infiltration of a drug war on the docks of New York—injuries from which he almost perished. After being thought dead by all of his close friends and family for a period of eight months, he comes back to Manhattan and resumes his normal, exciting life. When an old army buddy, Marcus Dooley, is on his deathbed, he clues Hammer in on a pot of $89 billion he stole and hid from the dons of the mafia. Young, greedy mobsters are also looking for that money, which they should have inherited, had it not been stolen. Mike Hammer takes on the whole mafia, coolly, and in imperfect health.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Pierce, J. Kingston. "That Hammer Guy Returns." The Rap Sheet, October 4, 2008.
  2. ^ Pierce, J. Kingston. "Collins Hammers Out His Legacy." The Rap Sheet, April 29, 2014.