The Mad and the Bad : New York Review Books Classics - Jean-Patrick Manchette

The Mad and the Bad

By: Jean-Patrick Manchette, James Sallis (Introduction by), Donald Nicholson-Smith (Translator)

Paperback | 15 July 2014

At a Glance

Paperback


$39.96

or 4 interest-free payments of $9.99 with

 or 

Available for Backorder. We will order this from our supplier however there isn't a current ETA.

Michel Hartog, a sometime architect, is a powerful businessman and famous philanthropist whose immense fortune has just grown that much greater following the death of his brother in an accident.

Peter is his orphaned nephew-a spoiled brat.

Julie is in an insane asylum.

Thompson is a hired gunman with an ulcerated gut.

Michel, known for his kindly interest in the disadvantaged, hires Julie to look after Peter.

And he hires Thompson to kill them.

Julie and Peter escape. Thompson, gut groaning, pursues.

Hunter and hunted make their way across France to the remote mountain estate to which Michel has retreated.

Bullets fly. Bodies accumulate.

The craziness is just getting started.

Like Jean-Patrick Manchette's celebrated Fatale, The Mad and the Bad is a clear-eyed, cold-blooded, pitch-perfect work of creative destruction.
Industry Reviews
"[Manchette's] writing is lean and relentless, a brutal evocation of a world in which conventional morality is just another lie we tell ourselves...The Mad and the Bad is so dark it redefines noir: bleak and pointed, yes, but also infused with an understanding that what passes between us is not only compromised but more often faithless, less a matter of commitment or connection than a kind of unrelenting animal need." --David L. Ulin, Los Angeles Times "A beautiful woman is freed from an insane asylum by a rich philanthropist who wants her to care for his nephew. But when the nanny and her charge are kidnapped, it's not the ransom plot it appears--in fact, as they escape and flee the gunmen hired to kill them, the truth of the situation is clearly a metaphor for the left-leaning author's deep cynicism about French society. Scenes play out like an art film--Manchette was also a screenwriter--right up until the prolonged, blood-splattered finale." --Booklist "Jean-Patrick Manchette: raconteur, bon vivant, leftist militant, agent provocateur, swinger, French crime kingpin, gadfly foe of the Fifth Republic. Man-oh-man Manchette was a decades-long hurricane through the Parisian cultural scene. We must revere him now and rediscover him this very instant. Jean-Patrick Manchette was Le Homme." --James Ellroy

"This early masterpiece by Jean-Patrick Manchette shows him in most glorious, coldest fury, wrapping a scathing critique of the excesses of greed and capitalism in the bloody bow of a chase thriller. You'll want to turn the pages of The Mad and the Bad at the fastest possible clip, but slow down a little and you'll see how much Manchette packs in--and how much of a punch this mean little book packs." --Sarah Weinman, Editor of Troubled Daughters, Twisted Wives

"'The crime novel, ' [Manchette] claimed, 'is the great moral literature of our time'--shortly before he set about proving it." --James Sallis, The Boston Globe

"In France, which long ago embraced American crime fiction, thrillers are referred to as polars. And in France the godfather and wizard of polars is Jean-Patrick Manchette.... He's a massive figure.... There is gristle here, there is bone." --The Boston Globe

"Manchette is legend among all of the crime writers I know, and with good reason: his novels never fail to stun and thrill from page one." --Duane Swierczynski, author of Expiration Date

"Manchette pushes the Situationist strategy of d�rive and d�tournement to the point of comic absurdity, throwing a wrench into the workings of his main characters' lives and gleefully recording the anarchy that results." --Jennifer Howard, Boston Review

"Manchette...was instrumental in the development of a new generation of French crime fiction--the n�o-polar--with his unpredictable, fast-paced, politically informed novels...[The Mad and the Bad] is violent, swiftly paced, and grotesquely funny." --The New Yorker

"A writer of urgency and cunning, of economy and laconic cool." --Chris Morgan, Los Angeles Review of Books

"Manchette is an impressively economical writer, lean and mean, with a single-mindedness of focus which permits just enough detail to make the stories palpable but precludes distractions." --Medium

"Building upon the hard-boiled genre and creating an offshoot of his own called the n�o-polar, Manchette was a sincere but complicated trickster, a writer who claimed that detective fiction was 'the great moral literature of our time, ' who wanted to use the genre to expose the pitfalls of capitalism and the victims of the exploited classes...and who produced thin novels that are very entertaining and stylistically singular." --Tynan Kogane, Music and Literature

[Manchette's] writing is lean and relentless, a brutal evocation of a world in which conventional morality is just another lie we tell ourselves...The Mad and the Bad is so dark it redefines noir: bleak and pointed, yes, but also infused with an understanding that what passes between us is not only compromised but more often faithless, less a matter of commitment or connection than a kind of unrelenting animal need. --David L. Ulin, Los Angeles Times

New York Review of Books Classics

The Road : Stories, Journalism, and Essays - Vasily Grossman
The Siege of Krishnapur : Empire Trilogy - J. G. Farrell
Peking Story : The Last Days of Old China - David Kidd
The Golovlyov Family : Shchedrin - Shchedrin
NADA : New York Review Books Classics - Jean-Patrick Manchette
The Midnight Folk : Kay Harker - John Masefield
Slow Homecoming : New York Review Books Classics - Peter Handke
Angel : New York Review Books Classics - Elizabeth Taylor
Patrick Leigh Fermor : A Life in Letters - Patrick Leigh Fermor
Fortunes of War : The Levant Trilogy - Olivia Manning
Augustus : New York Review Books Classics - John Williams