Guys and Dolls: and Other Stories
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Average customer review:Product Description
Slick, upbeat and funny, these stories inspired the popular musical and film Guys and Dolls. 'Of all the high players this country ever sees, there is no doubt but that the guy they call the Sky is the highest.. He will bet all he has, and nobody can bet any more than this'.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #32035 in Books
- Published on: 2005-07-28
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 288 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Alfred Dmon Runyon was born in 1884 in Manhattan, Kansas. During WWI he became a war correspondent, and he continued to write after the war. Runyion's stories are highly original and lively evocations of Broadway low-life and the New York sporting scene. Initially collected in Guys and Dolls (1932), other collections include Blue Plate Special (1934) amd Take it Easy (1938). He died in 1946.
Customer Reviews
Moving, funny, heartbreaking
These short stories are just unlike anything else you'll ever read. Set in prohibition era American, they are told with such a vivid 'voice' that you live each one and feel bereft when it ends. Runyon's skills are magnificent: his plots are often as twisted as Roald Dahl's but that's not the point. The true strength is in the characters who are endlessly surprising, with the most violent gangster laying down his life to save a child. I shocked myself by wanting to cry when reading this on the tube and spent the rest of the journey biting my tongue to hold back the tears - always the sign of an amazing book!
Gangster Rap
A joyous collection of short stories set in the ever popular world of the New York underworld of early years of the Twentieth Century.
"Style" is a very hard thing to define, but it is always easy to recognise. Runyon's evocative, slangy, prose is perfect for the scenes he describes, lively and disreputable. The names of the characters,Nicely Nicely Jones, Dave the Dude, Rusty Charley, Harry the Horse etc etc show the humour that runs through all the tales.
The character of the narrator himself, cautious and cynical yet not without sympathy, is consistent and well sketched in each story.
Although concentrating on the the lowest strata of society, these stories have a very soft centre, and even the worst villains are at the very least true sportsmen, who will never default on a bet.
The real enduring strength of these short works is their plotting. Each is a masterpiece of pacing and economy: consider "A Piece of Pie" or "The Snatching of Bookie Bob", not a word is wasted by Runyon in what are almost poetic pieces, songs of praise for the bars and betting shops of old New York.




