The author's first attempt at the crime genre after having met success with westerns, it was adapted twice into film. It is also Leonard's first book starring the character of Jack Ryan (no relation to Tom Clancy's character of the same name), who would return eight years later in Unknown Man No. 89.[1]
Plot summary
Jack Ryan, a drifter and small-time delinquent, arrives at the Thumb area of Michigan[2] as a seasonal farm laborer, picking pickles for food tycoon Ray Ritchie. He soon gets involved with Nancy, a young seductress, currently Ray Ritchie's girlfriend, though she is also cheating on him with another man, Bob Jr. For a while, Ryan and Nancy get their thrills smashing windows and breaking and entering, but Ryan soon gets a shot at settling down with the help of justice of the peace Mr. Majestyk, who hires Jack as a handyman at his beach resort. When Nancy grows bored with housebreaking and burglary and conceives a plan to steal the laborers' payroll, Ryan must choose between following her in her chase for "the big bounce" or the stability of an honest life.
Background
Leonard started offering the story to publishers and film producers in the fall of 1966. However, no one would touch it until 1969, when it was first adapted to the screen.[citation needed] While the screenplay is credited as an adaptation of the novel, the movie came out earlier.[citation needed]
Leonard memorably described the 1969 movie as the "second-worst movie ever made", with the 2004 version being the worst.[5]
Tie-ins
In one scene in the novel, the two main characters watch part of a western movie on TV through an outside window. The movie is Budd Boetticher's The Tall T, which was based on Elmore Leonard's story "The Captives."
The title character in the 1974 action film Mr. Majestyk, written and later novelized by Leonard and starring Charles Bronson, borrows his name from this novel; however, there seems to be no further relation between both characters.[8]
References
^Callendar, Newgate (May 22, 1977). "Decent Men in Trouble". The New York Times. Retrieved May 10, 2021.