John D. MacDonald is a polemical writer. We’ve jumped around his lengthy bibliography enough to be intimately familiar with his strong opinions about a wide ranging array of subjects. His basic approach is, “I’ve thought about this social phenomenon/cultural development/historical factoid much more carefully than anybody and here’s the ironclad dogma I’ve developed about it.” Which is fine, we guess. His observations about the inexorable direction of civilization remain insightful half a century later. We’ve built a house of cards and MacDonald took pains to point that out, with intelligence and some wit. But in seven books we’ve read, which he wrote in three different decades, he consistently cheats when writing about people, choosing in general to portray them as weak willed cardboard cutouts so they serve as foils for his sociological philosophizing.
This, more than any other reason, is why so many contemporary readers say MacDonald’s writing hasn’t aged well. But in our opinion he’s still worth reading. There’s real menace in his work, which is job one for a thriller author. In 1953′s Dead Low Tide his hero is suspected of using a spear gun to skewer his boss, seemingly over either a real estate project or the man’s slinky wife, but someone may be setting him up for the crime. His actual prospective love interest, a longtime neighbor, is drawn into the mess in her efforts to provide an alibi. MacDonald dishes out the twists, despairs the loss of Florida wilderness to fast-buck builders, and laments what’s in the hearts of men. It’s a good book, but you don’t need us to tell you that. The man sold a skillion novels for a reason. We’re moving on to The Executioners after this, which is the source material for the film adaptation Cape Fear, and we have high expectations.