A Deadly Shade of Gold: A Travis McGee Novel
A Deadly Shade of Gold: A Travis McGee Novel book cover

A Deadly Shade of Gold: A Travis McGee Novel

Paperback – March 12, 2013

Price
$17.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
416
Publisher
Random House Trade Paperbacks
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0812983968
Dimensions
5.2 x 0.88 x 7.99 inches
Weight
10.1 ounces

Description

Praise for John D. MacDonald and the Travis McGee novels “ The great entertainer of our age, and a mesmerizing storyteller.”—Stephen King xa0 “My favorite novelist of all time . . . All I ever wanted was to touch readers as powerfully as John D. MacDonald touched me. No price could be placed on the enormous pleasure that his books have given me. He captured the mood and the spirit of his times more accurately, more hauntingly, than any ‘literature’ writer—yet managed always to tell a thunderingly good, intensely suspenseful tale.”—Dean Koontz xa0 “To diggers a thousand years from now, the works of John D. MacDonald would be a treasure on the order of the tomb of Tutankhamen.”—Kurt Vonnegut xa0 “A master storyteller, a masterful suspense writer . . . John D. MacDonald is a shining example for all of us in the field. Talk about the best .”—Mary Higgins Clark xa0 “A dominant influence on writers crafting the continuing series character . . . I envy the generation of readers just discovering Travis McGee, and count myself among the many readers savoring his adventures again.”—Sue Grafton xa0 “One of the great sagas in American fiction.”—Robert B. Parker xa0 “Most readers loved MacDonald’s work because he told a rip-roaring yarn. I loved it because he was the first modern writer to nail Florida dead-center, to capture all its languid sleaze, racy sense of promise, and breath-grabbing beauty.”—Carl Hiaasen xa0 “The consummate pro, a master storyteller and witty observer . . . John D. MacDonald created a staggering quantity of wonderful books, each rich with characterization, suspense, and an almost intoxicating sense of place. The Travis McGee novels are among the finest works of fiction ever penned by an American author and they retain a remarkable sense of freshness.”—Jonathan Kellerman xa0 “What a joy that these timeless and treasured novels are available again.”—Ed McBain xa0 “Travis McGee is the last of the great knights-errant: honorable, sensual, skillful, and tough. I can’t think of anyone who has replaced him. I can’t think of anyone who would dare.”—Donald Westlake xa0 “There’s only one thing as good as reading a John D. MacDonald novel: reading it again. A writer way ahead of his time, his Travis McGee books are as entertaining, insightful, and suspenseful today as the moment I first read them. He is the all-time master of the American mystery novel.”—John Saul John D. MacDonald was an American novelist and short-story writer. His works include the Travis McGee series and the novel The Executioners, which was adapted into the film Cape Fear . In 1962 MacDonald was named a Grand Master of the Mystery Writers of America; in 1980, he won a National Book Award. In print he delighted in smashing the bad guys, deflating the pompous, and exposing the venal. In life, he was a truly empathetic man; his friends, family, and colleagues found him to be loyal, generous, and practical. In business, he was fastidiously ethical. About being a writer, he once expressed with gleeful astonishment, “They pay me to do this! They don’t realize, I would pay them.” He spent the later part of his life in Florida with his wife and son. He died in 1986. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. One A smear of fresh blood has a metallic smell. It smells like freshly sheared copper. It is a clean and impersonal smell, quite astonishing the first time you smell it. It changes quickly, to a fetid, fudgier smell, as the cells die and thicken. When it is the blood of a stranger, there is an atavistic withdrawal, a toughening of response, a wary reluctance for any involvement. When it is your own, you want to know how bad it is. You turn into a big inward ear, listening to yourself, waiting for faintness, wondering if this is going to be the time when the faintness comes and turns into a hollow roaring, and sucks you down. Please not yet. Those are the three eternal words. Please not yet. When it is the blood of a friend.u2008.u2008.u2008. When maybe he said, Please not yetu2008.u2008.u2008.u2008But it took him and he went on down.u2008.u2008.u2008. It was a superb season for girls on the Lauderdale beaches. There are good years and bad years. This, we all agreed, was a vintage year. They were blooming on all sides, like a garden out of control. It was a special type this year, particularly willowy ones, with sun-streaky hair, soft little sun-brown noses, lazed eyes in the cool pastel shades of green and blue, cat-yawny ones, affecting a boredom belied by glints of interest and amusement, smilers rather than gigglers, with a tendency to run in little flocks of three and four and five. They sparkled on our beaches this year like grunions, a lithe and wayward crop that in too sad and too short a time would be striving for Whiter Washes, Scuff-Pruf Floors and Throw-Away Nursing Bottles. In a cool February wind, on a bright and cloudless afternoon, Meyer and I had something over a half dozen of them drowsing in pretty display, basted with sun oil, behind the protection of laced canvas on the sun deck atop my barge type houseboat, the Busted Flush, moored on a semi-permanent basis at Slip F‑18, Bahia Mar, Fort Lauderdale. Meyer and I were playing acey-deucy. He was enjoying it more than I was. He kept rolling doubles. He looks like the diarama of Early Man in the Museum of Natural History. He has almost as much pelt as an Adirondack black bear. But he can stroll grinning down a beach and acquire a tagalong flock of lovelies the way an ice cream cart ropes children. He calls them all Junior. It saves confusion. He is never never seen with one at a time. He lives alone aboard a squatty little cruiser and is, by trade, an Economist. He predicts trends. He acquired a little money the hard way, and he keeps moving it around from this to that, and it keeps growing nicely, and he does learned articles for incomprehensible journals. At reasonable intervals one of the Juniors would clamber down the ladderway, go below and return with a pair of cans of cold beer from my stainless steel galley. I always buy the brands with the pull tabs. You stare at the tab, think deep thoughts about progress, advertising, modern living, cultural advances, and then turn the can upside down and open with an opener. It is a ceremonial kind of freedom. Just as Meyer got all the way around, blocked me out and began taking off with exquisite care, smirking away to himself, humming, rolling good numbers, I heard my phone ring. It surprised me. I thought I had the switch at the off position, the position where you can phone out, but anybody phoning you thinks it is ringing, but it isn’t. And that is another kind of freedom. Like throwing away mail without looking to see who it’s from, which is the ultimate test, of course. I have yet to meet a woman who has arrived at that stage. They always have to look. Perhaps if Meyer hadn’t been making everything so disagreeable, I would have let it ring itself out. But I went on down to my lounge and answered it with one very cautious depersonalized grunt. “McGee?” the voice said. “Hey, McGee? Is this Travis McGee?” I stuck a thumb in my cheek and said, “I’m lookin affa things while he’s away.” The voice was vaguely familiar. “McGee, buddy, are you stoned?” Then I knew the voice. From way back. Sam Taggart. “Where the hell are you,” I said, “and how soon can you get here?” The voice faded and came back. “.u2008.u2008.u2008too far to show up in the next nine minutes. Wait’ll I see what it says on the front of this phone book. Waycross, Georgia. Look, I’ve been driving straight on through, and I’m dead on my feet. And I started thinking suppose he isn’t there, then what the hell do you do?” “So I’m here. So hole up and get some sleep before you kill somebody.” “Trav, I got to have some help.” “Doesn’t everybody?” “Listen. Seriously. You stillu2008.u2008.u2008.u2008operating like you used to?” “Only when I need the money. Right now I’m taking a nice long piece of my retirement, Sam. Hurry on down. The little broads are beautiful this year.” “There’s a lot of money in this.” “It will be a lot more pleasant to say no to you in person. And by the way, Sam?” “Yes?” “Is there anybody in particular you would like me to get in touch with? Just to say you’re on your way?” It was a loaded question, about as subtle as being cracked across the mouth with a dead mackerel. I expected a long pause and got one. “Don’t make those real funny jokes,” he said in a huskier voice. “What if maybe it isn’t a joke, Sam?” “It has to be. If she had a gun, she should kill me. You know that. She knows that. I know that. For God’s sake, you know no woman, especially a woman like Nora, can take that from anybody. I dealt myself out, forever. Look, I know what I lost there, Trav. Besides, a gal like that wouldn’t still be around. Not after three years. Don’t make jokes, boy.” “She’s still around. Sam, did you ever give her a chance to forgive you?” “She never would. Believe me, she never would.” “Are you sewed up with somebody else?” “Don’t be a damn fool.” “Why not, Sam?” “That’s another funny joke too.” “She’s not sewed up. At least she wasn’t two weeks ago. Why shouldn’t her reasons be the same as yours?” “Cut it out. I can’t think. I’m dead on my feet.” “You don’t have to think. All you have to do is feel, Sam. She’ll want to see you.” “How do you know?” “Because I was the shoulder she cried on, you silly bastard!” “God, how I want to see her!” “Sam, it will tear her up too much if you walk in cold. Let me get her set for it. Okay?” “Do you really know what the hell you’re doing, McGee?” “Sam, sweetie, I’ve been trying to locate you for three years.” He was silent again, and then I heard him sigh. “I got to sack out. Listen. I’ll be there tomorrow late. What’s tomorrow? Friday. What I’ll do, I’ll find a room someplaceu2008.u2008.u2008.” “Come right to the boat.” “No. That won’t be so smart, for reasons I’ll tell you when I see you. And I’ve got to talk to you before I do anything about seeing Nora. What you better do, Trav, tell her I’m coming in Saturday. Don’t ask questions now. Just set it up that way. Iu2008.u2008.u2008.u2008I’ve got to have some help. Do it my way, Trav. I’ll phone you after I locate a place.” After I hung up, I looked up the number of Nora Gardino’s shop. Some girl with a Gabor accent answered, and turned me over to Miss Gardino. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • “John D. MacDonald was the great entertainer of our age, and a mesmerizing storyteller.”—Stephen KingWith an Introduction by Lee Child
  • When Travis McGee picks up the phone and hears a voice from his past, he can’t help it: He has to meddle. Especially when he has the chance to reunite Sam Taggart, a reckless, restless man like himself, with the woman who’s still waiting for him. But what begins as a simple matchmaking scheme soon becomes a bloody chase that takes McGee to Mexico, a beautiful country from which he hopes to return alive. Deception. Betrayal. Heartbreak. When Sam left his girlfriend, Nora, and vanished from Fort Lauderdale, no one was surprised. But when he shows up three years later lying in a pool of his own blood, people start to ask questions. And his old friend Travis McGee is left to find answers. But all he has to go on are a gold Aztec idol and a very angry ex-girlfriend. Is that enough to find his friend’s killer? And when the truth is as terrifying as this, does he really want answers after all?
  • Praise for
  • A Deadly Shade of Gold
  • “Travis McGee is the last of the great knights-errant: honorable, sensual, skillful, and tough. I can’t think of anyone who has replaced him. I can’t think of anyone who would dare.”
  • —Donald Westlake
  • “John D. MacDonald is a shining example for all of us in the field.”
  • —Mary Higgins Clark

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(663)
★★★★
25%
(553)
★★★
15%
(332)
★★
7%
(155)
23%
(508)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Early Travis McGee doesn't seem to live up to author's reputation

After thoroughly enjoying the very last book in this Travis McGee set, we’ve been slowing knocking off some of the early entries. “Gold” is #5 (of 21), published in 1965; and as usual we see McGee trying to recover something, herein valuable Aztec artifacts for a friend who is murdered almost as soon as he appears in town after quite an absence. McGee and the man’s former lover decide to avenge his death – a task that takes us to Mexico for quite a spell; and then almost a second plot with just our leading man in California chasing the probable bad guys.

While we hate criticizing an icon of the genre, we found little to captivate our interest in this tale. We were not endeared with any of the characters; the plot, especially while in California, was almost ridiculously unrealistic – and even McGee’s notorious philosophical ramblings seemed dated and tiresome. And although our hero rails against casual sex, especially the “free love” era of the 60’s (which we somehow missed!), it didn’t seem to stop him from hopping into bed with just about every woman he encounters.

Were it not for the reputation, this would probably be two stars by another author. We had planned to try another novel from late in the set to see if it resonates better with us – else, we’re probably better off elsewhere.
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

If you like this genre, take my review with a grain of salt....

I finished reading this detective novel five or six days ago, and I had to look back over it before I could review it because I could scarcely remember the plot, much less the details. That's how less-than-memorable it is.

It all begins when Sam, one of Travis McGee's old friends, comes back to town after a three-year absence, hoping to reunite with his abandoned fiance', Nora, who is also Trav's friend. He brings along a small and ancient solid gold statue (supposedly one of 27) which he says he plans to sell. Always a romantic at heart, Travis wants to help reunite the two, so he picks up the abandoned love to take her back to the friend's motel room. There they find the man murdered in a brutal and bloody fashion. And the statue is missing.

Thus begins an especially blood-soaked adventure that takes Travis and Nora to a remote village in Mexico as they attempt to find Sam's killer and recover the gold statues. Eventually, Travis ends up alone in Los Angeles, where he finally unravels the whole twisted mystery of who killed who and why and how and so on. Along the way he is severely wounded once and bedded four times by different sexy women. He even falls in love with one of them. He also recovers the gold statues, but ends up alone and gives most of the profits from the statues away, like the good guy he is.

I think the Travis McGee mystery series must be male fantasy novels, with the reader picturing himself in the place of the hero. (After all, women enjoy romance novels that allow them to picture themselves in an idealistic way.) Trav is big and rugged and can handle himself in any fight. He can kill a Doberman with his bare hands. He is smart and has sophisticated tastes. He is an independent loner who refuses to be tied down to a boring 9 to 5 job. He lives on a houseboat. Most of all, he attracts women like honey attracts flies. Every woman he meets comes on to him, but he is picky about the ones he accepts. He is such a great lover that he can heal grief and all manner of other feminine maladies through his sensitive and compassionate lovemaking. What guy wouldn't want to be him?

This is #5 in the series; it is not as good as #1, but much better than #2, #3, and #4. I think fans of this genre would really like it, but I see that it is not the genre for me.
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

superhero Travis McGee does it again ... duh!

About twelve years ago I read my first John D. MacDonald and wrote in my Amazon review that the book was "remarkably unremarkable" but I charitably gave the book three stars. Unfortunately 'A Deadly Shade of Gold' was no better. We have our investigator/hero Travis McGee escaping from precarious situations, having seemingly every woman he meets wanting to have sex with him, and naturally he gets all the bad guys. Maybe this stuff works well for James Bond but with Travis McGee, supposedly an ordinary guy who lives on a houseboat in Fort Lauderdale yet just happens to be incredibly handsome and well built, it sounds just plain ridiculous. In this story he tries to discover who killed a friend who was in possession of invaluable ancient gold artifacts. The premise was good and I found the first hundred pages to be pretty decent but then the story goes into all sorts of directions, gets overly complex and the author throws in different bad guys at random. Not fun.

However I will admit the author does produce good prose in general. The dialogue is particularly good. Shame about the story and the " aw shucks, but everyone thinks I'm damn cool" leading character.

Bottom line: despite all the many superlatives people throw at John D. MacDonald and his Travis McGee books I still think they are WAY overrated. Not recommended.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

MacDonald delivers again with a great story. I am reading my way through his ...

John D. MacDonald delivers again with a great story. I am reading my way through his Travis Magee series and getting the books through Amazon. At a penny apiece plus 3.99 shipping it is a great bargain.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

I don't think he is the great writer that many on here are saying

I had never read James MacDonald before so this was my first experience. I don't think he is the great writer that many on here are saying. I found the writing style to be corny and hard boiled. The story gets side tracked time from time as Travis McGee will pontificate about all the ills of society. His philosophy on life and where the planet is headed is something we have all heard before. Travis McGee is no great thinker. Perhaps it's the age of this book, but the female characters are all weak naive sex machines who can't control their emotions. I can't say I know the American female psyche of 1965 but I think he could have spent more time giving some of the women characters a little more depth. To be fair he has one female Latin character that he does a nice job of developing. The male characters are much more diverse and interesting. The book is old fashioned but there/s still plenty of people in real life that are just like Travis McGee. He is flawed and I liked that part of him. I found myself enjoying the story because of the twists and turns. I can't say it was a great read, but I did buy a second Travis McGee novel. James MacDonald has created 1970's T.V. Detective five years early. He was probably ahead of his time. I enjoyed it enough to buy the next book in the series but that story is corny and female character are underdeveloped and are nothing more than a male fantasy. Good looking and subservient.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A long Travis McGee story

My spoiler-free review:

This was the 4th Travis McGee story I read, and I was glad for it. Had I tried it first I may not have finished. This is another of John MacDonald's McGee stories that strayed away from sunny Florida, which I think happened too often at the beginning of the series. It is also most likely the longest out of all. Yet that isn't to say it drags on, in fact until the final quarter, it was a well paced story.

This one begins on the "Busted Flush", Travis' barge-style houseboat moored at the Bahia Mar marina. It continues to Mexico for most of the story, until the final quarter taking place in Los Angeles. A sullen and introspective McGee is playing host to his Economist friend Meyer's house-party of beach bunnies. Meyer sets up a date for everyone to meet at a local club, but Travis has no interest, and is saved by a phone call from an old friend, who is in town to settle down after years of restless fortune hunting, which incidentally, was of the less than legal variety. However, when Travis meets him at his hotel, he finds a grisly scene; his old friend having been knifed to death, laying in a pool of blood. Apparently this friend had a bead on some very expensive Aztec artifacts, and were Travis to attempt to find them, they could finance his "retirement as I go" lifestyle. The only caveat is the woman who was set to settle down with Travis' friend and is also a platonic friend of his wants to come along to assist with the recovery and revenge. With her in tow, they set off for Mexico...

Though this book was lengthy, I did not find it to drag. Most of the extra length comes from Travis' musings, as well as the mystery-solving in Mexico. In fact, I enjoyed the Mexico portion of this one as much as any set in Florida. The woman who accompanied him was chafing, to say the least. She came off as prim and proper, referring to him as "darling" more than one too many times. If you've ever seen an action movie where a hapless woman wants to accompany the leading action star around, you get the annoyance.

The Travis McGee we get in "Deadly Shade of Gold" is a brooding hero. More so than usual. He broods and broods. And broods. This time around, less is focused on sex, love and the environment, and more on his own life. I actually found it a positive addition to the book, as it made him seem more human. He wistfully thinks to himself that no "true American Wife" would tolerate his lifestyle or himself, that his restless nature he cannot ignore is causing him to be alone and lose the ladies in his life in one way or another through most of the color-coded books. One line that exemplifies his mood in "Gold" is:

"I wanted to get very, very drunk. I wanted to hallucinate, and bring back the women, one at a time, where I could see them, and tell each one of them how things had gone wrong, and how sorry I was."

Action-wise, this story has plenty. Bar fights, breaking and entering, midnight sneaking-about, Travis McGee does it all. As an aside, the only parts I felt irked by were the sexist way Meyer referred to women in the first chapter, multiple times (and I'm not easy to offend) and the annoying girl who accompanies our hero throughout the story. Truthfully, there are no likable females in this book, though Travis' main female lead does grow more likable as the story goes on.

I will reiterate that I will not spoil any major plot points, but I should offer a warning on the final 6th of the book. It takes McGee to LA, where he does some old-fashioned detective work, an enjoyable reprieve from the mostly action packed Mexico portion. However, the ending is boring, anticlimactic, and to risk loss of eloquence, just plain stupid. Though the end is a letdown, I still recommend the book to McGee fans as the first 275 pages are very well written and contain some of MacDonald's best writing of the series so far, and some of the main character's best thoughts on grief, the reality of investigative work, faithfulness, and life in general, all while consuming enough whiskey to give a horse acute alcohol poisoning.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

McGee chases down death-soaked treasure

The fifth novel in John D. MacDonald's classic "Travis McGee" series, "A Deadly Shade of Gold", has boat bum, philosopher, and occasional (read: when he needs the money) investigator McGee chasing after ancient gold statuettes and clues to unravel who killed his friend Sam Taggart. Joining McGee in the adventure is Taggart's ex-fiancee Nora, who was on the cusp of renewing her romance with Taggart when his brutal murder put a damper on things.

Like the four books that preceded it, this travel-heavy fifth entry in the series (we spend time in Mexico, California, and New York, in addition to McGee's native Florida) is gritty, detailed, and enjoyable, but for my tastes things got a little bogged down with politics (particularly involving Cuba of the 50's and 60's), too-complicated plotting, and excessive philosophizing my our man McGee. Plusses include well-rounded women characters (pun sort of intended) and many tense confrontations and escapes.

While this slightly overlong tale is my least favorite among the first five books in this 21-book series (I'm finally discovering this series via reading each of its entries in order), all that means is that I enjoyed the book instead of really enjoyed it. The brisk and scary "Nightmare in Pink" (with its memorable psycho ward setting) is still my favorite so far. But this tale of the corrupt rich and their ethics-free pursuit of priceless antiquities, and the many violent deaths left in the wake of that pursuit, still largely kept me speeding through its chapters. This is rich, dark fun.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Excellent writer, & in some ways seems like little has changed in last 60 years.

Thought plot was terrific & writing excellent. Sometimes think author gets on his high (chivalric) horse for a little too long. However, those parts easily skipped.
✓ Verified Purchase

Not thee "old" Travis McGee

I liked the overview story context, but the protagonist character substance and depth of the old TM not reflected in so many scenes of reflection of his "human character" not in evidence.
✓ Verified Purchase

These books are the same stupid junk.

I ordered several of these because Mike Rowe recommend them on his pod cast. I’m very disappointed. They are the same, mind numbing plot from every episode of every detective tv show from the 60’s and the 70’s.