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The Sins of the Fathers
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The Sins of the Fathers
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The Sins of the Fathers
Audiobook5 hours

The Sins of the Fathers

Written by Lawrence Block

Narrated by Alan Sklar

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this audiobook

The hooker was young, pretty...and dead, butchered in a Greenwich Village apartment. The prime suspect, a minister's son, was also dead, the victim of a jailhouse suicide. The case is closed, as far as the NYPD is concerned. Now the murdered prostitute's father wants it opened again--that's where Matthew Scudder comes in. But this assignment carries the unmistakable stench of sleaze and perversion, luring Scudder into a sordid world of phony religion and murderous lust where children must die for their parents' most unspeakable sins.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateFeb 1, 2011
ISBN9780745198668
Author

Lawrence Block

Lawrence Block is one of the most widely recognized names in the mystery genre. He has been named a Grand Master of the Mystery Writers of America and is a four-time winner of the prestigious Edgar and Shamus Awards, as well as a recipient of prizes in France, Germany, and Japan. He received the Diamond Dagger from the British Crime Writers' Association—only the third American to be given this award. He is a prolific author, having written more than fifty books and numerous short stories, and is a devoted New Yorker and an enthusiastic global traveler.

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Reviews for The Sins of the Fathers

Rating: 3.679530308724832 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

298 ratings27 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Sins of the Fathers introduces the series character of Matthew Scudder, a former New York City police officer. He's left the force and is now working as a private detective. Scudder fits right into the detective genre, wrestling with chronic alcoholism and leaving no stone unturned as he pursues the answers to his questions. This series is considered among mystery's most popular private eye novels.

    Scudder is hired by the stepfather of Wendy Hanniford, a woman who has died under strange circumstances. He doesn't want Matt to solve it, because the apparent killer has already been arrested and subsequently hung himself in his jail cell. They were estranged and the father wants to know how Wendy got to the point where she was murdered by her roommate.

    This book was originally written in 1976, so some of the details seem a little funny, like Matt Scudder carrying dimes to use at the payphone. I though Scudder was an interesting character, a tough ex-cop who pays a tithe to one of the local churches. His unconventional methods of investigation set him apart from most of the other private detective novels I've read. I really liked the ending which was unexpected. I love noir mysteries and I loved the pulp fiction style of this series. I'm definitely going to read the next book, In the Midst of Death.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Matthew Scudder, private investigator has been asked by the father of a murder victim to find out the truth about his daughter and the man that was living with her and supposedly killed her. What Matthew found out was not exactly what the father had in mind. It wasn't the usual type of murder mystery but it kept you turning the pages to see what he found out next. It was an early book in the series and I have found that the later books have more action but overall, it was a good read.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Another chip off the old Block. I love 'em.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A pretty young girl is butchered in her Greenwich Village apartment. The prime suspect, a minister's son, is found dead in his jail cell and as far as the NYPD is concerned the case is closed.Matt Scudder, an ex-cop who now does 'favours for friends' is persuaded to look into the case by the dead girl's father. Suddenly he's up to his neck in sleaze and corruption, phoney religious cults and murderous lust. In New York's underbelly the children have no choice but to pay the price for their parents' most unspeakable sins. (I think the blurb is a bit over the top - didn't really find a phoney religious cult..)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Excellent book. I love this series.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    read a couple of years ago.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I'm finally getting around to reading the first book in the Matthew Scudder series. What a great way to start. A definite psychological mystery. I will admit that I probably would not have rated this one as high if I had read it first. It didn't give very much insight into Matthew's character (which is what I love most about this series). Since I was reading this story with hindsight, I feel I had an advantage.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The Sins of the Fathers is my first Lawrence Block novel, but it won't be the last. The central character, Matthew Scudder, is a rather dark character. There seems to be quite a story in how he got that way and I'm hoping to find some of that in the remaining books of the series. The characters are made very real and the story is very good. It moves along fast and leads to the clever detective putting all the pieces together--and more. I recommend the book to mystery lovers.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Fast moving and lean, this reads quickly -- I finished it in a day. I know Matthew Scudder has a series of novels, and I'm interested to continue with him. Scudder is dark, that much I had known previous to reading the book, but the bringing out of his darkness within the novel is done wonderfully, had me reading passages aloud to my wife, a grin on my face.

    I was expecting something more formulaic, and it could be that I don't know the genre well enough, but this seemed fresh to me. I loved the religious aspect to the character and felt that Block treated it respectively and not as a shill for any pet theories of theism or atheism.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is the book that taught me how to fool people. Without this book, none of my own work would have twists.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A good book -- very dark though. Written in 1976, it seems even more dated than that. It has 60's sensibilities written all over it. The main character, Matt Scudder, wasn't terribly likable but that didn't keep me from enjoying the book.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I've listened to another in this series, so it was nice to listen to the first one. No real surprises. Typical Block, very understated. Scudder is likable if a rather aimless character. The mystery was OK, a little obvious, but not bad at all. The way Scudder solved it was perfect.

    I have the next book in the series, but I'm reading another mystery in paperback & don't like having 2 books of the same genre going at the same time. Too easy to get confused. Besides, I'm not in any rush. Scudder is a good way to pass the time, but I can't work up a lot of excitement for most of Block's books.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    (Audiobook.) There a few authors who can always be relied on to write interesting and entertaining stories. Lawrence Block is one of those. I’ve read many across all of his different series and they never fail to be enjoyable. Some are humorous like the “Burglar” series, others more serious character studies, like Scudder.Sins of the Fathers is the first Matthew Scudder. Scudder is approached by a man whose daughter has been killed. Her ostensible boyfriend, the killer, has been caught and committed suicide, but the father (nice pun in the title as Scudder has lost his faith with the police department) wants to know why. As Scudder notes, the door has been opened and now he wants to look inside the room. It seems the daughter had left home a few years earlier and had been living as a prostitute.Scudder, as his fans, will know, is not your usual P.I. A former cop, he now just looks into things for people. He doesn’t file reports, have expense accounts, or any of the usual trapping of the P.I. But he’s very good at asking questions. But that also provides him more latitude and incentive to dig a little harder than a cop might. Of course, nothing is at it first appears and things get complicated. Heart-pounding action it does not have, just good writing and interesting characters.The book was first published in 1976 and the stereotypic descriptions some of the gay characters is typical of that period. The diatribe of the cab driver against the Zionists controlling and hiking gas prices looks even more ridiculous now than it was then given today’s plummeting costs. Certainly not a criticism, just an observation.Block is at his best and Alan Sklar does the book credit. The way he reads the dialogue between Scudder and the killer’s father, a sanctimonious minister is priceless. A fine novel.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    In “A Diet of Treacle” Lawrence Block detailed the depths to which young adults fleeing to the city in the early sixties had reached. That books showed a world of drugs, prostitution, depravity, and bloody apartments. A decade later, Block introduced the world to the character of Matthew Scudder in “The Sins of the Fathers” and, in many ways, revisited the idea of what happened to kids who left college and sank into the netherworld of New York City in the early seventies. In particular, this is the story of a young lady who became a call girl and was found hacked apart with a razor and her male roommate was found wandering in front of the apartment building, half-crazed and covered with blood. He hanged himself in the tombs within a few days. The legal establishment considered the case closed at that point. But, when the girl’s father asks Scudder to poke around and find out who his daughter was and what her life had been about, Scudder unravels things about these two kids he never would have suspected.

    You can pick up the Scudder novels in just about any order and be intrigued. For the most part, they are each independent books. Each one is a terrific detective novel. If you think these novels are going to be about a hardboiled detective with a fedora and a sexy secretary taking dictation, you will be quite surprised. Although derived from the hardboiled tradition, the Scudder books are different. Scudder is an old-fashioned detective who puts together little bits and pieces and figures things out by dogged work.

    Scudder, if you did not know, is a former police officer. One night, off duty in a bar (where else would he be), he sees two guys hold up the joint and take out the bartender. Pursuing them outside, Scudder took them out, but a stray bullet from his gun ricocheted into the skull of a seven-year-old girl, ending her life. The shooting was found justified, but Scudder lost the desire for police work, the desire for his married life, and holed up in Hell’s Kitchen, doing favors for people in return for a few bucks. It is a dark period of his life and he literally tries to drown his troubles in booze.

    This book is an amazing introduction to the Scudder series and is absolutely a powerful story. Although, as noted earlier, you can hints about this book in some of the earlier Block books about the beats and the hippies, Block’s writing truly blossoms when he writes about Scudder. These books have a depth to them that few modern-day mysteries do. Five stars, indeed.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is the second Matt Scudder book I’ve read and I really like this character. Retired from the police he agrees to look into the murder of a prostitute in Greenwich Village for her father. The police have arrested her gay roommate, case closed for them, and then he kills himself in his jail cell after confessing to murdering her. But the facts don’t add up and Matt starts friends, neighbors, relatives and acquaintances till he figures out exactly what happened to them.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    First line:~He was a big man, about my height with a little more flesh on his heavy frame~I have read all of the Matt Scudder crime / detective fiction novels by Lawrence Block, some of them many years ago, and decided recently that it was time I revisited him. I really like exceptionally flawed characters who are really good at their job (like Robert B. Parker’s Jesse Stone) and Scudder is pretty flawed. I am now in a 12 Step Program and I remembered that Scudder is an alcoholic from the beginning and eventually gets into AA and recovers so I was really interested to see how that is played out with these re-reads. A former cop, having caused an accidental death with a clean shot that ricocheted off a building, he has left the force unable to live with the fact that it could happen again. His personal life is basically ‘in the toilet’. No job, he has left his wife and two sons, no real friends, no real relationships.He is not a PI. No licence. And, yet, people find him and ask him for help and give him 'gifts' as thank-yous. And he is damn good at what he does.This book, the first Scudder, is not the best. As with many series, the stories get stronger as time goes on. But it is a great introduction to Scudder and his basic good character. I enjoyed it very much and moved on to Scudder # 2.3.5 stars
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A pretty young woman is found in a pool of blood; she’s been slashed repeatedly with a sharp instrument. Her male roommate is found on the street nearby, covered in her blood, exposing himself and babbling incoherently. Arrested for her murder, he hangs himself in his jail cell. The case is closed. But the dead girl's father has come to Matthew Scudder, an ex-cop and unlicensed private investigator, hoping for answers; he’s been somewhat estranged from his daughter and he wants to know how she came to be in this setting. Scudder begins looking into her background, and finds much more than he expected.

    Wow. I’ve been a fan of Lawrence Block’s Bernie Rhodenbarr series (Burglars Can’t Be Choosers, et al) for quite some time, but had not read any of the Matt Scudder series until now. This series is darker than the “Burglar” books. Block is a master of suspense, and he writes a tight novel. There is nary a word out of place or an extraneous phrase.

    What I really loved about the book was Scudder himself. He’s contemplative and relatively quiet, not given to macho acts of aggression (though he’s not above teaching a lesson or two to a bad guy). I like the way he deals with other people – respectful, even when he’s applying pressure. He has a strong sense of right and wrong, and while he feels comfortable rendering judgment, he recognizes the slippery slope he’s on when he takes matters into his own hands.

    I’ll definitely be reading more of this series. I want to get to know Matthew Scudder better.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I remembered loving Matt Scudder, and found that I still do. The mystery itself isn't too complex, but the characters are. The setting is very evocative of the seventies, and the resolution is strong and feels absolutely right. I think I might re-read the whole series.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A great start to an even greater series. This is the book that first introduced Lawrence Block's most famous creation, Matthew Scudder, to the world.Matthew Scudder used to be a police detective, a good one by most accounts, the kind of "honest" cop who wasn't above putting a little cash in his pocket if the occasion presented itself but never went chasing after it with his hand held out. Then he was involved in an off duty shooting that resulted in the accidental death of a small child. That was the beginning of the end of his days as a cop. He left the life he was living behind - along with a wife and kids out on Long Island - and took up residence in a shabby residential hotel in the Hell's Kitchen area of New York City.Scudder's New York is a place that's gradually rotting around the edges like so much overripe fruit... it still has its good parts but it's probably just a matter of time before it all goes bad. He's an unlicensed investigator who works when he wants (or when he has to) and the rest of the time he mostly does a lot of maintenance drinking. Matt is neither sinking nor swimming, he's just kind of treading water along the undercurrents of the city.In this particular story a grieving father asks Scudder to look into the facts surrounding the recent murder of his estranged daughter. Not to solve the murder. Everyone knows who killed her and the guilty party has obliged them all by committing suicide in his cell. What the young woman's father wants is for Matt Scudder to investigate his daughter's life, to find out who she was, how she ended up living the way she had been living, if there was a reason why things happened in the way that they did. This is an all too familiar question for Scudder - a theme that reoccurs throughout the series - what is it that puts someone in a particular place at a certain time? Is it fate, destiny, or just plain dumb luck?In the process of his investigation he will uncover unexpected things - long forgotten secrets and unpleasant truths. Somewhere around the halfway point the astute mystery reader will get a general notion of where the story is headed but not likely the exact nature of it. It's a somber story, nobody really wins and quite a few lose. There's not a lot of wiz bang action - it's introspective - the story is constant but not frenzied. It doesn't have all the answers and it makes no apologies. But in the end there is a certain amount of accountability.Matthew Scudder isn't the standard hard boiled figure. He doesn't often crack wise - although he does get in the occasional one liner and the dialogue is ALWAYS spot on - he's not a meathead or a thug, he can handle himself but he never gives off the impression of being invincible or a caricature. He's not a religious man but he spends time in churches - they're a good place to think.Despite almost every possible reason on Earth for him to come across as a despicable, pathetic human being Matthew Scudder is a strangely sympathetic character. A hard luck, world weary student of the human condition, an introspective guy who wonders about things like fate and the fragility of human life. When he takes on a case he often becomes consumed with it (perhaps, at least in the earliest novels, because it gives him a greater purpose in his otherwise self indulgent life) refusing to stop even when it goes against his better judgment to continue.Originally published in 1976, The Sins of The Fathers holds up pretty well because, with a few exceptions, it avoids trendy phrases and sticks with a straight ahead story telling style (I do have to admit the first time he put a dime in a payphone it made me chuckle slightly). There's foul language, sexual situations and violence. There's some dark stuff in it, but none of it is unusually shocking by the standards of today.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    "The Sins of the Fathers" by Lawrence Block was a very fast read. A very strict minister, young adults searching for their own identity and a former cop turned detective complete the major characters in the story. Although this is an older book and the money that changed hands was not realistic for today's market, the rest of the story was fairly current. The plot was straightforward and I guessed most of the ending early in the book as it was fairly predictable. I still enjoyed this book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Read it in French: Les péchés des pèresIt is "typical" Block - which means it's concise and to the point and a little dark and the main character is flawed and just a smidge to the left of legal, but also immensely likable even when he is not being at all likable. It was written in the 70s and yet Block writes about homosexuals and prostitutes without adding any hint of judgment against either group - this is uncommon today, let alone in the 70s when any such "deviance" was the sensational fodder these trashy detective novels were based on. Block doesn't waste his writing efforts to moralize for us or preach to us, and I LOVE that about his writing.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I enjoyed this book (although Wikipedia poo-pooed it a little). The ending was not much of a mystery, but the build-up is worthy of some sort of moral tragedy.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The First book of my favorite series in crime/PI fiction. I'd recommend reading this series in publication order. I'm currently rereading these books and they really have held up well over time. Knowing where Matt Scudder ends up makes these reads even more enjoyable the second time around.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This novel is of the kind that your eyes hit the page and before you know, it, you sit up blinking, having devoured the book in one setting. The style is clean and flows well enough to do that. I also admit I have a weakness for books set in my home town of New York City, so that was another plus for me. Yet I didn't leave the novel wanting to read more of Block or his protagonist/narrator Matthew Scudder for several reasons. Some of those reasons are idiosyncratic, I know. I hold it against Scudder for instance, that he uses a prostitute for sex. Prostitution comes into the plot in other ways as well, and the attitude towards it is a bit too breezy for my comfort. I also don't like the picture of graft in the New York City Police as not just a way of life, but that not participating in it, even if you turn a blind eye towards others, would hurt your career and the trust of your peers. Maybe this is accurate--or was in 1976 when this was published. But it's yet another aspect of the hard-boiled detective tradition--along with the touch of vigilantism--that makes this subgenre unattractive to me. Then there's the Freudian psychology in the motivations I find cliched and hard to buy. Finally, if you read this looking for a surprising twist--well, I guessed the murderer as soon at the first interview.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    have read many books by Lawrence Block, and I keep coming back to the Matt Scudder series. This is book one of the series that consists of 16 books total by now.I had read this book a long time ago, but wanted to reacquaint myself with this series again. I certainly was not disappointed. Matt Scudder is not a private detective; rather he does favors for people. He is a former NYPD detective who had to leave the job for personal reasons.The favor he does this time is for the stepfather of a young woman who has been brutally murdered. The case has been solved already, but the stepfather wants more answers than have been provided.Although it isn't hard to figure out what has happened to this young woman, Matt does find more answers. It's the journey of enjoying Matt discover these answers that's so interesting.I'll definitely be reading the next book in this series soon. If you haven't read any Matt Scudder before, I would certainly recommend it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    First person. Down and outish PI investigates murder of 20 something college drop out prostitute and her suicided gay minister's son "murderer". Graft between cops is casually mentioned as well as "gay underground" of NYC. Probably bold in the 70's not so much in 07. Reminded me of an updated Breakfast at Tiffany's. Author pins the murder to the caricatured minister, throwing scripture in his face in the finale. Story could have gone in any direction. Characters were consistent though shallow. Prefer the more modern realism of George Pelecanos.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Interesting read, Matt Scudder is an ex-cop who isn't a private detective but still does odd jobs for people for pay. Like the saint he gives 10% to charity but a lot of his stuff is a lot less nice.The twists are good too.