760:. Always perfectly blueprinted heists, Parker's plans tend to go awry in the execution, sometimes due to bad luck but more often due to greed or incompetence on the part of Parker's less-experienced partners. The tension in the novels often comes from Parker having to work his way out of increasingly dangerous situations on the fly, as his carefully planned heist collapses around him—all while he tries to keep hold of both the money he stole, and his life. (And, often, he does so while endeavoring to exact revenge on those responsible for his troubles.)
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829:, people who came here three months every summer and left their 'cottages' unoccupied the rest of the year... For Parker, it was ideal. A place to stay, to lie low when nothing was going on, a 'home' as people called it, and no neighbors. In the summer, when the clerks came out to swim and fish and boat, Parker and Claire went somewhere else."
1067:(1970) was originally intended to feature Parker, but the plot, which involves a precious gem that is stolen, lost, stolen again, lost again, and so on seemed too comic a situation for the hard-boiled Parker, so Westlake rewrote the novel with a more bumbling and likable cast of characters, including
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as "big and shaggy, with flat square shoulders... His hands, swinging curve-fingered at his sides, looked like they were molded of brown clay by a sculptor who thought big and liked veins. His hair was brown and dry and dead, blowing around his head like a poor toupee about to fly loose. His face was
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Each book is divided into four sections of roughly equal length, each in turn subdivided into shorter chapters. The first and second sections are written in a limited third-person perspective focused entirely on Parker as he plans and undertakes a robbery or heist with colleagues. The second section
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after a heist goes wrong. In both cases, his real identity wasn't known to the authorities at the time of arrest, and he escaped both times from facilities with relatively low security. However, Parker's always very aware that the law is out there, and that his fingerprints are linked to the murder
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it is mentioned that Parker "owned a couple parking lots and gas stations around the country". He has virtually no involvement with the operation of these businesses, allowing the managers to skim profits in exchange for creating the appearance of Parker having a legitimate source of income to avoid
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a chipped chunk of concrete, with eyes of flawed onyx. His mouth was a quick stroke, bloodless." When asked about who he would cast as Parker, Westlake stated: "Usually I don’t put an actor’s face to the character, though with Parker, in the early days, I did think he probably looked something like
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in July 2009. The story is a faithful adaptation of the novel, retaining its 1962 setting. Cooke produced the work in consultation with
Westlake (who died before he could see the final product). Westlake was reportedly impressed enough that he gave his blessing for Cooke to use the name Parker for
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in 1999), in which he chases a past associate who betrayed him in a heist and left him for dead. He survives, but is arrested by the police. Slowly and methodically, Parker tracks down Mal
Resnick, his former accomplice, who intimidated Parker's weak-willed wife into shooting her husband after the
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Westlake wrote under many pseudonyms as well as his own name, but the
Richard Stark pseudonym was notable both for the sheer amount of writing credited to it (far more than any other except Westlake's real name itself), as well as for Stark's particular style of writing, which was colder, darker,
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outside his work, and when he is planning or executing a heist, he is focused on it to the exclusion of almost everything else. However, once the heist is complete, Parker has an almost overwhelming desire to have sex. Though he has a wide range of professional contacts, Parker has no friends.
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perspective", and tend to soften such characters, a fate Parker avoids: " never turns honest, or finds God, or starts working as a secret agent for the government." According to Block, a sign of
Westlake's genius and the key factor in the character's durability, was the realization that " mellow
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In terms of his interactions with others, Parker dislikes small talk, and has little use for social pleasantries. Instead, he prefers to converse as little as possible, and will end conversations abruptly once he feels that he has obtained the information he requires. Parker has few interests
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authored a series of novels with a protagonist named "Nolan" who was an homage to
Westlake's Parker. Collins said of the character: "he concept was to take a Parker-like character who has reached the ancient age of 48 and wants badly to retire, and of course needs one last heist to do so."
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A ruthless career criminal, Parker has almost no traditional redeeming qualities, aside from efficiency and professionalism. Parker lives by one ethical principle: he will not double-cross another professional criminal with whom he is working, unless they try to double-cross
647:...always restless, always on the move; forever hunted, forever hunting, crisscrossing the country following the mighty dollar, trying to make his way in the only way he knows how: through scheming, cheating, and the exercise of brute force. But Parker is by no means merely
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submitted to publishers, Parker was stopped by the police at the end, and killed trying to escape. Bucklin Moon, an editor for Pocket Books, said he'd buy the novel, on condition that Parker got away, so that he could appear in a series of books, instead of just one.
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job had been completed. When the gambling syndicate known as The Outfit refuses to return to Parker his share of the loot
Resnick gave them to make good on a debt, Parker takes on The Outfit as well, a storyline that figures in several subsequent books in the series.
805:, Parker meets Claire Carroll, the woman who will become his companion for the rest of the series. They live together somewhere in northern New Jersey in a lake house owned under the name Claire Willis (she took this surname from Parker's past). In the novel
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less sentimental, and less overtly humorous than
Westlake's usual prose. For a period in the late 1960s, the Stark name was more well-known and more lucrative for Westlake than his real name. According to Westlake, he chose the name "Richard Stark" for actor
1406:. The film's producer, Georges de Beauregard, did not complete payments for rights to the novel, so Westlake took him to court (after litigation Westlake was given North American distribution rights). The film had a theatrical release in the U.S. in 2009.
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would be a standalone book and which he stuck to even though it complicated writing the subsequent books. Westlake himself never definitively settled on a first name for the character, once musing "I don't know what the hell it would be, maybe Frank."
1031:(1972). Gores hints further at the connection between the two books by referring to Parker's associates as "the plunder squad." Additionally, earlier in the novel, the book's protagonist is described as being a reader only of Richard Stark novels.
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epithets that follow Parker from book to book is: 'He had to be a businessman of some kind. The way he looked, big and square and hard, it had to be a tough and competitive business; used cars maybe, or jukeboxes.' He is a loner, competing with
519:, Parker has plastic surgery in an attempt to evade The Outfit's retribution, so he's no longer recognizable to most who knew him before, though his general appearance (and the impression it makes on others) seems to be largely unchanged.
1340:, pits his series cop, Dan Sullivan, against a legendary criminal named "Karper," whose backstory derives from Stark's Parker novels. Doherty contacted Westlake ahead of time to get approval for this deliberate homage to his character.
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if he believes it necessary. However, Parker prefers to avoid murder less due to moral considerations and more because of practical factors: murder brings greater attention from the police and general public than does robbery or theft.
475:, a bank robber turned writer, notes that given Parker's "cold, methodical humorless" habits, the character would be the villain in most books. But Nussbaum also identifies two critical elements that make Parker a sympathetic
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and incapable of learning from his own bitter experience... we admire and yearn for Parker's demented sense of purpose: he feels no embarrassment or shame... he is never afflicted or careworn; he is, in the way of all
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Parker has been portrayed numerous times in films. Westlake refused to allow productions to use the name unless a whole series of films were planned based on the novels. Substitute names were created—starting with
433:: "Stark and Westlake use language very differently. To some extent they're mirror images. Westlake is allusive, indirect, referential, a bit rococo. Stark strips his sentences down to the necessary information."
1102:(1972) contains a brief encounter with a San Francisco detective named Kearney, who is not looking for Parker but for one of his associates. The same encounter is described from Kearney's point of view in the
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Parker's first name is never mentioned in the novels, and there are many details about him which remain unknown. In fact, it is hinted throughout the series that the name "Parker" might itself be an alias.
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Throughout the course of the series, Parker has operated under a number of pseudonyms, and it is implied that the name Parker itself is an alias. In the first novel in the series, Parker is arrested for
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No mention is ever made of Parker's family. While the events of previous novels are frequently referred to throughout the series, very little that happened in Parker's life before his appearance in
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impressed
Westlake: "part of the character's fascination and danger is his unpredictability. He's fast and mean, and that's what I wanted the writing to be: crisp and lean, no fat, trimmed down ...
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In subsequent novels, Parker is often at work, putting together a team of professionals to plan and execute daring heists. Parker's numerous memorable adventures include robbing an entire town in
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describes Parker as rare among anti-hero protagonists in that the character never develops a conscience. Block argues that novelists are generally "uncomfortable writing consistently from an
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612:, amateurs). He has no interest in society except as a given, like the weather, and none in power. He is a freebooter who acquires money in order to buy himself periods of vegetative quiet.
1474:, was distributed by United Artists to some territories in 1969. The film did not have a theatrical release in the U.S. until 2013, when it was screened at the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA).
1297:, Kurtz mentions that he did not know his father, but that he was a career criminal thief who went by a single name and would have sex with women after a job, a clear reference to Parker.
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has paid homage to
Westlake and his Parker character with three hard-boiled action novels featuring the character of Joe Kurtz, a past and current private investigator who spent time in
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features a character resembling Parker, an experienced professional thief known only by his last name, Stark—a reference to the pseudonym used by
Westlake for the Parker novels.
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to producer Les Alexander and allowed for the name Parker to be used in the adaptation, with the option of further novels being adapted should the first one prove successful.
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series features the gang planning a caper based on a Parker novel they have. Chapters alternate between Parker committing a kidnapping (in the otherwise unavailable novel
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hotel under the name Charles Willis between jobs, but is forced to abandon this identity (and the money that goes with it) when police show up at his hotel at the end of
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38:
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798:. In some later books, he uses Edward Latham as his "straight" name. It's mainly other heavy heisters and people who live outside the law who know him as Parker.
446:. Should that happen, Parker will unhesitatingly undertake to exact a thorough and brutal revenge. Parker is callous, meticulous, and perfectly willing to commit
1468:. Michel Constantin played Georges, the Parker character, and Franco Interlenghi appeared as Maurice, the Grofield character. An English-dubbed version, titled
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1253:, which is said to be based on the Parker series overall without specifying the novel it was based on. The project is intended to launch a franchise with a
515:. That may be partly because you knew Palance wasn’t faking it, and Parker wasn’t faking it either. Never once have I caught him winking at the reader." In
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in abbreviated form as an added bonus. The contract to adapt the series had been extended past the intended four books, as Cooke wanted very much to adapt
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specializing in large-scale, high-profit crimes, Parker is the main protagonist of 24 of the 28 novels Westlake wrote under the pseudonym Richard Stark.
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as they plan and execute their double-cross. Section four returns to Parker's perspective as he survives the plot against him and sets out for revenge.
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and is imprisoned in a work camp under the name Ronald Kasper, a name that is linked to his real fingerprints. In the next five novels in the series,
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of a guard at a prison camp—which means that he has no chance of ever being released if caught and properly identified. In the original version of
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553:, when Parker surveys the fictional city of Tyler and thinks to himself that it is a very different place from where he grew up. As well, in
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2029:"Amazon's Robert Downey Jr.-Shane Black-Joel Silver Reteam For Series Of 'Parker' Film & TV Projects To Launch With 'Play Dirty' Movie"
44:
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503:—in the various Parker novels that were written and take place over a span of 45 years, Parker always appears to be somewhere around 40.
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1075:(1974), features a plot in which Dortmunder and his associates base a kidnapping on a plan from a (fictitious) Parker novel called
693:, as Parker is betrayed—often injured and left for dead. Section three shifts to the perspective of Parker's opponents, usually in
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has Dortmunder's new accomplice Herman X claim to have been involved in a robbery with Stan Devers, Mort Kobler (who appears in
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the central character—something he had not allowed with any film adaptation of the Parker novels. Cooke went on to adapt
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595:, but simply different styles of crime. There is no law, so Parker cannot be caught, but merely injured or delayed. The
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Parker does state he had already been a thief for 18 years, and refers to a heist he committed in 1949. In Chapter 3 of
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80:
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2081:"Amazon Fires Producer Joel Silver From Films Starring Mark Wahlberg, Jake Gyllenhaal Over Verbal Abuse (EXCLUSIVE)"
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1027:— Parker appears briefly in Chapter 18, in a sequence that was also described (from a different viewpoint) in
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1777:(September 24, 2014). "Writers on Writing: A Pseudonym Returns from an Alter-Ego Trip, with New Tales to Tell".
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Block, Lawrence (1981). "Introduction", p. iv. Westlake, Donald (1963, 1981). The Mourner. Boston: Gregg Press
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His first name is never revealed in the series, a decision Westlake has stated he made when thinking that
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as a journalist investigating the disappearance of her boyfriend. Characters were named after the writer
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2205:"Dermot Mulroney & Tony Shalhoub Join Shane Black's Thriller 'Play Dirty' For Amazon MGM Studios"
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427:." Westlake described the difference between Stark's style and his usual style in a 2001 article for
1110:(1972). Westlake and Gores repeated the same trick in 1990 with matching sequences in the DKA novel
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stripped to its essentials... callous, unable to feel guilt for his actions, completely lacking in
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1045:) and the Dortmunder gang screwing it up as they try to imitate Parker. Only a few chapters of
1013:(1969) by Richard Stark — Parker appears only in the first chapter of this novel starring
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1079:. Ironically, in the main Parker novels, Parker repeatedly expresses disgust for kidnappers.
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Contrary to what Sante says, Parker was arrested and imprisoned twice in the series—first in
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bore the dedication "To P., 1962-1974"—the dates the original Parker novels were published.
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655:; the brilliance of the books lies in their blurring of the distinction between madness and
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479:: he is surrounded by criminals even more ruthless than he and though Parker is capable of
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Jennifer Lopez joins Jason Statham in new thriller 'Parker' | Film & TV News | NME.COM
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2055:"Robert Downey Jr. and Shane Black's 'Parker' Franchise to Begin With 'Play Dirty' Movie"
809:, their home is described as "a house on a lake called Colliver Pond, seventy miles from
659:, justice and mercy. Parker is not so much sick as blank, with the deep blankness of...
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1333:. Like Stark's Parker, this character is also only known by the single name "Parker".
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Nussbaum, Albert. "An inside look at Donald Westlake." Take One 4.9 (May 1975): 10-13
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The closest Westlake has ever come to alluding to Parker's childhood is in the novel
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Richard Stark (March 1, 1999). "Richard Stark: Introduced by Donald E. Westlake".
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was removed from the project after test screenings and new footage was written by
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Jim Doherty's short story, "The Ghost of Dillinger," published in the anthology
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Westlake used the same structure for many of the Parker novels, a method that
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implication is not that crime pays, but that all business is crime. Among the
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1982:
1727:, and possibly others, but Cooke's death in 2016 left these plans unfinished.
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After Westlake's death, his widow, Abby, sold the screen rights to the novel
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Fictional criminal created by Richard Stark (pseudonym of Donald E. Westlake)
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1999:
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The Westlake Review, reviewing all Westlake (and Stark) novels, in progress
1291:, is dedicated to Richard Stark/Donald Westlake. In the third Kurtz novel,
1133:). Dortmunder is familiar with Kobler and his friend Kelp knows Catchcart.
587:(then known as Luc Sante) offered the following analysis of the character:
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1962:
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are featured, and this particular Parker story is not complete on its own.
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1083:(1985) was originally intended as the seventeenth Parker novel following
1071:, who is Parker seen through a comic mirror. The third Dortmunder novel,
499:, Parker's age is explicitly stated to be 38, Parker is, essentially, an
1530:(1973, MGM) was based on the novel of the same name. It was directed by
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with the possibility of featuring other Westlake characters. Initially,
1129:) and George Cathcart (who briefly appears in the final Grofield novel,
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401:
2107:"Shane Black's 'Play Dirty' Shoots in Early 2024, Stars Mark Wahlberg"
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1558:(1983) was based on the novel of the same name. It was directed by
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later on. Shooting is expected to commence sometime in early 2024.
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heroes and madmen, somehow stenchless, blameless and utterly free.
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See Nussbaum's introduction to the 1981 Gregg Press reprint of
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had written a script for a film he's attached to direct titled
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1037:(1974) by Donald E. Westlake — This novel in Westlake's
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1827:"Interview with Donald Westlake, author of the Parker novels"
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Physically, Parker is described in the opening paragraphs of
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in 2007. This version's plot more closely follows the novel.
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Interview with Donald Westlake, author of the Parker novels
838:(Pocket Books, 1962; re-released in 1999 under the title
1780:
The Getaway Car: A Donald Westlake Nonfiction Miscellany
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as Earl Macklin, the Parker character. It also starred
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as Walker, the Parker character. The film also starred
1967:. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 4–5.
934:(Random House, 1971 — first chapter shared with
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is a fictional character created by American novelist
1951:, University of Chicago Press, accessed 03 July 2020
462:(1963), Westlake's friend and fellow crime novelist
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608:(the syndicate) and fending off marginal elements (
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152:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
1901:"Canarsie and Westlake, Parker and Stark (and Me)"
1707:, released in October 2010. The third adaptation,
1590:as Porter, the Parker character. It also featured
1490:as McClain, the Parker character. It also starred
1313:features a character named "Parker". As played by
2784:Characters in American novels of the 21st century
2779:Characters in American novels of the 20th century
1265:was set to portray Parker, but was replaced with
577:, which appeared in the March 28, 1985 issue of
1586:and directed by Paul Abascal. The film starred
825:meet... mostly a resort community, lower-level
1257:consisting of films and television series for
842:as a movie tie-in by Grand Central Publishing)
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8:
2134:. Violentworldofparker.com. January 30, 2009
1994:
1992:
1753:. Grand Central Publishing. pp. vii–x.
1711:, was released in July 2012, and the fourth—
1783:. University of Chicago Press. p. 28.
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1740:
1402:— people influential in the genre of
53:Learn how and when to remove these messages
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2422:
2401:
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1622:for a small theatrical run in 2006 and on
2327:"IDW: Richard Stark's Parker: Slayground"
2267:"IDW: Richard Stark's Parker: The Outfit"
2237:"IDW: Richard Stark's Parker: The Hunter"
1642:stars as the title character, along with
1620:Payback – Straight Up: The Director's Cut
230:Learn how and when to remove this message
212:Learn how and when to remove this message
110:Learn how and when to remove this message
2369:The Violent World of Parker tribute site
2297:"IDW: Richard Stark's Parker: The Score"
73:This article includes a list of general
1848:Bahn, Christopher (November 16, 2006).
1829:. The University of Chicago Press. 2008
1736:
1245:. A decade later, it was reported that
1224:(the second screen adaptation based on
895:(Pocket Books, 1966) also published as
886:(Pocket Books, 1966) also published as
871:(Pocket Books, 1964) also published as
850:(Pocket Books, 1963) also published as
458:In a 1981 introduction to a reprint of
2789:Literary characters introduced in 1962
1618:. Helgeland's version was released as
710:The first novel in Parker's series is
591:In Parker's world there is no good or
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2079:Siegel, Tatiana (November 30, 2023).
1239:was cast as the titular character in
7:
643:(March 3, 2007), wrote of Parker as
161:"Parker" Stark novels character
150:adding citations to reliable sources
2620:What's the Worst That Could Happen?
1482:(1968, MGM) was based on the novel
2526:Richard Stark's Parker: The Hunter
2105:Ruimy, Jordan (December 7, 2023).
620:for vagrancy, then much later, in
79:it lacks sufficient corresponding
14:
2217:from the original on May 15, 2024
2203:Grobar, Matt (February 6, 2024).
1903:. Mulholland Books. June 30, 2011
1091:, was rewritten for Dortmunder.
487:violence except in self-defense.
34:This article has multiple issues.
2053:Devore, Britta (March 3, 2022).
1930:. Books: Book of the week: Mar 2
1719:also contained an adaptation of
1638:, was released in January 2013.
1059:Literary spinoffs and crossovers
790:, Parker lives comfortably in a
417:, whose performance in the film
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64:
23:
2359:Article about the Parker novels
1924:"The man with flawed-onyx eyes"
1715:—was released in January 2014.
137:needs additional citations for
42:or discuss these issues on the
2027:Grobar, Matt (March 3, 2022).
1574:(1999) was based on the novel
1378:(1966) was based on the novel
430:The New York Times Book Review
1:
2441:The Man with the Getaway Face
1922:Samson, Ian (March 3, 2007).
1876:"The Gentrification of Crime"
1874:Sante, Luc (March 28, 1985).
1634:, an adaptation of the novel
1121:The second Dortmunder novel,
847:The Man with the Getaway Face
771:The Man with the Getaway Face
563:The Man With the Getaway Face
517:The Man With the Getaway Face
471:Parker is no Parker at all."
1880:The New York Review of Books
1850:"Donald Westlake: Interview"
1666:stars as Parker, along with
813:, a deep rural corner where
580:The New York Review of Books
2004:Dead Skip: A DKA File Novel
716:(adapted to film twice: as
575:The Gentrification of Crime
483:violence he rarely if ever
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2749:Characters in pulp fiction
1949:The Hunter: A Parker Novel
1285:prison. The first novel,
633:In a similar tone, author
2774:Fictional prison escapees
1418:) was based on the novel
1114:and the Dortmunder novel
473:Albert Frederick Nussbaum
2799:Thriller film characters
1691:wrote and illustrated a
996:(Mysterious Press, 2006)
990:(Mysterious Press, 2004)
984:(Mysterious Press, 2002)
978:(Mysterious Press, 2001)
972:(Mysterious Press, 2000)
966:(Mysterious Press, 1998)
960:(Mysterious Press, 1997)
938:, a novel in Westlake's
756:, and a rock concert in
568:internal revenue beagles
1961:Stark, Richard (2011).
1693:graphic novel based on
1338:Tales from the Red Lion
706:Novels by Richard Stark
685:described as "clever."
546:for blackmarketeering.
371:In-universe information
94:more precise citations.
2794:Male literary villains
2705:Other film adaptations
2561:John Dortmunder series
2002:(1972). "Chapter 18".
1317:, Parker is an expert
1307:The television series
1146:starring as Walker in
744:, an island casino in
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614:
538:is ever discussed. In
2754:Fictional con artists
1662:is an upcoming film.
1422:. It was directed by
1002:(Grand Central, 2008)
908:The Green Eagle Score
754:The Green Eagle Score
645:
589:
544:bad conduct discharge
2173:on December 22, 2010
954:(Random House, 1974)
948:(Random House, 1972)
928:(Random House, 1971)
920:The Sour Lemon Score
880:(Pocket Books, 1965)
865:(Pocket Books, 1963)
859:(Pocket Books, 1963)
555:The Sour Lemon Score
146:improve this article
2764:Fictional murderers
2677:Ripley Under Ground
1775:Westlake, Donald E.
1460:based on the novel
1198:as Earl Macklin in
1174:as Paula Nelson in
1063:The Westlake novel
988:Nobody Runs Forever
914:The Black Ice Score
902:The Rare Coin Score
803:The Rare Coin Score
244:Fictional character
2410:Donald E. Westlake
2210:Deadline Hollywood
2132:"Not Quite Parker"
1614:and an uncredited
1608:Kris Kristofferson
1604:Deborah Kara Unger
1578:. Writer/director
1353:Selina's Big Score
1263:Robert Downey, Jr.
1087:(1974), but, like
922:(Gold Medal, 1969)
916:(Gold Medal, 1968)
910:(Gold Medal, 1967)
904:(Gold Medal, 1967)
398:Donald E. Westlake
283:(as Richard Stark)
281:Donald E. Westlake
2769:Fictional outlaws
2759:Fictional thieves
2736:
2735:
2687:Posthumous novels
2629:
2628:
2556:
2555:
1974:978-0-226-77300-1
1790:978-0-226-12181-9
1760:978-0-446-67464-5
1668:LaKeith Stanfield
1508:Donald Sutherland
1301:Max Allan Collins
1180:(partly based on
1158:Michel Constantin
1098:The Parker novel
1006:Also appears in:
501:ageless character
400:. A professional
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2337:on June 18, 2014
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1382:and directed by
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722:in 1967, and as
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495:While in 1966's
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1255:shared universe
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2592:The Hot Rock
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2339:. Retrieved
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1932:. Retrieved
1928:The Guardian
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1883:. Retrieved
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1619:
1616:James Coburn
1600:David Paymer
1575:
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1564:Peter Coyote
1562:and starred
1553:
1534:and starred
1525:
1512:Warren Oates
1504:Jack Klugman
1496:Julie Harris
1492:Gene Hackman
1483:
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1424:John Boorman
1419:
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1379:
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144:Please help
139:verification
136:
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36:Please help
33:
2634:Screenplays
2466:Point Blank
1814:The Mourner
1721:The Seventh
1596:Maria Bello
1592:Gregg Henry
1584:Terry Hayes
1548:Robert Ryan
1544:Karen Black
1484:The Seventh
1458:French film
1444:Keenan Wynn
1436:John Vernon
1411:Point Blank
1394:, director
1388:Anna Karina
1375:Made in USA
1323:cat-burglar
1279:Dan Simmons
1247:Shane Black
1172:Anna Karina
1149:Point Blank
1077:Child Heist
1047:Child Heist
1043:Child Heist
1000:Dirty Money
926:Deadly Edge
884:The Seventh
863:The Mourner
780:The Mourner
758:Deadly Edge
742:The Seventh
740:stadium in
719:Point Blank
701:Appearances
691:cliffhanger
670:existential
477:protagonist
460:The Mourner
297:Point Blank
271:Dirty Money
92:introducing
2743:Categories
2568:Characters
2536:Characters
2508:Play Dirty
2487:Slayground
2480:The Outfit
2434:The Hunter
2116:January 1,
2090:January 1,
2000:Gores, Joe
1859:August 30,
1732:References
1717:Slayground
1713:Slayground
1705:The Outfit
1695:The Hunter
1659:Play Dirty
1648:Nick Nolte
1588:Mel Gibson
1576:The Hunter
1555:Slayground
1532:John Flynn
1527:The Outfit
1428:Lee Marvin
1420:The Hunter
1398:and actor
1396:Don Siegel
1380:The Jugger
1347:featuring
1327:pickpocket
1251:Play Dirty
1226:The Hunter
1216:Mel Gibson
1211:Slayground
1201:The Outfit
1182:The Jugger
1166:(based on
1154:The Hunter
1152:(based on
1144:Lee Marvin
1137:Portrayals
1127:The Outfit
1106:DKA novel
1054:Influences
1023:(1972) by
932:Slayground
897:Run Lethal
893:The Handle
878:The Jugger
857:The Outfit
835:The Hunter
819:New Jersey
796:The Jugger
788:The Jugger
776:The Outfit
746:The Handle
713:The Hunter
689:ends on a
635:Ian Sansom
627:The Hunter
618:The Hunter
610:psychotics
597:subversive
585:Lucy Sante
559:The Outfit
540:The Outfit
536:The Hunter
528:The Hunter
508:The Hunter
497:The Handle
468:antisocial
384:Occupation
363:Play Dirty
336:Mel Gibson
330:Slayground
319:The Outfit
292:Lee Marvin
277:Created by
260:The Hunter
172:newspapers
75:references
39:improve it
2727:The Actor
2649:Hot Stuff
2599:Bank Shot
2473:The Split
1983:748371421
1964:Backflash
1854:A.V. Club
1709:The Score
1636:Flashfire
1566:as Stone.
1488:Jim Brown
1479:The Split
1462:The Score
1404:film noir
1233:Flashfire
1191:The Split
1186:Jim Brown
1168:The Score
1123:Bank Shot
1108:Dead Skip
1104:Joe Gores
1025:Joe Gores
1021:Dead Skip
976:Firebreak
970:Flashfire
964:Backflash
888:The Split
869:The Score
807:Backflash
784:The Score
750:Air Force
734:The Score
695:flashback
491:Character
485:initiates
308:The Split
303:Jim Brown
202:July 2010
100:July 2010
45:talk page
2713:The Hook
2341:June 17,
2311:June 17,
2281:June 17,
2251:June 17,
2215:Archived
2177:March 5,
2138:March 2,
2064:March 6,
2059:Collider
2038:March 8,
2033:Deadline
1907:March 2,
1612:Lucy Liu
1452:Pillaged
1349:Catwoman
1310:Leverage
1288:Hardcase
1163:Pillaged
982:Breakout
958:Comeback
873:Killtown
815:New York
811:New York
766:vagrancy
752:base in
738:football
661:humanity
622:Breakout
437:Overview
387:Criminal
2720:The Axe
2663:Why Me?
2613:Why Me?
2494:Payback
2221:May 15,
2163:"About"
2085:Variety
1750:Payback
1571:Payback
1414:(1967,
1277:Author
1273:Homages
1221:Payback
942:series)
840:Payback
792:Florida
725:Payback
665:empathy
601:Homeric
341:Payback
186:scholar
88:improve
2695:Memory
2543:Parker
2501:Parker
2426:Novels
2010:
1981:
1971:
1816:(1966)
1787:
1757:
1683:Comics
1650:, and
1631:Parker
1283:Attica
1242:Parker
1214:, and
786:, and
657:sanity
653:insane
448:murder
402:robber
394:Parker
376:Gender
352:Parker
250:Parker
188:
181:
174:
167:
159:
77:, but
1368:Films
1355:, by
1319:thief
748:, an
637:, in
481:using
425:stark
193:JSTOR
179:books
2343:2014
2313:2014
2283:2014
2253:2014
2223:2024
2179:2011
2140:2012
2118:2024
2092:2024
2066:2022
2040:2022
2008:ISBN
1979:OCLC
1969:ISBN
1936:2010
1909:2012
1887:2010
1861:2014
1835:2010
1785:ISBN
1755:ISBN
1674:and
1546:and
1518:and
1442:and
1343:The
1329:and
821:and
817:and
736:, a
649:evil
593:evil
379:Male
165:news
2331:IDW
2301:IDW
2271:IDW
2241:IDW
1700:IDW
1624:DVD
1416:MGM
1228:).
1204:,
1184:),
1170:),
1156:),
570:".
444:him
148:by
2745::
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2165:.
2109:.
2083:.
2057:.
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1991:^
1977:.
1926:.
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1852:.
1739:^
1670:,
1646:,
1610:,
1606:,
1602:,
1598:,
1594:,
1542:,
1514:,
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782:,
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