Donkey Punch (also referred to as Donkey Punch: A Cal Innes book and Sucker Punch) is a crime novel by Scottish author Ray Banks. It was first published in the United Kingdom by Edinburgh-based company Birlinn Ltd in 2007, and again by the same publisher in 2008. In the United States it was published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in 2009, titled Sucker Punch, and was reprinted in 2011.

Donkey Punch
2007 book cover
AuthorRay Banks
Original titleDonkey Punch
CountryScotland
LanguageEnglish
SeriesCal Innes novels
SubjectCrime
GenreFiction
PublisherBirlinn Ltd
Publication date
1 April 2007
Media typePaperback
Pages248
ISBN1-904598-85-4
OCLC176777039
LC Class2010293778
Preceded bySaturday's Child (2006) 
Followed byNo More Heroes (2008) 

Donkey Punch is part of a series following protagonist Cal Innes, a former convict and private investigator. Innes agrees to accompany a novice boxer from England to a fight in Los Angeles, California. While there, Innes must investigate the subsequent kidnapping of the boxer, while battling his own internal struggles and avoiding trouble with the Los Angeles Police Department.

The Skinny said, "Donkey Punch is as terse and macho as Saturday's Child, although his hardboiled writing style has become more poised and confident."[1] Scotland on Sunday said, "Vivid and realistic, with an appealingly flawed hero and an interesting setting amid the underside of modern LA, this is a knockout."[2] The Plain Dealer said, "Banks' tough-guy prose is irresistible."[3] Associated Press said of the author's writing style, "Innes, for all his faults and problems, is an engaging character with a sharp sense of humor and a ton of turmoil in his life. And Banks, a member of the so-called 'Brit grit' movement, has an easy, breezy style that keeps you flipping the pages."[4]

Author edit

Ray Banks was born in Kirkcaldy, Scotland,[5] and spent two years studying performance art and theatre at Warwick University.[6] Banks said in an interview with the Newcastle Evening Chronicle that leaving Warwick University led him to become a published writer. Banks said, "If I'd stayed on, I probably would have gone down the acting route instead of writing. University isn't for everyone and I discovered that the other writers I know didn't finish their courses either. It was certainly the best thing that happened to me."[6]

Banks' first novel was released in 2004, titled The Big Blind.[7][8] The Big Blind was inspired by Banks' prior employment as a croupier.[9] His work Saturday's Child was published in 2006 in the UK by Polygon,[10] and in the US by Harcourt.[5][11] Protagonist character, private investigator Callum Innes, first appeared in Saturday's Child,[10] and was the focus of Donkey Punch.[12] Subsequent books include No More Heroes (2008),[13][14] Gun (2008),[15][16] Beast of Burden (2009),[17][18] California (2011),[19][20] and Dead Money (2011).[21] Banks has also contributed short stories for collected works and to a website called Noir Originals.[6][9]

Publication history edit

Donkey Punch was first published in Edinburgh by Polygon Books, an imprint of Birlinn Ltd which publishes fiction, in 2007,[12][22] and again by Birlinn Ltd on 1 February 2008.[23][24] It was published in the US under the title Sucker Punch by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in 2009,[25][26] and again by the same publisher in 2011.[27][28]

Plot edit

The book follows protagonist Cal Innes, a private investigator and former convict whose parole after being released from HM Prison Manchester is finished. He is employed as a caretaker of a boxing gym called the Lads' Club managed by Paulo Gray in Manchester. Innes has allegiance to an influential criminal figure named Morris Tiernan, also known as Uncle. Innes agrees to a request from Uncle to accompany a novice 17-year-old boxer named Liam Wooley to a significant boxing match in Los Angeles.

Once there, Innes becomes acquainted over drinks with a former boxer named Nelson Byrne. The job, originally intended to be looking after Wooley, becomes a sinister operation as Innes learns there may be impropriety related to the fight. Innes deals with his dependence on codeine and alcohol along with Wooley's anger management problems. Innes finds himself in a difficult situation in an unfamiliar city, suffers a gunshot wound and his charge Wooley is involuntarily subdued with medication and kidnapped. Innes becomes the suspect in a murder investigation by the Los Angeles Police Department, finds and rescues Wooley and learns that his supposed friend Byrne was the culprit. After being exonerated by the police, Innes escorts Wooley back to England.

Reception edit

Reviewer Gareth K. Vile of The Skinny gave the book three out of five stars, and commented, "By transplanting his thuggish noir from Manchester to LA, Ray Banks' second Cal Innes novel has two sets of mean streets to pace. Not that his grasp of characterisation has gotten any stronger: Donkey Punch is as terse and macho as Saturday's Child, although his hardboiled writing style has become more poised and confident."[1] Andrea Mullaney reviewed the book for Scotland on Sunday and wrote, "Vivid and realistic, with an appealingly flawed hero and an interesting setting amid the underside of modern LA, this is a knockout."[2]

Les Roberts gave the book a favourable review for The Plain Dealer and wrote, "Much of Innes' narration is East London slang, generously laced with profanities and hard for Americans to grasp. But Banks' tough-guy prose is irresistible."[3] Writing for Electric City, James Crane suggested readers read The Maltese Falcon before beginning Banks' book, and said the story is a step-down from Guy Noir and Sin City.[29] Crane wrote, "I enjoy the hard-boiled style ... It certainly isn't a new formula, though Ray Banks does follow it well."[29]

Chris Talbott gave Donkey Punch a mixed assessment for the Associated Press and wrote, "Innes, for all his faults and problems, is an engaging character with a sharp sense of humor and a ton of turmoil in his life. And Banks, a member of the so-called 'Brit grit' movement, has an easy, breezy style that keeps you flipping the pages."[4] Talbott concluded, "Pretty standard stuff, but done with enough style and wit to make us pick up the next book in the series."[4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Vile, Gareth K. (9 August 2007). "Donkey Punch by Ray Banks". The Skinny. Radge Media Limited. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  2. ^ a b Mullaney, Andrea (1 April 2007). "Round up: Crime – Donkey Punch". Scotland on Sunday. The Scotsman Publications Ltd. p. 6.
  3. ^ a b Roberts, Les (22 February 2009). "Ray Banks' 'Sucker Punch' makes most of tension". The Plain Dealer. Cleveland, Ohio: Advance Publications, Cleveland Live LLC; www.cleveland.com. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  4. ^ a b c Talbott, Chris (Associated Press) (15 February 2009). "Book Review: Ray Banks' 'Sucker Punch' not quite a knockout". The Dedham Transcript. Dedham, Massachusetts: Daily News Transcript; www.dailynewstranscript.com. Retrieved 22 October 2012. alternate link (ABC News).
  5. ^ a b Banks, Ray (2006). Saturday's Child. Orlando: Harcourt, Inc. ISBN 978-0-15-101322-7.
  6. ^ a b c Carrahar, Keegan (2 June 2007). "Living a life on the edge". Newcastle Evening Chronicle. Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear, North East England: MGN Ltd.; Section: News. p. 1.
  7. ^ Banks, Ray (2004). The Big Blind. Pointblank. ISBN 978-1-930997-37-0.
  8. ^ OCLC (2012). "The Big Blind". WorldCat. worldcat.org. OCLC 57496301.
  9. ^ a b "Ray Banks". Books from Scotland. booksfromscotland.com. 22 February 2012. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  10. ^ a b Banks, Ray (3 April 2006). Saturday's Child. Polygon. ISBN 1-904598-78-1.
  11. ^ OCLC (2012). "Saturday's Child". WorldCat. worldcat.org. ISBN 9781846970214. OCLC 85444219.
  12. ^ a b Banks, Ray (1 April 2007). Donkey Punch. Birlinn Ltd. ISBN 978-1-904598-85-5.
  13. ^ Banks, Ray (15 February 2008). No More Heroes. Polygon. ISBN 978-1-84697-013-9.
  14. ^ OCLC (2012). "No More Heroes". WorldCat. worldcat.org. ISBN 9781846970214. OCLC 317917939.
  15. ^ Banks, Ray (15 November 2008). Gun. Crime Express. ISBN 978-1-905512-52-2.
  16. ^ OCLC (2012). "Gun". WorldCat. worldcat.org. ISBN 9781846970214. OCLC 244314990.
  17. ^ Banks, Ray (15 March 2009). Beast of Burden. Polygon. ISBN 978-1-84697-098-6.
  18. ^ OCLC (2012). "Beast of Burden". WorldCat. worldcat.org. ISBN 9781846970214. OCLC 521745115.
  19. ^ Banks, Ray (1 April 2011). California. Crime Express. ISBN 978-1-907869-07-5.
  20. ^ OCLC (2012). "California". WorldCat. worldcat.org. OCLC 751861364.
  21. ^ Banks, Ray (25 October 2011). Dead Money. Blasted Heath.
  22. ^ OCLC (2012). "Donkey Punch". WorldCat. worldcat.org. ISBN 9781846970214. OCLC 176777039.
  23. ^ Banks, Ray (1 February 2008). Donkey Punch. Birlinn Ltd. ISBN 978-1-84697-021-4.
  24. ^ OCLC (2012). "Donkey Punch". WorldCat. worldcat.org. OCLC 757274412.
  25. ^ Banks, Ray (12 February 2009). Sucker Punch. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0-15-101323-4. First published as Donkey Punch in Great Britain by Polygon, an imprint of Birlinn Ltd., 2007
  26. ^ OCLC (2012). "Sucker Punch (Book, 2009)". WorldCat. worldcat.org. OCLC 231745580.
  27. ^ Banks, Ray (23 September 2011). Sucker Punch. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0-547-24774-8.
  28. ^ OCLC (2012). "Sucker Punch. (Book, 2011)". WorldCat. worldcat.org. ISBN 9781846970214. OCLC 666239967.
  29. ^ a b Crane, James (10 December 2009). "Crime drama". Electric City. Scranton, Pennsylvania: Section: Columns; 2009, Electric City, Scranton, PA. Archived by: NewsBank.

Further reading edit

External links edit