KILLING CASTRO by Lawrence Block
Book Quote:
“Garrison’s eyes opened. He grinned. He was an American businessman on vacation, a real estate speculator who occasionally took a taxi to look at a piece of property. He stayed in a top hotel, ate at good restaurants, tipped a shade too heavily, drank a little too much, and didn’t speak a damned word of Spanish. Hardly an assassin, or a secret agent, or anything of the sort. They searched his room, of course, but this happened regularly in every Latin American country. It was a matter of form. Actually, it tended to reassure him, since they searched so clumsily that he knew they were not afraid of him. Otherwise, they would take pains to be more subtle.
He stood up, naked and hard-muscled, and walked to his window. He’d been careful to get a room with a window facing on the square. The square was the Plaza of the Republica, a small park surrounding the Palace of Justice. Parades with Fidel at their head made their way up a broad avenue to the plaza. Then Fidel would speak, orating wildly and magnificently from the steps of the palace. From the window Garrison could see those steps.
With the rifle properly mounted on the window ledge, he could place a bullet in Fidel’s open mouth….”
Book Review:
Reviewed by Jana L. Perskie (APR 30, 2009)
From the moment Fidel Castro made the choice to wage war against the dictatorial government of Cuban President Fulgencio Batista and to begin the Cuban Revolution, his life was in constant jeopardy. There were the perils of guerrilla warfare in the Sierra Maestra mountains, post revolution dangers from those he deposed, civilian and military, Cuban and US, plantation owners and crime bosses, who so profited under Batista. Then there were the numerous CIA attempts to kill Castro with poison pills, toxic cigars and exploding mollusks. Rumor has it that the dictator once even volunteered to kill himself. He was joking, of course. For nearly half a century, the CIA, Cuban exiles, and heaven knows who else, have been trying to devise ways to assassinate el Presidente.
However, Lawrence Block did not know this when he wrote Killing Castro. The book was originally published by Monarch in 1961 as “Fidel Castro Assassinated.” Block used the pseudonym Lee Duncan, a moniker adopted for this novel alone.
Killing Castro is as much about the journeys, literal and figurative, of five men, as it is about an assassination. Five Americans are offered twenty thousand dollars apiece to kill Castro. That was really a lot of money back in 1961. The loot is to be collected after the fact. Every one of the five has different reasons for slipping into Cuba and risking his life to kill a man relatively unknown to them, except for the media, stories from Cuban exiles, and government statements. It is, after all, only 1961, two years into the revolution and shortly before the Cuban missile crisis. Each man’s journey, his motivations and outcome, are what is really exciting and unexpected here. All of these characters are changed by this deadly adventure.
Then one wonders who or what entity is behind the operation? Impoverished Cuban refugees could hardly have scraped together one hundred thousand dollars. So, “who was financing the assassination? Tobacco and sugar planters? Oil refiners? Batista fascists hungry to regain power? Americans unwilling to tolerate a Communist nation ninety miles offshore?”
Interspersed between the narrative are italicized chapters which provide a historical perspective on Castro and the reasons he became involved in the politics of revolution. The history of the man, his years as a student and young revolutionary, are absolutely fascinating – especially as the changes which occur in him are contrasted with those which take place in his prospective killers. However, there are occasions when the author, through the voice of the omniscient observer, makes certain points and allegations which are way too subjective for omniscience and border on editorializing. I think Block would have been more credible had he used one of his characters to express these personal political views.
I really enjoyed Killing Castro, and although it is far from the author’s best work, it certainly makes for an entertaining read.
Kudos to Hard Case Crime for making this most rare of Lawrence Block’s thrillers available.
| AMAZON READER RATING: | |
| PUBLISHER: | Hard Case Crime; Reprint edition (December 30, 2008) |
| REVIEWER: | Jana L. Perskie |
| AVAILABLE AS A KINDLE BOOK? | YES! Start Reading Now! |
| AUTHOR WEBSITE: | Lawrence Block |
| EXTRAS: | Excerpt |
| MORE ON MOSTLYFICTION: | Read our reviews of:
Hope to Die (Matt Scudder series) |
Bibliography:
- Coward’s Kiss (1961)
- You Could Call It Murder (Originally published as Markham) (1961)
- Deadly Honeymoon (1967)
- After the First Death (1969)
- Specialists (1969)
- Ronald Rabbit is A Dirty Old Man (1971)
- Ariel (1980)
- Code of Arms (1981)
- Random Walk (1988)
- Some Days You Get the Bear: Stories (1993)
- Ehrengraf for the Defense: Stories (1994)
- One-Night Stands: Early Stories (1999)
- Collected Mystery Stories (1999)
- The Lost Cases of Ed London (2001)
- Enough Rope: Collected Stories (2002)
- Small Town (January 2003)
- Cinderella Sims (March 2003)
- One Night Stands and Lost Weekends (November 2008)
Hard Case Crimes reprints:
- Mona (1961) (republished as Grifter’s Game in September 2004)
- The Girl with the Long Green Heart (1965; reprinted November 2005)
- Lucky at Cards (originally published 1964 under a pseudonym; January 2007)
- A Diet of Treacle (originally published 196? under a pseudonym; January 2008)
- Killing Castro (originally published 196? under a pseudonym; December 2008)
- Getting Off: A Novel of Sex and Violence (September 2011)
Matthew Scudder Mysteries
- The Sins of the Fathers (1976)
- Time to Murder and Create (1976)
- In the Midst of Death (1976)
- A Stab in the Dark (1981)
- Eight Million Ways to Die (1982)

- When the Sacred Ginmill Closes (1986)
- Out on the Cutting Edge (1989)
- A Ticket to the Boneyard (1990)
- A Dance At the Slaughterhouse (1991)
- A Walk Among the Tombstones (1992)
- The Devil Knows You’re Dead (1993)

- A Long Line of Dead Men (1994)
- Even the Wicked (1997)
- Everybody Dies (1998)
- Hope To Die (2001)
- All The Flowers are Dying (February 2005)
- A Drop of the Hard Stuff (May 2011)
Keller Series:
- Hit Man (1999)
- Hit List (2000)
- Hit Parade (2006)
- Hit and Run (June 2008)
Bernie Rhodenbarr Mysteries (reprinted 2006)
- Burglars Can’t Be Choosers (1977)
- The Burglar in the Closet (1978)
- The Burglar Who Like to Quote Kipling (1979)
- The Burglar Who Studied Spinoza (1980)
- The Burglar Who Painted Like Mondrian (1983)
- The Burglar Who Traded Ted Williams (1994)
- The Burglar Who Thought He Was Bogart (1995)
- The Burglar in the Library (1997)
- The Burglar in the Rye (1999)
- The Burglar on the Prowl (March 2004)
Evan Tanner Mysteries (reprinted in 2007):
- The Thief Who Couldn’t Sleep (1966)
- The Cancelled Czech (1966)
- Tanner’s Twelve Swingers (1967)
- Two for Tanner (1967)
- Here Comes A Hero (1968)
- Tanner’s Tiger (1968)
- Me Tanner, You Jane (1970)
- Tanner on Ice (1998)
- The Scoreless Thai (2000)
- Tanner’s Virgin (April 2006)
Writing as Paul Kavanagh
- Such Men are Dangerous (1969)
- The Triumph of Evil (1971)
- Not Comin’ Home to You (1974)
Nonfiction:
- Writing the Novel from Plot to Plot (1979)
- Telling Lies for Fun & Profit (1981)
- Write for Your Life (1986)
- Spider, Spin Me a Web (1987)
- Step by Step: A Pedestrian Memoir (May 2009)
Movies from Books:
- Nightmare Honeymoon (based on Deadly Honeymoon)
- Eight Million Ways to Die (1985)
- Burglar (loosely based on The Burglar in the Closet) (1987)
- Keller (based on Hit Man)
- A Walk Among the Tombstones
April 30, 2009
В·
Judi Clark В·
3 Comments
Tags: 1960s, Cuba, Hard Case Crime, Int'l Thriller В· Posted in: Cuba, Noir, Thriller/Spy/Caper, y Award Winning Author

3 Responses
I enjoyed the book, but was a bit perplexed by the ambiguous ending. I would like Ms. Perskie to share her views about the ending. Thank you.
Hi – I am so sorry to have taken so long to get back to you RE: your comment and question, but I have been away on vacation without a PC…some peace and quiet is what I needed. ;>
About your question…I’m not sure I can enter into a discussion on this book at this time. I read “Killing Castro” earlier this year. I read about 1-3 books each week and unless I am reading a truly “great” novel, I do forget all but the most basic of plots. For me, “KILLING CASTRO” was a light read… one of those that I enjoyed while reading it, but not one that has stayed with me outside of a few images here and there. Also, since this is one of Block’s earliest books, (not even published under his own name), I wasn’t too critical about any flaws in the novel. But let me ask you this, what exactly do find ambiguous about the ending? I am really interested, and I hope that your response will trigger my memory. Thanks for reading and commenting on my review, and for following MostlyFiction.com. All best, Jana Perskie
I apologize for taking even longer to respond.
I refer to the following: One of the assassins was holed up in a hotel room that overlooked the place where Castro was to address the masses. He decided not to go through with it and heads to the airport where his mistress is to join him on his return flight to the States. Only, there is no indication of what transpires once he gets to the airport. Is the woman there? Is he able to escape? The book ends with: “He opened the door,” referring to the airport terminal, and that’s it, no clue whatsoever as to what happens. The reader is left flat-footed.
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