

If I'm looking for sheer, sophisticated entertainment, and Wodehouse isn't to hand (and sometimes even when he is), I reach for the
Burglar books.
Lawrence Block, who must be one of the most prolific writers in any genre, has turned out ten of these sparkling mysteries so far. And long may he continue.
The hero of the books is one Bernie Rhodenbarr, a Manhattan bookstore owner who also happens to be a burglar. Technically, that should probably make him an anti-hero, but he's a straightforward hero every time.
Bernie inhabits the New York we all love to imagine: a laid-back, loose-limbed sort of a city, peopled with laconic, wise-cracking characters always ready with a snappy quip or a sudden revolver. And the Burglar's the epitome of this personality: effortlessly witty and bright as a button, without being the smartarse nobody likes.
Burglars Can't Be Choosers is the first in the series - which can be enjoyed in sequence or in whatever order they arrive with you. It's not that important to read them in order, says Block on his website, adding the Bernie-esque aside that "I wrote them in order, but I didn't have any choice."
The books almost always follow the same basic formula: there's a murder, and Bernie's in the frame for it. (Often because he was sneaking into the victim's home around the same time as the Grim Reaper.) Unless he can solve the crime himself, he's going to be taking an unexpected and protracted vacation from the bookselling business.
But this 'formula' is far from monotonous. Indeed, settling down with the new Bernie Rhodenbarr mystery is like settling down for a drink with an old friend. Their very familiarity is what makes them so much fun, but they've always got some new and entertaining tale to tell.
Bernie's aided and abetted by his long-term
compadre Carolyn Kaiser, a dog-groomer by trade. Whole passages of the
Burglar books are taken up with dialogue between these two, much of it inconsequential – and all of it a delight to read. (Of course, Block also exploits the distractingly trivial quality of these chats to disguise plot points that bob to the surface later on.)
The fact that there will never be any romance between these two (they both like girls) means we're never looking for that possibility as readers, and can enjoy their banter and partnership as easily as they do themselves.
There's more. A lot more. But I'll let you discover the rest. And I hope you enjoy doing so as much as I have. (Click the cover image to start your
Burglar collection at Amazon.)