The Quick Red Fox

The Quick Red Fox (1964) is the fourth novel in the Travis McGee series by John D. MacDonald. In it, McGee is hired to aid a fictitious Hollywood star named Lysa Dean who is being blackmailed with revealing photographs.

The Quick Red Fox
First edition cover
AuthorJohn D. MacDonald
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesTravis McGee
GenreMystery
PublisherFawcett Publications
Publication date
September 29, 1964[1]
Media typePrint (paperback)
Pages160
Preceded byA Purple Place for Dying 
Followed byA Deadly Shade of Gold 

The New York Times called it "fast moving, hard hitting."[2]

It was issued in hardback in 1974.[3]

Summary

The back of the book reads, "From all that Travis McGee could gather, it must have been one hell of a party. Four languid days and all the booze they could drink...Ten playful people swinging wild and free, getting drunk, getting bored, swapping partners in the warmth of sun on naked bodies, miles from civilization. --- Miles from civilization - and 300 feet from a very good camera with a telephoto lens. The star attraction was a woman named Lysa Dean. --- It was a blackmail set-up as old as the hills. McGee - waterfront gypsy - did not want to touch the deal with a ten-foot pole. Except there was another woman involved, a lovely, longing, tender woman whose life was slowly draining away into disaster..."

Themes

The title phrase, "The Quick Red Fox" is mentioned at two places in the book referred to Lysa Dean, the movie star that Travis McGee is employed to.

The first mention on page 16 reads, "With her head slightly bowed, looking up at me through her lashes, the gold-red weight of hair at the right side of her face had swung slightly forward. Suddenly I knew what she reminded me of. A vixen. A quick red fox." The second mention is on page 155, "The quick red fox stared at me with foxy eyes..."

Travis McGee is given an advance of $5,000 for expenses and once his mission is complete, Lysa Dean gave McGee an envelope with $10,000 cash. Lysa Dean provided Dana Holtzer to assist Travis McGee during his work. Although Travis is romantically involved, there isn't an indication that the interest extends beyond the book.

The character "Lysa Dean" makes an appearance in Free Fall in Crimson to help Travis solve another case.

The character "Meyer" is briefly mentioned in the book, but does not have any part in the story.

This is the first book that mentions Travis McGee's preference for gin. He drinks Plymouth Gin with bitters and in later books prefers Boodles Gin. Previous to this book, Travis McGee generally prefers a generic "Good Bourbon."

gollark: Well, yes, programming languages generally have syntax errors and stuff.
gollark: It's nicer to actually get "command not found, did you mean X/Y/Z" instead of "haha no I can't or won't do that for whatever reason".
gollark: I prefer less freeform interfaces; they have about the same restrictions, generally, but they're actually documented and obvious.
gollark: The voice input thing makes it seem like you can interact with the virtual assistant things like an actual human, except they'll just immediately fall over if you ask anything complex because NLP is hard.
gollark: As well as the privacy aspect, they often aren't actually that good.

References

  • Merril, Hugh (2000). The Red Hot Typewriter: The Life and Times of John D. MacDonald. Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin's Minotaur. ISBN 978-0-312-20905-6.
  • Geherin, David (1982). John D. MacDonald. F. Ungar Pub. Co. ISBN 978-0-8044-2232-1.

Notes

  1. "Books Today". The New York Times: 40. September 29, 1964.
  2. Criminals at Large By ANTHONY BOUCHER. New York Times 25 Oct 1964: BR52.
  3. The Quick Red Fox MacDonald, John D. Chicago Tribune 14 Apr 1974: f4.


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