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6The ''87th Precinct'' series is a LongRunningBookSeries in the PoliceProcedural genre, written by Ed [=McBain=] (the crime-fiction writing pseudonym of Creator/EvanHunter). It features a revolving cast of police officers from the eponymous precinct, located in [[NoCommunitiesWereHarmed an unnamed city that isn't exactly New York]].
7
8The series began in 1956 and continued until 2005 with the novels progressing from short pocket novels of roughly 200 pages (often released two or three times a year) to the longer style of novel common today (released once every year or two). The series was atypical in a number of ways from most other mystery/police drama series in that cases were often solved through routine police work, mistakes made by the criminals, or the criminals were not apprehended at all. Also atypical was that the detectives were usually less personally invested in the case – they went home at night, let other detectives handle part of the foot work, and treated the cases as a matter of routine. Detectives who served as the primary protagonist in a previous novel in the series would often be a secondary character in the next and there was no set pattern as to which detectives were partners or not. Given the time-length of the series it also had its own version of ComicBookTime where the officers stayed roughly the same age throughout the series but still referenced [[ContinuityNod previous cases and major events]].
9
10There have been several screen adaptations, including the feature films ''Cop Hater'' (1958), ''The Mugger'' (1958), ''The Pusher'' (1960), ''Fuzz'' (1972), and ''Blood Relatives'' (1978); a short-lived weekly series, ''87th Precinct'' (1961–62); and three {{Made for TV Movie}}s, ''Lightning'' (1995), ''Ice'' (1996), and ''Heatwave'' (1997). Most famously, ''King's Ransom'' was adapted into the Japanese film ''Film/{{High and Low|1963}}'' (1963) by Creator/AkiraKurosawa. ''So Long As You Both Shall Live'' and ''Jigsaw'' were also adapted for ''Series/{{Columbo}}'' (as "[[Recap/ColumboS10E05 No Time to Die]]" and "[[Recap/ColumboS10E09 Undercover]]" respectively, with Arthur Brown joining Columbo in the latter).
11
12!!Installments:
13
14# Cop Hater (1956)
15# The Mugger (1956)
16# The Pusher (1956)
17# The Con Man (1957)
18# Killer's Choice (1957)
19# Killer's Payoff (1958)
20# Killer's Wedge (1958)
21# Lady Killer (1958)
22# 'til Death (1959)
23# King's Ransom (1959)
24# Give the Boys a Great Big Hand (1960)
25# The Heckler (1960)
26# See Them Die (1960)
27# Lady, Lady, I Did It! (1960)
28# The Empty Hours (1960)
29# Like Love (1962)
30# Ten Plus One (1963)
31# Ax (1963)
32# He Who Hesitates (1965)
33# Doll (1965)
34# Eighty Million Eyes (1966)
35# Fuzz (1968)
36# Shotgun (1968)
37# Jigsaw (1970)
38# Hail, Hail, the Gangs All Here (1971)
39# Sadie, When She Died (1972)
40# Lets Hear It for the Deaf Man (1961)
41# Hail to the Chief (1973)
42# Bread (1974)
43# Blood Relatives (1975)
44# So Long as You Both Shall Live (1976)
45# Long Time No See (1977)
46# Calypso (1979)
47# Ghosts (1980)
48# Heat (1981)
49# Ice (1983)
50# Lightning (1984)
51# Eight Black Horses (1985)
52# Poison (1987)
53# Tricks (1987)
54# Lullaby (1989)
55# Vespers (1989)
56# Widows (1991)
57# Kiss (1992)
58# Mischief (1993)
59# And All Through the House (1984)
60# Romance (1995)
61# Nocturne (1997)
62# The Big Bad City (1999)
63# The Last Dance (1999)
64# Money, Money, Money (2001)
65# Fat Ollie's Book (2002)
66# The Frumious Bandersnatch (2003)
67# Hark! (2004)
68# Fiddlers (2005)
69
70----
71!!This series provides examples of:
72* AbsenceOfEvidence: Items wiped clean attract suspicion in [[spoiler:''Axe'']] and [[spoiler:''Heat'']].
73* AccidentalKidnapping: ''King's Ransom'' has the son of a servant mistaken for the son of a rich man and abducted.
74* AdaptationDistillation: Both ''Columbo'' adaptations strip out almost all the social, racial and sexual commentary, as well as combining several detectives into one role that Lt. Columbo himself fills (although as mentioned above Arthur Brown does appear in the second one). They are essentially the same basic plot with a lot of changes to the finer details.
75* TheAdjectivalMan: The recurring villain the Deaf Man, a cold-bloodedly vicious criminal with a ComplexityAddiction who is [[VillainExitStageLeft usually beaten but never caught]]. He's sometimes been seen wearing a hearing aid, has described himself as "hard of hearing", and tends to use aliases alluding to deafness [[ThisIsMyNameOnForeign in different languages]], such as "L. Sordo" (el sordo) and "D.R. Taubman" (der taubman). He's certainly not completely deaf, but whether he actually is hard of hearing or even if ''that's'' simply an affectation is unknown.
76* AllBikersAreHellsAngels: Played straight and subverted in a subplot of ''Let's Hear it for the Deaf Man''. Two of the bikers in it are drug-using rapists who torture the rape victim's artist boyfriend, fatally crucify one of their own friends for trying to stop them and put up a fight when the police come to arrest them. On the flip side, said crucified friend is described as a NiceGuy who just liked traveling around on his bike and was interested in carrying around art to sell across the region.
77* ArchEnemy: The Deaf Man is this for the precinct and for Steve Carella in particular.
78* AssholeVictim:
79** The victims in ''Fiddlers'' become less sympathetic when you discover just what rotten people they were, and [[spoiler:what they did to Charlie to make him so deranged.]]
80** Michelle, the main victim in ''Romance'', is a whiny, spoiled diva who gets her boyfriend / agent to stab her for attention [[spoiler:and is later stabbed for real]].
81** Gregory Craig in ''Ghosts'' is one as well; he blamed his wife for his penultimate novel being slated by critics, dumped her for a younger woman who claims to be a psychic, and was killed by [[spoiler: the man whose story he basically stole for the basis of his final, hugely successful book. The author's lover later declares through her powers that he killed his wife - she drowned, but she was an excellent swimmer. It's never proven... but her powers ''are'' real.]]
82** The blackmailer in ''Killer's Payoff''.
83** Some of the victims of ''Ten Plus One'' were once involved in a rape, although many innocents are killed with them.
84* TheBadGuysAreCops: [[spoiler:Mike Ingersoll]] in ''Let's Hear It for the Deaf Man''.
85* BadassInDistress: [[spoiler:Carella]] is kidnapped, chained to a radiator and injected with heroin in ''Doll''.
86* BerserkButton: Emma is Brother Anthony's in ''Ice''. [[spoiler: And vice versa, as the novel's killer ultimately finds out when he murders Anthony...]]
87** Don't even think about insulting or mistreating Teddy Carella. Steve will tear you a new one.
88** As a father of a teenage daughter, Meyer absolutely hates paedophiles and has to be cautioned by Carella in ''Lullaby'' when dealing with [[spoiler: the father of the murdered baby, who was having an affair with the other murder victim - the 15 year old sitter.]]
89** And in ''Lady, Lady, I Did It!'', when Carella, Brown and Kling go to arrest the killer, [[spoiler: Kling loses all control and beats him half to death, because one of his victims was [[RecurringCharacter Kling's girlfriend Claire Townsend]].]]
90-->[[spoiler: ''Carella was already typing up the false report in his head, the one about how Manners (the killer) had resisted arrest.'']]
91** In ''Killer's Choice'', the normally patient Meyer loses it when the owner of the liquor stone Annie Stone was shot dead in is visibly more concerned about the four thousand dollars' worth of booze that was destroyed in the process.
92* BestServedCold: The main plot in ''Ten Plus One'' and ''Fiddlers''. [[spoiler:In the former, the killer is targeting people who were in a play with his wife at university, and who participated in an orgy-turned-gang rape during the aftershow which left her infertile. In the latter, the killer is targeting people who screwed him over in some way, from his own mother - who abandoned him and his brother - to a teacher who refused to give him an A and made fun of him.]]
93* BlackGalOnWhiteGuyDrama: Kling's relationship with Sharyn Cooke has some of this and partially falls apart because of said drama.
94* BlackmailBackfire:
95** In the BackStory of ''Ax'', an accountant found out one client was a tax cheat and tried to blackmail him. The client told his Italian-American boss, who attempted to ScareEmStraight by claiming to be mob-connected and saying he'd kill the accountant if he tried anything again. The accountant was scared, but still blackmailed another client. To avoid his boss's wrath, he enlisted an accomplice (the VictimOfTheWeek) to meet the blackmail victim and claim to have found the incriminating papers during a burglary. [[spoiler:This whole subplot is a RedHerring, as the blackmail victim died of natural causes years ago and the accountant isn't the killer either.]]
96** In ''Long Time No See'', [[spoiler:the blind and impoverished first victim is killed for trying to blackmail a war buddy over an UnfriendlyFire incident after crossing the DespairEventHorizon.]]
97* BrickJoke: Meyer's long, wonderfully orchestrated story about a cat thief in ''The Mugger''.
98* BrokenBird: Eileen Burke, so very much. [[spoiler: She becomes a cop after her father and uncle, both policemen, are murdered, and dreams of avenging her uncle's death. She is raped and slashed in one book and suffers PTSD as a result, and it gets worse after the events of ''Tricks'', when she shoots a man who was killing and mutilating prostitutes, after he tried to kill her.]]
99* BullyTurnedBuddy: As a kid Meyer had a bully named Patrick Cassidy (one of the many kids who called him "Meyer Meyer, Jew on Fire") who once literally tried to force Meyer to kiss his butt as a form of dominance after Meyer gave him an EmbarrassingNickname of his own. Meyer hoped to beat up Cassidy some day, only to find that the man was a cop when he looked him up again, with Cassidy actually being the one to encourage Meyer to join the police force as well.
100* BusmansHoliday: "Storm", from ''The Empty Hours'', has Cotton Hawes investigating a murder while on vacation at a [[SkiResortEpisode ski resort]].
101* ButtMonkey: The Deaf Man, surprisingly. On one hand he constantly gets a lot of people killed and avoids being arrested. On the other hand, he ''always'' ends up empty handed, continuously fails to prove himself smarter than the detectives of the 87th Precinct, and is repeatedly badly injured and/or forced to flee town with his tail between his legs. [[CatharsisFactor The guy is such a smug sadist whose plans often entail stunning collateral damage, that it's pretty satisfying to watch]].
102* CartwrightCurse: Bert Kling. The poor guy just can't catch a break. All of his girlfriends either end up dying, having too many issues to cope with a relationship, going off with another man, or just getting fed up with him and leaving.
103* CaughtOnTape: Crucial evidence in [[spoiler:''Doll'']] and [[spoiler:''Bread'']].
104* CelebrityParadox: A couple of books contain references to other works written by [=McBain=] under his real name of Creator/EvanHunter:
105** ''Axe'':
106-->"Who wrote ''Strangers When We Meet''?."
107** The opening line of ''The Blackboard Jungle'' is quoted in ''Killer's Payoff''.
108* TheChessmaster: The Deaf Man.
109* ChristmasEpisode: ''The Pusher'', ''Sadie When She Died'', ''Ghosts'', ''Eight Black Horses'', ''Money Money Money'', ''All Through the House''. (The latter of which is actually [[FormulaBreakingEpisode an illustrated short story]].)
110* ColdSnap: ''Fuzz'' takes place when the city is in the middle of a freeze of sorts.
111* ComicBookTime: The same cast of characters were used for the entire 49-year run of the series. This necessitated revisions over time, such as characters who originally had seen military service in World War II getting rewritten so that their service occurred during Korea, Vietnam, the Gulf War, etc.
112* ConMan: Several in the fourth book of the series.
113* ConfessToALesserCrime: A variant occurs in ''Long Time No See'' when someone [[spoiler:confesses a lesser crime, not to the authorities, but to a confidant who he's afraid will ''go'' to the authorities if he tells the real story. In the BackStory, the murder victim was an AccompliceByInaction to the UnfriendlyFire murder of his superior in UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar. Years later, he needs to bare his soul and talk to his therapist about what happened, but claims that it was a gang-rape he stood by and witnessed instead of a murder (rape has a statute of limitations and murder doesn't)]].
114* ContinuityNod: Later books in the series frequently reference events or characters from earlier ones.
115* CopKiller: In ''Cop Hater'', the first novel, a murderer kills three policemen; [[spoiler:as it turns out at the end, [[SerialKillingsSpecificTarget the third was the true target]], and he only killed the first two to mislead the police into thinking that he's a SerialKiller who targets cops.]]
116* CreatorCameo: A drunk sailor in ''The Mugger'' says his ship is "U S S Huntuh".
117* CriminalMindGames: Most noticeable with the Deaf Man who increasingly targeted his plans or modified them to specifically antagonize the 87th Precinct detectives, even to the point of causing his own plans to fail.
118* CrossOver: [=McBain=]'s final Matthew Hope novel, ''The Last Best Hope'', has that character teaming with Steve Carella on a case.
119* CutleryEscapeAid: In ''So Long as You Both Shall Live'', a kidnapped woman uses the vinegar and oil left with her salad to remove the rust and lubricate the door hinges of the room where she is being held. She then uses the fork to scrape away the rust and pop the pins out of the hinges to escape the room.
120* CynicismCatalyst: Roger Havilland was a "gentle" cop until he tried to intervene when a street punk was being beaten up and both the victim ''and'' assailants turned on him, putting him in the hospital. He came out a sour man prone to hitting people.
121* DatingCatwoman: In ''Tricks'', Parker has a spark with another Halloween party guest before realizing she's with a group of thieves and killers his colleagues are after (in fact, she's the one who's done all of the killing) and arresting her with some regret.
122%%* ADayInTheLimelight: ''Fat Ollie's Book''.
123%%* DeadPersonImpersonation: In [[spoiler:''Shotgun'']] and [[spoiler: ''Tricks'']].
124%%* DeadpanSnarker: Meyer, often.
125* DeathFakedForYou: [[spoiler: Carella's, in ''Doll''. He's found and rescued just before his kidnappers are about to make it very real.]]
126%%* ADeathInTheLimelight: [[spoiler:Frankie Hernandez]] in ''See Them Die''.
127* DetectivePatsy: Happens to inexperienced patrolman Bert Kling in ''The Mugger''. Bert gets a promotion to Detective after that.
128* DirtyCop: Roger Havilland. While never portrayed as an antagonist (just TheFriendNobodyLikes) he beats up suspects on occasion and after his death it's confirmed that he was taking bribes to protect a gambling ring.
129* DisproportionateRetribution:
130** [[spoiler:George Lasser in ''Axe'' is killed for "poaching" customers in a business that amounted to maybe ten dollars a week:]]
131-->[[spoiler:"He did it for the lousy two-bit wood business."]]
132** One short story has a Rabbi murdered by [[spoiler: An ultra conservative colleague upset that he - reluctantly and only due to the workers busy schedule - was willing to hire a workman to renovate the Synagogue on the Sabbath]].
133** In ''Lady, Lady I Did It!'', [[spoiler:The killer is a garage employee who gunned down a customer - and three innocent bystanders - out of simple anger that the man didn't like the color he'd repainted the car and made him do it over again. Not helping the matter was that the main victim was Jewish and the killer was an antisemite]].
134* DistractedByTheSexy:
135** The officers on duty in ''Ten Plus One'' when a hot blonde actress – and potential victim of the book's villain, a sniper – arrives at the station. [[spoiler: She does not get killed, by the way.]]
136** In ''Tricks'', the principal of a high school where Sebastian the Great and his sexy assistant Marie are performing sees most of the male students can't keep their eyes off her, and while he's supposed to be watching the students "he himself was having a little difficulty (taking ''his'' eyes off her), to the extent that when Marie takes her leave the principal thinks "Shit." [[spoiler: Then again, how was he to know she's part of a murder plot involving Sebastian and his male protege?]]
137* DyingClue: In ''Lady, Lady, I Did It!'', one of the victims manages to gasp the word "carpenter" before dying. Investigation by the 87th Precinct fails to turn up a suspect who is named Carpenter or who works with wood. It turns out [[spoiler:the victim was actually saying "car painter" (i.e. the man who had recently painted his car) but his thick accent turned it into "carpenter"]].
138** The Swedish procedural, ''The Laughing Policeman'', about a mass shooting on a Stockholm bus, with a member of the Violence Squad among the victims, turns on exactly the same sort of obscure dying utterance [[spoiler:which the cops misunderstand because he has an American accent]].
139* EstablishingCharacterMoment: The Deaf Man at his introduction in ''The Heckler'' wins a poker match by calculating hand probabilities.
140* EurekaMoment: Cotton Hawes often has well-timed bursts of realisation.
141* EverybodyDidIt: [[spoiler: ''Killer's Payoff'']] comes to a climax with Hawes setting a BluffingTheMurderer trap for three suspects to see which one shows up. All three do.
142* EverybodyLives: In [[spoiler:''King's Ransom'']] and [[spoiler:''So Long as You Both Shall Live'']], both the victims and the perpetrators of the featured crimes survive.
143%%* EveryoneIsASuspect: ''Killer's Choice''.
144* ExtremelyShortTimespan: Some books take place over the course of a single day.
145* FairCop: Bert Kling, Eileen Burke, Annie Rawles.
146** Sharyn Cooke is both this and a HospitalHottie, being Deputy Chief Surgeon for the department.
147* FairPlayWhodunnit: ''Like Love'', although the main clue [[UnintentionalPeriodPiece can be confusing for the modern reader]].
148* FakingTheDead: [[spoiler: Andrew Leyden in ''Shotgun''.]]
149* FatBastard: 88th Precinct detective Fat Ollie Weeks, and police informant Fats Donner. The former is a bigot, the latter a pedophile.
150* FatalMethodActing: In-universe in ''Eighty Million Eyes'', where a famous comedian is murdered on live television in front of forty million witnesses.
151%%* FieryRedhead: Eileen Burke.
152* ForWantOfANail: In ''The Heckler'', the Deaf Man and his accomplices make off in an ice cream van. [[spoiler:But it has no ice cream and, while awaiting the ferry, a police patrolman asks for an ice cream...]]
153* GangBangers: ''Hail to the Chief'' has the detectives investigating the fallout between a turf war (partially motivated by race) between three separate gangs.
154* GirlsBehindBars: Part of Marilyn's backstory in ''Poison'', being imprisoned in Mexico and subjected to various abuses.
155* GoodGirlsAvoidAbortion:
156** [[spoiler:Jeannie Page]] is killed for this reason in ''The Mugger''.
157** Invoked and subverted in ''Lightning''. [[spoiler:A SerialRapist targets devoutly pro-life Catholic women and keeps re-attacking them in a deliberate effort to [[ChildByRape get them pregnant]] and force them to change their minds about abortion]].
158** ''Lady, Lady, I Did It!'' has a subplot about a teenaged girl who was [[ChildByRape impregnated by a rapist]] and then died from the effects of an illegal abortion.
159* HalloweenEpisode: ''Tricks''. There's even a group of [[spoiler:circus midgets]] who yell "Trick or treat!" before shooting people.
160* HappilyMarried: Steve and Teddy Carella, and Meyer and Sarah Meyer both have stable relationships throughout the series with both mutual trust and the ability to have fun together.
161* HauntedHouse: ''Ghosts''. [[spoiler: And as Carella finds out first hand, it's for real.]]
162* HeatWave: ''Cop Hater'', ''Bread'', and ''Heat'' all take place in hotter than usual periods of time.
163* HelloAttorney: Prosecutor Nellie Brand is often introduced being called over to the precinct after having just been dressing up nice for a dinner date or something.
164%%* HollywoodSatanism: ''Vespers''
165%%* HowUnscientific: ''Ghosts''
166* INeverSaidItWasPoison: Frequent mistake of suspects being questioned is saying more than they claim to know about.
167* IRememberBecause: In ''Ghosts'', a bartender remembers a suspect was drinking at the bar during the murder because, right around that time, another customer did a drunken striptease and the suspect gave the bartender a $5 tip and made a joke about the floor show.
168* IdentifyingTheBody:
169** In ''Tricks'', a stage magician's decapitated body is found and his wife identifies him by some scars on the body. [[spoiler: They actually had faked his death and the body is that of his assistant.]]
170** [[spoiler: A victim's mother did so in ''Shotgun'', with a similar outcome.]]
171* ImmediateSequel: ''Eight Black Horses'' picks up straight after where ''Lightning'' [[SequelHook left off]].
172* InfoDump: Usually at the end, in the form of a transcript of the culprit's confession explaining various details that have been puzzling the detectives.
173* InsistsOnPaying: Steve Carella (and, by extension, every honest cop).
174* InterruptedSuicide: One was unsuccessfully interrupted in [[spoiler:''Like Love''.]]
175* ItsPersonal:
176** '''Til Death'', in which the wedding day of Carella's sister is marred by someone targeting her husband-to-be.
177** ''So Long as You Both Shall Live'', in which Bert Kling's wife Augusta is kidnapped after the actual wedding [[spoiler: by a StalkerWithACrush who wants to have sex with her and then kill her. [[DrivenToSuicide And then himself]].]]
178* JerkAss: Roger Havilland and Andy Parker are rude, insensitive men who drag down the people around them.
179* JustGotOutOfJail: Subplot of ''Heat'', where a recently released prison inmate is out for revenge on the man who arrested him - Bert Kling.
180* KarmaHoudini:
181** The murderer who is the protagonist of [[spoiler: ''He Who Hesitates'']].
182*** KarmaHoudiniWarranty [[spoiler: Said murderer ends up confessing in ''Shotgun'' and does get charged and presumably convicted. Karma caught up to him.]]
183** And the Deaf Man, who remains at large at the end of ''Hark!'', the final book in which he appears.
184** Several of the Deaf Man's accomplices also get away clean, including a man who helps him blow up several cop cars as a diversion and two of the people who helped him start a violent race riot at a concert meant to promote inclusiveness.
185** Emma from ''Ice'' is a remorseless career criminal multiple-murderer who just doesn't happen to be ''the'' murderer of the book and gets off scot free at the end.
186** Detectives Brock and Mastersen in ''Ten Plus One'', who beat and railroad an innocent man into prison out of pure meanness and get away with it due to the 87th Precincit detectives never finding out.
187* KilledOffForReal: [[spoiler: Roger Havilland in ''Killer's Choice'', Frankie Hernandez in ''See Them Die'', Claire Townsend in ''Lady, Lady, I Did It!'']].
188* KissingCousins: In ''Blood Relatives'', a man is suspected of murdering his cousin, to whom he is engaged.[[spoiler: The culprit turns out to be [[IncestantAdmirer the man's sister]].]]
189* LockedIntoStrangeness: Detective Cotton Hawes has a white streak in his otherwise red hair as a result of his hair growing back over a knife scar.
190* LockedRoomMystery: A fairly realistic version in ''Killer's Wedge''.
191* {{Locking MacGyver in the Store Cupboard}}
192* LoveLetter: A series of erotic ones left behind by a murder victim in ''Widows''.
193* LowerDeckEpisode: ''Hail, Hail the Gang's All Here'' gives brief spotlights to some of the precinct's least seen detectives.
194* MeaningfulName: Usually averted, but played straight with Don King from ''King's Ransom''.
195* NeverSuicide: ''Shotgun'', although the detectives see through it straight away.
196%%* NewYearHasCome: ''Lullaby''
197* NobleBigotWithABadge: Fat Ollie Weeks throws around racist slurs or stereotypes multiple times per conversation, but the man is a very good detective, ultimately honest and never hesitates to investigate the murder of a minority. The "bigot" part is gradually (although not fully) eroded in the last few books as he starts dating a Hispanic detective.
198* NoCommunitiesWereHarmed: The novels are set in "Isola", a district of an [[CityWithNoName unnamed, fictional city]] in an unnamed state which, as mentioned above, closely resembles New York [[TheBigRottenApple at its scuzziest]]. Isola includes many features of Manhattan, and the other districts mentioned are clear expies for New York City's other four boroughs.
199** More specifically, according to [[Website/{{Wikipedia}} The Other Wiki]], [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isola_(fictional_city) "Calm's Point" is Brooklyn, "Majesta" is Queens, "Riverhead" is the Bronx, and "Bethtown" Staten Island]]. Then there's the Harb (Hudson) and Dix (East) Rivers, and the similarly unnamed "next state" (New Jersey). George M. Dove's unofficial 1985 companion to the series, ''The Boys from Grover Avenue'', analyzes the geography of [=McBain=]'s "Imaginary City" and describes it as NYC shifted to the side, so that north becomes east, east south, etc.
200** Oddly enough, [[ExpyCoexistence New York itself is occasionally mentioned in the books]]. Apparently [=McBain=]'s universe has two huge and virtually-interchangeable metropolises co-existing very close to one another on the East Coast of the United States.
201** The film adaptations of ''Cop Hater'' (1958) and ''The Pusher'' (1960) are explicitly set in NYC. Meanwhile, the film of ''Fuzz'' (1972) is set in Boston for some reason, and the film of ''Blood Relatives'' (1978), being a French-Canadian co-production, is set in ''Montreal''!
202* NoKillLikeOverkill: [[spoiler:Pepe Miranda]]'s death in ''See Them Die''. First, he is shot repeatedly by the ''army'' of cops. Then Andy Parker empties his gun into him. And then, Parker grabs another gun and shoots [[spoiler:Miranda]] in the head. Twice.
203* NonProtagonistResolver: Sometimes people other than the main cast catch the villains while having little idea of what's going on.
204** In ''[[spoiler:The Heckler]]'', an unnamed beat cop foils the villains' getaway by approaching a fake ice cream truck to make an order, then noticing a discrepancy in the crooks' story and making inquiries that cause them to try and shoot their way out, only for him to wound both men and capture one of them.
205** In ''[[spoiler:Ghosts]]'', right after a scene that discusses how Carella and Hawes both see themselves as the hero and the other man as the {{Sidekick}}, the killer is arrested by a beat cop who mistakenly thinks the killer just robbed a pawnshop (really, he's fleeing the pawnshop because the owner realized he was trying to sell stolen property). Said beat cop gets promoted to protagonist as a result of the case, being promoted to detective and working with the leads in a few of the remaining books, but he's never seen or mentioned before arresting the killer.
206* NonSequitur: Meyer often blurts his (unrelated to the topic at hand) thoughts out loud, confusing the others.
207* NotSoHarmlessVillain: Some of the most mild and harmless-seeming people turn out to be killers, such as [[spoiler:Timothy Moore, the victim's medical student boyfriend in ''Ice''.]]
208* NumberOfObjectsTitle: ''Eight Black Horses''.
209* ObfuscatingDisability:
210** While the Deaf Man wears a hearing aid, it's suggested on various occasions (including by the Deaf Man himself, in ''The Heckler'') that it may just be a prop.
211** [[spoiler: Elmer Wollender]] in "Storm", from ''The Empty Hours''.
212* OddballInTheSeries: ''He Who Hesitates'' is the only novel in the series told from the [[MurdererPOV villain's POV]].
213* OnceDoneNeverForgotten: Just about any time Carella thinks about Assistant District Attorney Henry Lowell he remembers that he's the guy who failed to convict the murderer of [[spoiler:Carella's father]], usually admitting to himself that the man tried hard and it isn't fair to hold it against him, but he still does.
214* OnceMoreWithClarity: Taped evidence in [[spoiler:''Bread'']], misunderstood at first.
215* OneLetterTitle: "J" in ''The Empty Hours''.
216* OneWordTitle: Many of the books, particularly in the '80s and '90s.
217* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: The Deaf Man.
218* ParanormalEpisode: ''Ghosts'' is the only novel to feature supernatural, and with Det. Steve Carella seemingly being saved by a ghost.
219* PluckyComicRelief: Richard Genero is one of the least lucky and insightful of the detectives and moments where he shows up are rarely serious ones.
220* PointyHairedBoss: Captain Frick. The best thing that could be said about his leadership is that he realizes his own incompetence and most of the time just doesn't do anything.
221%%* PoliticallyIncorrectHero: Fat Ollie Weeks.
222* PunBasedTitle: ''Let's Hear It for the Deaf Man'', ''Give the Boys a Great Big Hand''
223%%* RabidCop: Masterson and Brock in ''Ten Plus One''.
224%%* RapeAsDrama: Eileen Burke. In ''Lullaby'', she goes into therapy after the events of ''Tricks'' (see BrokenBird above).
225%%* RecoveredAddict: [[spoiler: Larry Byrnes]] in ''The Pusher''.
226%%* RecurringCharacter
227* RepetitiveName: Meyer Meyer.
228* ReportsOfMyDeathWereGreatlyExaggerated: [[spoiler:Carella]] reads his own obituary in ''Doll''.
229* ScaryBlackMan: Arthur Brown, and he's more than happy to play on white people's prejudices (see ''Jigsaw'' for an excellent example). Unfortunately, some white suspects have a tendency to talk to the white cop who's interviewing them (usually Kling) and ignore Brown completely.
230** Mostly subverted in the ''Series/{{Columbo}}'' film "Undercover".
231* SecondEpisodeIntroduction: Monaghan and Monroe debut in ''The Mugger'', the second book of the series.
232* SecretDiary: There's one belonging to the victim in ''Blood Relatives''.
233* SelfDeprecation: Both Meyer Meyer and The Deaf Man admit to hating Creator/AlfredHitchcock's ''The Birds'', the screenplay for which was written by... Evan Hunter.
234* SerialKillingsSpecificTarget: [[spoiler:''Cop Hater'']], [[spoiler:''Long Time, No See'']] and [[spoiler:''Mischief'']].
235* SerialRapist: ''Lightning'' involves one who keeps re-attacking the same women.
236* SpeechImpededLoveInterest: The protagonist's wife Theodora "Teddy" Carella is unable to speak due to her deafness.
237* TheSpook: The Deaf Man, a diabolical [[Franchise/SherlockHolmes Moriarty-esque]] criminal genius. His real name and biography are never revealed, and even his deafness may be an affectation.
238* StalkerWithACrush: Kling must protect Cindy Forrest from one in ''Eighty Million Eyes''.
239* TheStoolPigeon: Danny Gimp is a useful informant whose sole profession is lingering on the edges of crime picking up things to sell to the cops.
240** Fats Donner is also one of these.
241* SuspectIsHatless:
242** In ''Lady, Lady I Did It'', a gunman opens fire in a crowded bookstore; killing several people. Despite there being multiple eyewitnesses, the police are unable to get an accurate description as most of them were focused on the gun. And, even then, the description of the gun varies greatly from person to person. It turns out, [[spoiler:the gunman was using two quite different guns; one in each hand]].
243** Lampshaded in ''Blood Relatives'' when a victim fails to pick a suspect out of a lineup. The narrative then describes how at some time during their training, police officers have to describe someone who entered their classroom during a lecture (results of which are, to say the least, varying).
244* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: Andy Parker for Roger Havilland. After Havilland's death, Parker fills the role of a large, brutal, racist jerkass cop. Even his backstory is similar to Havilland's.
245* SympatheticMurderer: Several, for example [[spoiler: Charles Tudor ]] from ''Give the Boys a Great Big Hand''. Both Carella and Meyer feels sympathy for him for being such a LoveMartyr.
246* ThemedAliases: The Deaf Man always uses aliases that are some sort of play on words on 'deaf' in a variety of languages.
247* ThisIsAWorkOfFiction
248-->"The city in these pages is imaginary. The people, the places are all fictitious. Only the police routine is based on established investigatory technique."
249* ThisIsMyNameOnForeign: The Deaf Man's aliases are always some kind of play on 'deaf' in a foreign language: sometimes literally translating as 'The Deaf Man'.
250* ThoseTwoGuys: The buffoonish and arrogant homicide detectives Monoghan and Monroe.
251* TomboyishName: Though Mrs. Carella's given name is Theodora, everyone calls her "Teddy".
252* TreasureMap: In ''Jigsaw'' a gang of thieves made a map of where they were going to hide their loot, then tore up the pieces (two for each gang member) and entrusted them to various friends and relatives. The gang all died in a shootout with the police and the novel follows the detectives and various criminals trying to get the pieces of the treasure map to recreate it and find the loot.
253* TrojanAmbulance: In ''So Long As You Both Shall Live'', Augusta Kling is abducted on her wedding night by her StalkerWithACrush, who is a paramedic and drives her away in an ambulance.
254%%* TwoLinesNoWaiting: Frequently.
255* UnintentionallyNotoriousCrime: In ''Lady, Lady, I Did It'', a shooter opens fire in a store and guns down four people. One of them happens to be Detective Bert Kling's fiancee, thereby guaranteeing that the crime has the attention of every cop in the city.
256%%* ValentinesDayEpisodes: ''Ice''
257* VillainEpisode: [[spoiler: ''He Who Hesitates'']] is told entirely from the killer's point of view.
258* WeddingEpisode: Crime still plagues the squad in '' 'til Death'' and ''So Long As You Both Shall Live''.
259* TheWorldsExpertOnGettingKilled: In ''Tricks'', a liquor store owner whom the squad warns about a group of murderous thieves brags about how he's gunned down many such robbers in the past. A few pages later, the current gang of robbers kill him before he can get a shot off.
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