By definition, there are always criminal characters in crime fiction books, and even the good guys sometimes have to take part in illegal or immoral acts. But books where the main character is a full-time professional criminal are surprisingly few and far between. Here’s a selection of some of the best anti-hero criminals we’ve come across…
The 24 books written between 1962 and 2010 featuring the professional thief known as Parker remain some of the best crime fiction ever written. Parker is a career criminal who steals things for a living. Get in his way on a job or try to double cross him afterwards and he’ll hurt you. Yet he’s not a psychopath in the vein of so many contemporary literary and film criminals. His only morals are what it takes to survive, no more, no less. He’s almost an anti-character, emotionless, with few social connections and hardly any past that Westlake ever let the reader know about.
Richard Stark was the pen name of Donald E Westlake and 16 Parker novels appeared between 1962 and 1974. Westlake took a rest from the character until 1997, then wrote another eight Parker books. The pre-1974 Parkers are the most hard-boiled, the character having mellowed somewhat in his post-1997 incarnation, but they are all solid, meticulously constructed tales, using multiple points of view – Parker’s and others. Westlake’s writing style is lean and disciplined and he’s a master of less is more. If you haven’t read him, start at the first book, The Hunter
Wyatt by Garry Disher
Wyatt is the creation of Australian crime writing veteran, Garry Disher. Like his American counterpart, Wyatt is an old school hold up man. The character is unusual for the Australia scene where police procedurals and literary crime fiction rule the roost. Seven Wyatt books have been published to date.
You can start at the beginning of the Wyatt series or jump straight to the most recent, simply entitled Wyatt
Chances are you’ve seen the 1973 movie The Friends of Eddie Coyle
Crime fiction does not come tougher than this and Higgins’s grasp of Boston’s criminal milieu and language is second to none.
Gloria Denton by Megan Abbott
Denton featured in Megan Abbott’s third book, Queenpin
Jack Carter by Ted Lewis
Another character better known for his cinematic appearance (Michael Caine in Get Carter) but whose print persona is worth checking out. Lewis wrote three books featuring the English gangster and standover man, Jack Carter. The first was Jack’s Return Home
Lewis has been called the English Mickey Spillane and the character of Carter is a violent, foul-mouthed, strong-arm man for the London mob. The dialogue is cracking, as is the period detail of the late 60s and early 70s criminal underworld in England. The books are only available second hand but are well worth tracking down.
McCoy only featured in one Thompson book, The Getaway
Crissa Stone by Wallace Stroby
Crissa Stone is the central character of Wallace Stroby’s 2011 book, Cold Shot to the Heart
Who are your favourite criminal heroes? Tell us below…