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Hardcover City of Lies Book

ISBN: 1590204654

ISBN13: 9781590204658

City of Lies

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

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Book Overview

Returning home to New York brings with it memories of childhood, many of them painful, and yet Harper could never have prepared himself for the truth. Confronted with the reality of his father's existence, Harper finds himself seduced by a lifestyle that he seems to have inherited--an underworld life of power, treachery, and menace. As he desperately tries to uncover the facts of his own past, he is faced with one lie after another, and with each...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

"a great read!"

after reading "a quiet belief in angels" i had to read every book written by rj ellory! this storyline is so captivating and the characters rich and complex. no one is better at building suspense and fascinating endings !

New York Gangsters In A New Light

From Candlemoth, R. J. Ellory's first novel, I have now read all but two. City of Lies is not my favorite, but that's only because he has two better books out- A Quiet Belief in Angels, and A Simple Act of Violence. Anyone picking up City of Lies as a stand-alone read will be mesmerized by the quality of Ellory's writing, his descriptiveness, his ability to place the reader into the action, and into the minds of his characters. And the characters themselves are deep and intriguing, masterfully drawn. How a British writer can make the reader believe that he knows the American scenes of his novels so well that you might believe that he has lived in that location his entire live escapes me. All the nuances of the locale are correct. Then, of course, there is the story itself. Ellory is a master story teller, one up there with Dennis Lehane and William Lee Burke. You will hold all of your crime novelists to higher standards after you finish a book by R.J. Ellory. City of Lies brings you a look at New York and its crime that matches or exceeds any that I have ever read.

66 Carmine

Before finishing Ellory's beautiful A QUIET BELIEF IN ANGELS I decided to buy everything else he has written, and CITY OF LIES is the first I found, although it is actually his fourth novel. I much prefer the author's original title '66 Carmine' as it evokes thoughts of a more appropriately noir-ish atmosphere than the rather bland title the publishers preferred and more accurately reflects one of the key elements of the story, which is to say this house is where it all began some three decades earlier and where it ultimately ends. It has to be said that the writing style is so completely different from AQBIA that the reader might wonder if they were both penned by the same man, but there is one thread that both novels have in common: the central character in each case will become a writer, in fact the key man here has already had a book published in years past which is often referred to in dialogue. That man is 36-year-old John Harper, who has lived an unassuming life in Miami unaware that the father he thought had died when he was a boy is in reality one of the most powerful financiers of organised crime in New York. It's only when the elderly boss-of-bosses is shot and critically injured that Harper is brought in to act on behalf of the father he never knew so as to bring about the big deal that is designed to hand over power and territory to another leading underworld kingpin. This is a riveting, powerful character-driven tale of life-long deception and power pursuits. Spread over just ten days or so the bulk of the story is built upon the lead up to a climax on a specific date, Christmas Eve, and much of the final 100 pages are dedicated to a minute-by-minute account of several simultaneous bank heists on that day. If this was to be turned into a film, I would suggest that Michael Mann would be the right man to direct it. Despite intense and intimate debate about what went on all those years ago and what will happen when everything comes to a head in a few days' time, I could not think what the outcome would be as it seemed, in its specific detail, to be utterly unpredictable. The confusion and distraction that Harper and others suffer is felt by the reader too, I for one feeling totally engrossed in the people, the history and the events, and sensing real tension and danger in the concluding stages. This is a crime thriller with genuine depth and breadth and one that on several occasions manages to move, excite and surprise the reader. The bank heists are pure theatre, vividly cinematic and thoroughly gripping. Once you're in, you won't want to put it down until the very end. Strongly recommended - RJ Ellory has to be one of Britain's best and yet still most promising literary talents.

Brilliant!

From the moment John Harper got the phone call summoning him back to New York and found out that his father, who he'd thought dead for the past 30 years was seriously ill in hospital following a shooting in a liquor store I was hooked. As the storyline develops John uncovers a massive web of lies and deceit starting with the Aunt who brought him up and told him his father was dead, Uncle Walt his fathers business partner in the criminal underworld, the 'eye candy' Cathy Hollander. Which one should he believe? Where does the seemingly obsessed Detective Frank Duchaunak fit in to it all? I enjoyed this one so much I didn't want to finish it. Anyone who's considering an RJ Ellory book and not sure which one, they're all great, but I'd recommend this one or 'A Quiet Vendetta'
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