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Hardcover Hard, Hard City Book

ISBN: 0399152172

ISBN13: 9780399152177

Hard, Hard City

(Book #4 in the Terry Orr Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

When a troubled, talented teenager goes missing, private investigator Terry Orr's search uncovers a hornet's nest of family secrets. In just three short years, Jim Fusilli has garnered the kind of... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Glad I Found This Author

This book is a pleasure to read. I have been disappointed a lot lately by mysteries but this one makes up for a couple of stinkers. The following is an off the wall example of the author's skill but indicative of what he can do. The PI main character lives in Manhatten and has a genius, precocious teen daughter. I could actually read the scenes involving her without visualizing my hands slowly closing the windpipe of the little know it all. He could make even her bareable. I loved the plot and the 3D characters. One problem, I wanted to buy the rest of the series but they aren't in print. I'll just have to wait until a new one comes out.

It's Dark, It's Got Suspense, It's Awfully Darn Good

Manhatten Private Eye Terry Orr is still dealing with the death of his wife and son, who have been gone for three years. He has a bright twelve-year-old daughter named Bella who he should be spending more time with and he feels guilty about not doing so. He's got a new relationship going with attorney Julie Giada and he has a problem with commitment, and he has his work. He is a complex man. One day his daughter's friend, a boy named Daniel Wu asks Terry to investigate the disappearance of Allie Powel, another teen. Terry agrees and before long he's run off the road, shot and and beaten to pulp. This, of course, does not deter him, on the contrary, he works even harder and, of course again, more violence ensues as he digs up some dirty secrets that have sent the boy into hiding. Secrets that could get both him and the boy killed. Mr. Fusilli has written, in my opinion, a tension filled, character driven book that is a worthy addition to his series. I don't see how anyone who reads mysteries or thrillers could possibly not love this book. I know I did. It's dark, it's got suspense, it's awfully darn good.

Fabulous Fusilli!

I usually like to read several books at once. But I HAD to read "Hard, Hard City" in one sitting. It is sensational. I beg anyone who has not read this author to order this book immediately. It's that good.

One of the best writers in the genre

It is hard to believe that HARD, HARD CITY is only the fourth of Jim Fusilli's entries in the mystery novel genre. Already well-known for his insightful reviews and essays concerning the music industry for the Wall Street Journal, Fusilli has carved a separate career out of whole cloth and has done it to the extent that it is easy to think of him first as the creator of Terry Orr: writer, erstwhile private investigator, single father of Bella, and widower of the late Marina. This latest novel continues Fusilli's examination of Orr's life, his struggles with and accommodations to post-911 Manhattan. HARD, HARD CITY finds Orr still reeling from the revelation --- possibly true, possibly not --- that his wife was involved with another man at the time of her death. Orr is not obsessed with, so much as shadowed by, the ghost of Marina and their infant son, David, who also died. There are days, however, when the memories and the uncertainty of what is true or untrue threaten to drown him. He accordingly welcomes a request from Bella's friend, Daniel Wu, to look for a missing friend. Allie Powell has been missing from school for weeks. He has been staying with John McPorter, a friend of the family, in New York City during the week while attending school and returning home to New Jersey on the weekends. McPorter is an odd but apparently harmless soul who assures Orr that Allie is a good boy; he doesn't connect Allie's disappearance with the simultaneous burglary of a few hundred dollars from his safe. Harlan Powell, Allie's father, is a high-rolling investor who has made a number of enemies in the financial world with his questionable business practices. Powell grudgingly retains Orr to locate his son, an act that suddenly becomes the catalyst for the commencement of a cycle of senseless violence. Fusilli has become a master at blindsiding his readers. He has few equals in this regard --- Ross Macdonald, possibly one or two others --- and his timing is so subtle, so exquisite, that one is compelled to turn the page while simultaneously being almost afraid to do so. Orr's domestic life balances nicely against the grimness of his cases, and Fusilli is wisely showing no inclination toward keeping Bella in pigtails and anklets forever; instead, he is letting her age in real-time between appearances in the novels. HARD, HARD CITY is appropriately named, a work that further ensconces Fusilli's name and work onto the short list of the best in the genre. If you haven't read him before, start now while his backlist remains manageable. You'll want to catch up. --- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub

dark urban noir

After years of mourning for his wife and their son who died in a train accident, private detective Terry Orr still struggles with the fact that his spouse was locked in a passionate embrace with another man while her son was on the rail tracks. She died trying to save their child's life. Terry cares for Julie, but is unable to tell or show her how much he needs her. His daughter Bella looks after him because she understands his pain and he will do anything for her. Bella asks her father to find Allie Powell, who has been missing for several days. Terry visits John McPorter, who shows the sleuth his open safe in which $471 and some envelopes were stolen leaving behind much more valuable items. Next Terry sees Allie's father Powell who believes the detective has the stolen items; his goons rough up Terry. He returns to John's house to find the man impaled on a fence and not long afterward the man's son is dead in a shoddy apartment building. Terry concludes that Powell seeks incriminating documents that John possessed and if he can prove this perhaps Allie can come out of hiding. Jim Fusilli provides a dark urban noir that paints the meanness of city streets. The protagonist prefers being shot at or beaten up as less painful than his thoughts and enables him to escape from his growing unwanted feelings for Julie. The story line is action-packed filled with colorful secondary characters, but it is the sinister Manhattan skyline that makes HARD, HARD CITY a tale that fans of James Patterson will want to read. Harriet Klausner
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