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Hardcover White Shadow Book

ISBN: 0399153551

ISBN13: 9780399153556

White Shadow

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

"This book succeeds both as a first-rate historical novel and as a superb crime story. It packs the emotional wallop of Dennis Lehane's Mystic River . It is as gritty as James Ellroy's L.A.... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

Florida's Gang War's, soaked in blood and rum

As a history buff True crime has always had its place in my mind as one of the more important things that make up America and its history. Though a fictional account, White Shadow is a great read. Charlie Wall, lovingly dubbed by the press and law enforcement 'the dean of crime' for so many years ruled Tampa, he cornered everything worth controlling from smuggling rum from Cuba, gambling, prostitution and political connections since he was a kid and Tampa was used as a staging ground for the invasion of Cuba during the Spanish American war. Then the Italians came and wrest his empire from him. His death throws new players into the mix, from Santo Trafficante all the way to his hench man and second in command all out to get their hands on his fortune and even a young Fidel Castro looking for support in the U.S. Its an interesting story with twists and turns that leaves you battered and bloody in the back alley's of historical fiction.

White Shadow

Wonderful book. I was there during this era and this book is right on!

The Florida nobody knows!

WOW! Whattabook! It's hard to grab all of the adjectives needed to praise this novel. Just read it! This could be the best fictionalized non-fiction telling of more recent Florida History since `A Land Remembered' by Patrick Smith. It covers Tampa, Ybor City and Gibsonton history. Most of the figures in the story are real: Charlie Wall, Santo Trafficante, Hampton Dunn, George Raft, Fidel Castro, etc. Ace Atkins ties all of this together with a narrative that puts you at the scene in `54. It's a terrific book! Many folks do not know of Florida's rampant ongoing crimewave that goes back to the 1500s and that thief Desoto. Mob activity has been but a small part of it all. Atkins really brings it alive. There are no flamingos on the beach in this novel. Then again there are no flamingos on any beach in Florida. Here's an opportunity to visit the REAL Florida, circa 1954.

Any Ace Atkins book a cause for celebration

Atkins never disappoints; whether it's Nick Travers tracking down a killer or his latest, "White Shadow", a fictionalized history of the strange and savage death of Florida kingpin, Charlie Wall. Watkins command of texture and prose is exceptional and delightful. If you love the printed word arranged in beautiful weaved phrases you will love this book. Atkins loves the area and has an artist's passion for this work. Ace Atkins is a blossoming superstar. And, he's young so his best is yet to come. "White Shadow". Buy it, read it, let the prose wash over your mind. -- W. L. Ripley

A fantastic work of fiction

WHITE SHADOW is a very different work for Ace Atkins, who has garnered critical and popular acclaim with his Nick Travers novels, a very readable series featuring a protagonist who is by turns a music professor and a somewhat reluctant private eye. What we have here is a more serious, much darker worldview. It is a fictionalized account of the infamous and unsolved Charlie Wall murder, which occurred in Tampa, Florida in 1955. Wall, a one-time criminal kingpin specializing in the areas of bootlegging and illegal gambling, was found bludgeoned to death in his home, putting the city in an uproar and causing the ethically challenged police department to shift into overdrive to determine who was behind the deed. There was a surfeit of suspects, given that Wall had made a number of enemies, particularly among the Cuban and Sicilian gangsters who maintained a de facto control of the streets of Tampa while warily vying with and eying each other. The narrative of the crime and its subsequent investigation are presented from different points of view. The primary of these are L.B. Turner, a reporter for The Tampa Daily Times, and Ed Dodge, a tough city detective who clings to ethics and truth in a sea full of sharks. There are others, however, including a beautiful young woman with a quiet, smoldering passion for revenge, and criminals who have various reasons for rejoicing in Wall's death, even as they work at cross-purposes. For even as Wall's murder is investigated, it has repercussions that quietly but surely affected events on an international scale --- even to this day --- among people and within places that did not even know of Charlie Wall's flamboyant existence and brutal end. The foregoing elements, taken together, would be enough to make WHITE SHADOW a compelling read. Atkins, however, does much more here. The research that was involved in its writing is remarkable, as is its result, which is the literary recreation of a time and place removed from the present by a half-century. Atkins recreates the imagery and rhythm of Tampa in 1955 so unerringly that, at times while I was reading this work, the world outside of its pages looked foreign by comparison. Atkins's characterizations are all memorable and jolting; switching points of view continuously throughout the book, Atkins unerringly bestows each character with their own voice, so much so that one narrative smoothly follows another without the confusion that a lesser writer might otherwise impart on a reader. That said, the primary element of WHITE SHADOW that ultimately lifts it to the summit of fictional works is its imagery. Atkins evokes the spirit of such varied figures as E. L. Doctorow (without, thankfully, sacrificing imagery for clarity), Cormac McCarthy, Elmore Leonard and James Ellroy. Violence is sudden and sure; there are double-crosses from beginning to end; and there is romance, or what passes for it. A note on the latter: there are many types of love affairs that take plac

fine "reenactment" thriller

For years Charlie "White Shadow" Wall ran the Tampa, Florida mob. Now Charlie retired as he knows that being the kingpin is a young man's game with him finding it increasingly difficult to stay alive from the assorted rivals and employees who want to dethrone him. However, in April of that year, someone stabbed elderly Charlie killing him. Detective Ed Dodge and Tampa Tribune reporter Leland Hawes investigate the homicide that each assumes ties back to the White Shadow's mob days; could someone have feared that Charlie knew too much and with Kefauver making noise in DC was about to reveal secrets. Dodge and Hawes travel the city to include the infamous Latin Quarter of Ybor City, Sunset Park and more before heading to Havana as they follow clues that look promising but seem to go nowhere with the mob watching every step they take just in case. Though a fine mystery based on the real homicide of Wall in 1955 Tampa, WHITE SHADOW feels more like a historical tale with a whodunit subplot as the story line contains a who's who of 1950s Florida and Cuba. The investigation is terrific, but it is the tidbits from the era and the persona like Castro who brings what seems now like ancient history (the Dodgers are still in Brooklyn winning their only world series while located there while L.A. is not even a strategic objective). True crime fans, the historical mystery audience, and readers who appreciate a look back at the "Happy Days" of the Eisenhower era will appreciate Ace Atkins fine "reenactment" thriller. Harriet Klausner
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