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In the early 1960s, uncertainty and menace gripped New York, crystallizing in a poisonous divide between a deeply corrupt, cynical, and racist police force, and an African American community buffeted by economic
distress, brutality, and narcotics. On August 28, 1963—the day Martin Luther King Jr. declared "I have a dream" on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial—two young white women were murdered in their Manhattan apartment. Dubbed the Career Girls Murders case, the crime sent ripples of fear throughout the city, as police scrambled fruitlessly for months to find the killer. But it also marked the start of a ten-year saga of fear, racial violence, and turmoil in the city—an era that took in events from the Harlem Riots of the mid-1960s to the Panther Twenty-One trials and Knapp Commission police corruption hearings of the early 1970s.
The Savage City explores this pivotal and traumatic decade through the stories of three very different...<
In Searches & Seizures, Elkin tells the story of the
criminal, the lovelorn, and the grieving, each searching desperately for
fulfillment—while on the verge of receiving much more than they
bargained for. Infused with Elkin’s signature wit and richly drawn
characters, “The Bailbondsman,” “The Making of Ashenden,” and “The
Condominium” are the creations of a literary virtuoso at the pinnacle of
his craft.
This ebook features rare photos and
never-before-seen documents from the author’s estate and from the
Stanley Elkin archives at Washington University in St. Louis.
Review
For Elkin, the sentence is more than instrumental to the end, and its
loving elaboration of perceptions, surprising and just, is the key to
his work, putting him among not only the best of novelists, but only the
best of writers. --Howard Nemerov
The searches of Elkin's latest
book are philosophical, but the seizures are almost epileptic. In three
novellas, through three very different alienated characters, Elkin
traces a search for an Other, whether it be a criminal prey, a beloved,
or the dead. In each case the search is ended through a seizure, a
paroxysm of hate, lust or despair. Elkin's strength as a writer lies in
his arch, tricky, pyrotechnical style, and his ability to fuse horror
and humor in each "seizure." He has given us three good novellas in this
book, worthy of inclusion in any college or university fiction
collection. --Choice
Wrenchingly funny and oddly moving. This
collection of three new novellas should provide the uninitiated with an
ideal introduction to Elkin's art even as it confirms addicts like me in
our belief that no American novelist tells us more about where we are
and what we are doing to ourselves. This is a remarkably various talent,
and the stories in Search & Seizures nicely illustrate its range
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SUMMARY:
The smash hit No. 1 bestselling author takes you on the ride of your life in the seventh Stephanie Plum adventure. Stephanie thinks she's going after an easy FTA: a senior citizen charged with smuggling contraband cigarettes. But when she and Lula show up at his house, they get more than they bargained for a corpse in the woodshed and an old man on the lam. Stephanie's mind is on other matters, however, because she has two proposals to consider: vice cop Joe Morelli is proposing marriage, and fellow bounty hunter Ranger is proposing a single perfect night...<
Calla Savitch, owner of Shear Bliss salon, has to deal with warring panthers and werewolves with overlapping appointments, she's fed up with their constant matchmaking attempts. The last thing she wants especially is a hook-up with the shifter who broke her heart. Will she send Caleb Houlihan packing when he returns for a second chance?<
When John Mercy-of-Christ's soldiers ran up against weapons like none they had ever seen before, John's campaign to defeat the enemies of The True Word and Flesh came to a sudden halt. Once guns that could only come from Old Earth arrived, the doctrinal differences between his sect and the Chosen of the Holy Ghost had to be put to one side-for what other abominations might be in store? If the starships of Earth were to battle the swords of Godsworld, John was ready for that war. But what he wasn't ready for was just how much the new war was going to change him.<
Es un pueblo perdido en el campo. Es una casa de piedra sólida junto a un río profundo, un camino nevado y una cantera agreste. Es un tejedor que vive en una casa de piedra de un pueblo perdido en el campo de la Inglaterra moralista, religiosa y conservadora que se dio a llamar victoriana. Despreciado por su aldea, desgraciado en el amor, traicionado por el mejor amigo del mundo que conspiró para arrebatarle a su amada, Silas Marner, llega a Raveloe a vivir en la misantropía y la soledad más absolutas sin saber que la vida y el azar pocas veces son lo que los hombres eligen para sí mismos. Una nueva oportunidad de amar transformará la avaricia del tejedor estoico en dádiva cuando una mujer vaya a morir con una criatura en los brazos a la entrada de su casa. Entonces no sólo se transformará la vida del tejedor, sino todas las historias parroquiales, sencillas y anónimas que se mezclarán entorno al más extraño personaje que se haya conocido en Raveloe: los poderosos terrateneientes, los pobres peones, los religiosos y los puritanos. Todos ayudarán a Silas Marner en la crianza de aquella niña que esconde tras de sí la sombra de una traición y una vileza. Narrada con la precisión descriptiva de George Eliot, Silas Marner constituye un retablo donde se mueven tipos humanos de diversa rusticidad aldeana. Mary Ann Evans, que firmaba sus libros como George Eliot para que estos fueran juzgados por la sociedad de su tiempo en virtud de sus méritos estéticos y no con el prejuicio victoriano de que eran sospechosos por haber sido escritos por una mujer, la misma escritora admirada por Prouts y Virginia Woolf, recrea una inglaterra rural, pintada con piceladas de precisión en los ámbitos del corazón humano en esta historia, considerada por la crítica como una VERDADERA OBRA MAESTRA.<
Review
“SIREN is a richly lyrical and melancholic meditation on loss and desperate yearning. It is also a superbly effective exercise in soul-ripping terror. Modern horror doesn't get much better than this.” - Bryan Smith, author of Depraved and The Killing Kind
“John Everson hits one out of the park and into deep water! SIREN is as wicked a tale of intense sexual obsession as any you're likely to read, and it'll definitely make you afraid -- very afraid -- of the water. If you weren't before, you will be after venturing into its pages. You won't be able to stop reading ... but beware - this sexy Siren has teeth, and she knows how to use 'em!” - W.D. Gagliani, Author of Wolf's Gambit
“With SIREN, John Everson brings horror fiction back to its roots: scary, sexy and surprising. His best work yet!” - Jonathan Maberry, multiple Bram Stoker Award-winning author of The Wolfman and The Dragon Factory
About the Author
John Everson’s short stories have appeared in 22 small press anthologies, 55 have appeared in magazines, and three collections of his short fiction have been published by small presses. He was a 2007 Bram Stoker Award Finalist for Best Short Fiction and won the a 2004 Bram Stoker Award- Best First Novel for Covenant. This was Everson’s fourth novel with Dorchester.
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EDITORIAL REVIEW:
Trenton, New Jersey, bounty hunter Stephanie Plum has inherited a lucky” bottle from her Uncle Pip. Problem is, Uncle Pip didn’t specify if the bottle brought good luck or bad luck. . . .
BAD LUCK:
Vinnie, of Vincent Plum Bail Bonds, has run up a gambling debt of $786,000 with mobster Bobby Sunflower and is being held until the cash can be produced. Nobody else will pay to get Vinnie back, leaving it up to Stephanie, office manager Connie, and file clerk Lula to raise the money if they want to save their jobs.
GOOD LUCK:
Being in the business of tracking down people, Stephanie, Lula, and Connie have an advantage in finding Vinnie. If they can rescue him, it will buy them some time to raise the cash.
BAD LUCK:
Finding a safe place to hide Vinnie turns out to be harder than raising $786,000. Vinnie’s messing up Mooner’s vibe, running up pay-per-view porn charges in Ranger’s apartment, and making Stephanie question genetics.
GOOD LUCK:
Between a bonds office yard sale that has the entire Burg turning out, Mooner’s Hobbit-Con charity event, and Uncle Pip’s lucky bottle, they just might raise enough money to save the business, and Vinnie, from ruin.
BAD LUCK:
Saving Vincent Plum Bail Bonds means Stephanie can keep being a bounty hunter. In Trenton, this involves hunting down a man wanted for polygamy, a turnpike toilet paper bandit, and a drug dealer with a pet alligator named Mr. Jingles.
GOOD LUCK:
The job of bounty hunter comes with perks in the guise of Trenton’s hottest cop, Joe Morelli, and the dark and dangerous security expert, Ranger. With any luck at all, Uncle Pip’s lucky bottle will have Stephanie getting lucky---the only question is . . . with whom?*
*Sizzling Sixteen* . . . so hot, the pages might spontaneously combust!*<
Amazon.com Review
Forensic anthropologist Gideon Oliver and his wife Julie have planned a relaxing four-week European jaunt that will allow Gideon to collect material for his upcoming book. But when a local dog digs up some very tasty--and very modern--human bones at a prehistoric site in the French Dordogne, Gideon gets a call for deductive assistance from old friend Inspector Lucien Joly. It appears that the bones are connected to the Institut de Préhistoire, epicenter of the academic debate on the proper place of Neanderthals in the progression of human evolution.
Years ago, the Institut's director, Ely Carpenter, found startling archaeological evidence that Neanderthal Man was a sensitive being with an appreciation of beauty and art: when that evidence was exposed as a fraud, Carpenter committed suicide. Or did he? These days, the remaining members of the Institut are still at dagger's (or perhaps Middle Paleolithic Acheulian cordiform hand ax's) edge. Half of them argue for the Neanderthals as card-carrying Homo sapiens, and the other half want to fling them from the family tree altogether. The academic debate is vicious, indeed--but when more bodies start to appear, Gideon must dig deep into layers of personal animosity and professional rivalry to determine which of his anthropological colleagues has more than a monograph at stake.
Aaron Elkins is the author of a number of Gideon Oliver mysteries, including the Edgar Award-winning Old Bones. It is a tribute to his skill that the dusty fragments of bone at the heart of this latest outing will capture his readers' interest, and that the ramifications of a scientific dispute seem the perfect motive for murder. Skeleton Dance carries as well all the touches that have made his previous novels successful: a genial protagonist who wavers between sharp-eyed precision and absent-minded obliviousness; an assortment of well-drawn minor characters (though their foibles may be sketched a bit too broadly, as Elkins stretches for a touch of humor); and a cozy evocation of local atmosphere. If the music of Skeleton Dance is a tune we've heard before, and the steps are a trifle well-worn, it doesn't really matter; Elkins is such a skilled partner that we'll find ourselves tapping our feet and turning the pages in easy rhythm. --Kelly Flynn
From Publishers Weekly
Academic infighting, at once comically petty and deadly serious, is the subject of Elkins's terrific follow-up to Old Bones, winner of the 1988 Edgar Award for best novel. This time, celebrated Seattle "skeleton detective" Gideon Oliver travels to the quaint French village of Les Eyzies to aid police in the identification of some human bones. At first, the bones were thought to be prehistoric fossils, common enough in a town famous for its Paleolithic caves and the world-class Institut de Pr?histoire. But closer examination reveals the deceased to have been murdered sometime within the past five years, possibly by someone linked to the institute. Gideon, now on sabbatical leave from his professorship to write a book on scientific bloopers, begins interviewing the institute's five French and American members about a notorious archeological hoax perpetrated by the former director, elusive American Ely Carpenter. The more Gideon learns about the hoax, the more he's convinced of a connection to the unidentified bones. When Gideon is attacked and the bones stolen, it's clear that one of the five scientists is responsible--probably for murder, as well. Every suspect is a full-blown comic creation capable of surprise, from the absent-minded Jacques Beaupierre, who crosses the street "somewhat in the manner of a soft-bodied sea creature undulating over the ocean floor," to the pompous ?mile Grize, who affects bow ties depicting "egg yolks exploding in a microwave oven." Mischievous wit, fascinating erudition, juicy (but never mean-spirited) academic gossip and a gorgeous setting redolent with Gitanes and goose liver combine to make this mystery an especially delectable treat. Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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From Publishers Weekly
Those who like plots about a desperate effort to catch multiple serial killers before they can add to their body count will welcome Ellison's sixth Taylor Jackson thriller (after The Immortals). A Nashville homicide lieutenant, Jackson has no time to breathe between psychopaths. Having foiled the savage killer known as Snow White, she must now contend with Snow White's protégé, the Pretender, who's arranged for several murderers to commit crimes around the country patterned on those of the Boston Strangler, Son of Sam, and the Zodiac Killer. As so often happens in such books, Jackson and her team get a handle on the Pretender's likely true identity early on, then try to figure out what mask he's been hiding behind to escape detection. Ellison offers few genuine surprises and little depth, but airport readers seeking to kill a few hours could do worse. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Review
Top Pick!
Ellison's sixth novel featuring homicide lieutenant Taylor Jackson is arguably her best book to date. A tense thrill ride filled with secrets, raw emotion and death, newcomers will love it as much as her longtime fans. --Romantic Times
The Wild Hunt is stirring - and the dragons are finally waking from their long sleep...
Cat Barahal was the only survivor of the flood that took her parents. Raised by her extended family, she and her cousin, Bee, are unaware of the dangers that threaten them both. Though they are in beginning of the Industrial Age, magic - and the power of the Cold Mages - still hold sway.
Now, betrayed by her family and forced to marry a powerful Cold Mage, Cat will be drawn into a labyrinth of politics. There she will learn the full ruthlessness of the rule of the Cold Mages. What do the Cold Mages want from her? And who will help Cat in her struggle against them?
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