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City of Lies by Roger Jon Ellory
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City of Lies

by Roger Jon Ellory

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There is no doubt that this novel is right outside of my comfort zone,. However as with the three other novels I have read by this author, I was hooked right from the start, and would have finished it much faster had it not been for a very busy week. I am now glad I didn't finish it too quickly as it was a real pleasure to have it keep me company this week. It also seemed very appropriate to be reading it just before Christmas as the story takes place in the days leading up to Christmas Eve in New York. City of Lies is also so well written, the sense of place is wonderful, the constant hum of the city and it's underlying threat a character in itself, brilliantly done.

The world created here by R J Ellory is a tough, urban underworld, where violence come easily to men for whom it is a way of life. Into this world comes John Harper, who has spent the majority of his adulthood in Miami leading a pretty unremarkable life, and totally unaware of this other world. He spends the next week with people like Walt Freiberg a man who has known his father for many years and was a shadowy figure in John's own childhood, Cathy Hollander "the eye candy" who it seems has gone by several different names, his Aunt Evelyn, who is responsible for the lies John grew up with, and knows more than she is telling him, and Frank Duchaunak a crazy cop with a Marilyn Monroe obsession. The characterisation is fantastic, the dialogue is fast paced and authentic, and reminiscent of all the episodes of Hill Street Blues I watched with my Dad in the 1980'. ( )
  Heaven-Ali | Dec 13, 2009 |
Until a week before Christmas John Harper living in Miami had thought he was an orphan. That was when he got a phone call from his Aunt Evelyn stressing that it was important he get to New York city as soon as he could. It has been 17 years since he left New York and now he learns that Lenny Bernstein, the father he had thought dead for 30 years, is lying in a Manhattan hospital critically wounded in a liquor store hold up. At the hospital Harper meets up with an old family friend whom he had always thought of as Uncle Walt.
A little faster than John, the reader learns that things are not what they seem. There is a vortex of evil that slowly begins to suck John Harper in as he struggles to understand who his father actually is, and the events rush towards a climax that will mean death for many. I liked the pace at which this book moved, but I did have a problem in seeing John Harper as a real person. In my opinion too there were a couple of improbabilities, and a couple of loose ends- but I am not going to spoil your reading by talking about them here ( )
1 vote smik | Dec 31, 1969 |
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Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0752880896, Paperback)

The powerful thriller from 'one of crime fiction's new stars' [Sunday Telegraph]

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:57 -0400)

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