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Richard Price (1) (1949–)

Author of Lush Life

For other authors named Richard Price, see the disambiguation page.

19+ Works 7,144 Members 247 Reviews 25 Favorited

About the Author

Author and screenwriter Richard Price was born in the Bronx, New York on October 12, 1949. He received a BS degree from Cornell University, an MFA from Columbia University, and a Mirillees Fellowship in fiction at Stanford University. His first novel, The Wanderers, was published in 1974 and was show more adapted into a film by director Philip Kaufman in 1979. His novel Clockers was nominated for the National Book Critics Circle Award and was made into a movie by Spike Lee in 1994. His screenwriting credits include The Color of Money (1986), Sea of Love (1989), Mad Dog and Glory (1992), and Ransom (1996). Price won several awards for his writing on the television series The Wire. He has written for numerous publications including The New York Times, Esquire Magazine, the Village Voice, and Rolling Stone. In 1999, he received the American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in Literature. In 2015, Price published his bestselling novel, The Whites, under the pseudonym Harry Brandt. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Works by Richard Price

Lush Life (2008) 2,128 copies, 106 reviews
Clockers (1992) — Author — 1,399 copies, 31 reviews
The Whites (2015) 822 copies, 59 reviews
Freedomland (1998) 791 copies, 11 reviews
Samaritan (2003) 711 copies, 10 reviews
The Wanderers (1974) 381 copies, 8 reviews
Bloodbrothers (1976) 191 copies, 4 reviews
Ladies' Man (1978) 187 copies, 4 reviews
Lazarus Man (2024) 174 copies, 11 reviews
The Breaks (1983) 122 copies, 1 review
Freedomland [2006 movie] (2006) — Writer — 67 copies
Child 44 [2015 film] (2015) — Writer — 47 copies, 1 review
Sea of Love [1989 film] (1989) — Screenwriter — 46 copies, 1 review
Clockers [1995 film] (1996) — Screenwriter — 29 copies

Associated Works

Requiem for a Dream (1978) — Foreword, some editions — 2,636 copies, 33 reviews
The Future Dictionary of America (2004) — Contributor — 652 copies, 3 reviews
The Moth (2013) — Contributor — 346 copies, 9 reviews
The Best American Essays 2002 (2002) — Contributor — 233 copies, 1 review
Shaft [2000 film] (2000) — Writer — 121 copies
The Color of Money [1986 film] (1986) — Writer — 108 copies, 2 reviews
Ransom [1996 film] (1996) — Writer — 81 copies, 1 review
New York Stories [1989 film] (1989) — Writer — 52 copies, 1 review
Kiss Me, Kate [2003 TV movie] (2002) — Producer — 22 copies, 1 review

Tagged

2008 (24) American (55) American fiction (65) American literature (55) audiobook (22) crime (262) crime fiction (86) detective (26) drugs (40) DVD (38) fiction (795) First Edition (59) literature (44) murder (42) mystery (188) New Jersey (57) New York (115) New York City (81) novel (129) NYC (40) police (69) police procedural (41) read (71) Richard Price (30) signed (34) suspense (25) thriller (49) to-read (408) unread (33) USA (54)

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

260 reviews
Dig down. Dig beneath the slang and bravado and you will find a gritty story about two very different human beings trying to survive the poverty stricken streets of New Jersey and New York. Rocco Klein has been a homicide detective for too long. He has seen it all and maybe he is too jaded because, as of late, the drug deaths he encounters inch him closer and closer to a yawning apathy. It might be time to retire. That is, until he meets young, barely out of his teens, Victor Dunham. Victor show more seems to be too innocent to be readily and eagerly confessing to a murder. Klein knows better. Who is Vincent covering for? Could it be his always in trouble drug-dealing brother? The cat and mouse game cops and crook play makes for an adventure (albeit a little long).
As an aside: Clockers is code for drug runners. Cocaine dealers, to be more specific
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This book is superb! The writing is excellent--spare but evocative, with surprising bursts of humor interspersed with all the heaviness--and the characters are complex and believable. The story is a difficult one; every character is touched by violence, and there are no easy answers (or even difficult but satisfying answers). Retribution and justice are major themes of this novel, which leaves the reader questioning not just how to right a wrong, but also who determines what is "right" in show more the first place.

Because this book involves cops ("good" and "bad") taking the law into their own hands, I thought a lot about Eric Garner while I was reading it. The book was published in February 2015, and I am not sure when it was written, so I can understand why that story was not addressed here. I would love to read Richard Price's take on current events.

Highly recommended for all libraries, and basically required for New York City public libraries.
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Al Pacino plays Frank Keller, a lonely, divorced, alcoholic New York cop on the verge of retirement. Along with his new partner Sherman (John Goodman) he begins to investigate a serial killer who appears to track down victims through a newspaper lonely hearts columns. The pair identify blond bombshell Helen Cruger (Ellen Barkin) as one of their primary suspects, but unfortunately Keller begins to fall in lust and love with his super-sexy suspect. Richard Price's script doesn't deliver many show more twists nor surprises and it's left to the powerful characterisation of Keller by Al Pacino to carry the film. Pacino is angry and defiant, a nice guy consumed by anger over the breakdown of his marriage and falling into a alcohol-fuelled middle-aged stupor. Ellen Barkin makes an incredible foil for Pacino and it says much for his own ability that she is able to match Pacino in power and sheer on-screen magnetism. The chemistry between the pair is undeniable and their love scenes are hit and fiery with more than a dangerous edge. John Goodman is fine in a supporting role that doesn't give him much to do and it's interesting to see a young Samuel L. Jackson popping up in a bit part. Harold Becker's direction is appropriately subdued but along with cinematography Ronnie Taylor he paints a noirish and dreary Manhattan hiding behind a gaudy veneer of sad neon. Trevor Jones' downbeat score and successive spins of The Twilights disc Sea of Love adds to the melancholy. Overall then "Sea of Love" is an atmospheric mystery thriller with two powerhouse performances from Pacino and Barkin that give the standard plot a painful edge of psychological isolation and a seething barely subdued anger. show less
½
Obwohl dieser 800-Seiten-Wälzer ausschließlich im Drogenmilieu spielt, ist es kein Krimi oder Thriller im klassischen Sinn. Die beiden Hauptfiguren sind Rocco, Detective, und Strike, ein 'leitender' Clocker, einer der schwarzer Dealer die rund um die Uhr ihren Stoff verkaufen. Als sich in Strikes Umfeld ein Mord ereignet, gerät er in Roccos Visier.
Um einen solchen Plot herum einen 800-Seiten-Roman aufzubauen, würde sicherlich etwas langatmig ausfallen. Doch der Schwerpunkt dieser show more Geschichte liegt bei der Darstellung der beiden Protagonisten.
Strike, gerade 19 Jahre alt, ist nicht glücklich mit dem was er tut. Immer wieder macht er sich vor, dass er sofort aufhören würde, hätte er genügend Geld beisammen. Doch wann ist genug? Es ist die Furcht vor dem was danach kommt, die Unsicherheit wie er nach dem Drogenjob sein Geld verdienen soll, die ihn daran hindert eine entgültige Entscheidung zu treffen. Und die Angst vor seinem Boss Rodney, der offenbar völlig skrupellos ist.
Rocco, Anfang/Mitte 40, seit 20 Jahren im Dienst, plant ebenfalls auszusteigen, jedoch aus völlig anderen Gründen. Verheiratet mit einer vermögenden Frau und seit kurzem Vater, will er diesen 'Drecksjob' an den Nagel hängen. Doch immer wieder wird ihm klar, dass dieser Job sein Leben ist: das Aufklären von Morden, das Kämpfen für eine bessere Gesellschaft, die gemeinsamen Zeiten mit seinen Kollegen. Und als ein offensichtlich Unschuldiger des Mordes verdächtigt wird, setzt er alles daran, den wahren Täter herauszufinden.
Auch die weiteren Personen in diesem Roman sind überzeugend dargestellt: Strikes Bruder, der unter allen Umständen versucht, in dieser kriminellen Umgebung anständig zu bleiben und beinahe daran zugrunde geht; ihre Mutter, die mit ihren Möglichkeiten versucht, ihre Jungen zu anständigen Bürgern zu erziehen; die Kollegen Roccos, die an (fast) nichts mehr Gutes glauben. Nichtzuletzt ist es der rauhen, teils eher schlichten Sprache zu verdanken, die dem Ganzen einen unglaublich realistischen Klang gibt. Price gelingt es zum einen, das Bild eines Teils der Gesellschaft zu vermitteln, in der es einem dort Hineingeboren fast unmöglich gemacht wird, zu einem anständigen Bürger zu werden. Und zum andern den alltäglichen Kampf der Polizei gegen diese Kriminalität darzustellen, wie auch deren immer wiederkehrendes Scheitern.
Obwohl dieses Buch bereits 20 Jahre alt ist, ist ihm dies zu keiner Zeit anzumerken. Eine noch immer aktuelle und überaus spannende sowie vermutlich realistische Abbildung eines Teils unserer Gesellschaft, den die meisten von uns glücklicherweise wohl nicht kennen.
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Statistics

Works
19
Also by
9
Members
7,144
Popularity
#3,434
Rating
3.8
Reviews
247
ISBNs
409
Languages
10
Favorited
25

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