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How far would you go to protect everything you love?
On the South Side of Chicago, you’re only as strong as your reputation. Danny Carter and his best friend, Evan, earned theirs knocking over pawnshops and liquor stores, living from score to score, never thinking of tomorrow.
Then a job went desperately wrong, and in the roar of a gun blast, everything changed.
Years later, Danny doesn’t think about his past. He’s built a new world for himself: a legitimate career, a long-term girlfriend, and a clean conscience. He’s just like anyone else. Normal. Successful. Happy.
Until he spots his old partner staring him down in a smoky barroom mirror. The prison-hardened Evan is barely recognizable. Having served his time without dropping Danny’s name, his old friend believes he’s owed major payback -- and he’s willing to do anything to get it. With all he loves on the line and nowhere to turn, Danny realizes his new life hinges on a terrible choice: How far will he go to protect his future from his past?
A debut novel that’s drawn comparisons to Dennis Lehane, Laura Lippman, and Quentin Tarantino, The Blade Itself is the story of a good man held hostage by circumstance; a riveting exploration of class, identity, and the demons that shape us, where every effort to do the right thing leads to terrifying consequences and one inevitable conclusion: The more you have, the more you have to lose.
About the Author
MARCUS SAKEY is an award-winning advertising writer. While researching The Blade Itself he shadowed homicide detectives, toured the morgue, and learned to pick a deadbolt in sixty seconds. Born in Flint, Michigan, he now lives in Chicago with his wife. Visit his website at: www.MarcusSakey.com for contests, behind-the-scenes info, and an excerpt of his upcoming novel.
… [Sakey] writes well, and The Blade Itself is an impressive start to his career.
More Reviews and RecommendationsMarcus Sakey is an award-winning advertising writer. While researching The Blade Itself he shadowed homicide detectives, toured the morgue, and learned to pick a deadbolt in sixty seconds. Born in Flint, Michigan, he now lives in Chicago with his wife. Visit his Web site at MarcusSakey.com for contests, behind-the-scenes info, and an excerpt of his upcoming novel.
Reader Rating:
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May 25, 2009: When writing about crime one expects the author to take a few liberties with the odd statute or court case if it suits the plot.
But this poorly written mess has as the basic premise a wholesale ignorance of how the law and courts work. A convicted felon tries to blackmail an upstanding citizen with their involvement in a 10-year-old murder. Not a chance in hell any prosecutor would ever touch the case, but we're supposed to believe the upstanding citizen chucks his entire life and gets involved in a kidnapping based on this nonsensical premise.Worse, the writing is at the young adult level. Painful plot development, two-dimensional characters and an absurd premise make this book a loser at several levels.I bought the book because of it being a New York Times Book Review Editors Choice. That'll never happen again.I Also Recommend: L. A. Requiem (Elvis Cole Series #8), Gone Tomorrow (Jack Reacher Series #13), Night and Day (Jesse Stone Series #8), The Renegades (Charlie Hood Series #2).
Reader Rating:
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March 28, 2009: Wow! This book was such a good read that I didn't want to put it down. Sakey did a tremendous job at making you think about choices...if you were put in the same situations. Most of us aren't criminals, but this book sure makes you think like one. Awesome!
The Barnes & Noble Review
Harking back to the days of the true hard-boiled pulp masters -- Carroll John Daly, Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, etc. -- Marcus Sakey's stellar debut novel instantaneously puts him in league with other contemporary down-and-dirty crime fiction luminaries like Ken Bruen, Jason Starr, and Charlie Huston.
Enterprising criminals Danny Carter and Evan McGann grew up together in the same rough Chicago neighborhood, but the botched burglary attempt of a pawnshop sends their paths in opposite directions. McGann gets arrested and spends more than seven years in state prison. Carter gets away and eventually turns his life around, ending up with a respectable job in construction management and a beautiful, loving girlfriend named Karen. But when McGann is finally released, he reenters Carter's life hell-bent for payback and forces his former best friend to revisit memories, emotions, and desires best left forgotten. Hardened into a ruthless killer from years of incarceration, McGann sadistically manipulates Carter back into the game for one last, lucrative heist by threatening not only his life but Karen's as well. The job is to kidnap the young son of Carter's boss and ransom him off for a cool million, but once the child is abducted, McGann initiates another plan altogether…
Like the much-flawed main characters portrayed in The Blade Itself, Sakey's hard-hitting debut is as cold-blooded as it is adrenaline-fueled -- a dark crime fiction gem. Fans of the aforementioned Bruen, Starr, and Huston will be more than satisfied with this gritty Windy City thriller. Paul Goat Allen
How far would you go to protect everything you love?
On the South Side of Chicago, you’re only as strong as your reputation. Danny Carter and his best friend, Evan, earned theirs knocking over pawnshops and liquor stores, living from score to score, never thinking of tomorrow.
Then a job went desperately wrong, and in the roar of a gun blast, everything changed.
Years later, Danny doesn’t think about his past. He’s built a new world for himself: a legitimate career, a long-term girlfriend, and a clean conscience. He’s just like anyone else. Normal. Successful. Happy.
Until he spots his old partner staring him down in a smoky barroom mirror. The prison-hardened Evan is barely recognizable. Having served his time without dropping Danny’s name, his old friend believes he’s owed major payback -- and he’s willing to do anything to get it. With all he loves on the line and nowhere to turn, Danny realizes his new life hinges on a terrible choice: How far will he go to protect his future from his past?
A debut novel that’s drawn comparisons to Dennis Lehane, Laura Lippman, and Quentin Tarantino, The Blade Itself is the story of a good man held hostage by circumstance; a riveting exploration of class, identity, and the demons that shape us, where every effort to do the right thing leads to terrifying consequences and one inevitable conclusion: The more you have, the more you have to lose.
About the Author
MARCUS SAKEY is an award-winning advertising writer. While researching The Blade Itself he shadowed homicide detectives, toured the morgue, and learned to pick a deadbolt in sixty seconds. Born in Flint, Michigan, he now lives in Chicago with his wife. Visit his website at: www.MarcusSakey.com for contests, behind-the-scenes info, and an excerpt of his upcoming novel.
… [Sakey] writes well, and The Blade Itself is an impressive start to his career.
The Blade Itself does keep this subject suspenseful: not until the very end of the story is it clear who Danny is or where he stands. His ability to churn these questions so vigorously will bring Mr. Sakey attention and give him a toehold among the crime writers he admires.
Sakey's brilliant debut, a crime novel set in Chicago, is a must read. From the thrilling opening, a horribly botched pawnshop robbery by childhood friends Evan and Danny, to the riveting ending, the tension ratchets up to almost unbearable levels. After the robbery, Evan serves prison time while Danny turns over a new leaf and eventually earns a responsible management job in a construction company. Seven years later, Evan is out and comes looking for Danny for payback. Using their past ties as leverage, Evan tries to drag Danny back into their partnership. Sakey convincingly portrays the bonds forged in adolescence and the gulf wrought by prison for one and hard work for the other. In a battle of wits and wills, the stakes escalate as Danny fights to preserve his new life and the ruthless Evan counters every attempt Danny makes to break free. The collateral damage is high in a page-turner that has already received plaudits from Lee Child, George Pelecanos and T. Jefferson Parker. Author tour. (Jan.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
South Chicago natives Danny Carter and Evan McGann were young partners in crime until one fateful robbery-gone-bad sent Evan to prison for seven years. Danny walked away, managing to convince himself that his criminal days were over; he's now working in construction management and is in a long-term relationship. What he failed to reckon with was Evan, newly released from prison, who understands all too clearly that partners in crime don't break up. Attempting to outwit Evan without succumbing to his past life, Danny devises a scheme wherein the two of them will kidnap Danny's boss' son, hold him for ransom, and make a bundle, at which point they will "be even." Does this make sense? Of course not, but what a thrilling ride debut author Sakey has concocted. Sakey's insights into Danny's struggles to maintain a decent, honest life truly make the story stand out. This book may remind readers of George Pelecanos's Drama City and certainly will appeal to Dennis Lehane fans as well. Recommended for all popular crime fiction collections. [See Prepub Mystery, LJ 9/1/06.] Teresa L. Jacobsen, Solano Cty. Lib., CA Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
One man's attempts to shake off his checkered past are foiled when his old partner in crime returns. Danny Carter and Evan McGann used to be a great team. The two grew up in Bridgeport, a rough-and-tumble and predominantly Irish Chicago neighborhood, where they quickly graduated from shoplifting to knocking over pawnshops. When one such heist goes bad, Danny's able to get away without being caught, but Evan winds up doing a seven-year prison bid. Once paroled, Evan makes a beeline for Chicago, where Danny's been keeping his nose clean by working as a construction foreman and settling into a comfy life with his girlfriend, who runs a hip nightclub. A standard-issue kidnapping plot ensues, but though there's a ring of familiarity to the material, Sakey proves he has the chops to eventually do better things. He has a great feel for the moral dilemmas created by Danny's return to criminal life, and he makes the most of Chicago's geographical split between its north side (upscale, educated) and south side (working-class, pugnacious) without overworking the metaphor. The dialogue has all the efficiency and punch the genre demands, and Evan is a fully imagined thug-he's simultaneously charismatic and fearsomely violent, and though his actions strain believability in the later chapters, he never becomes a tough-guy caricature. (And Sakey doesn't shy away from describing the occasional bit of savagery in unsettling detail.) The author is working with themes and tones reminiscent of George Pelecanos; he shares the same interest in exploring the ill-lit corners of a city, prefers heroes who have a rough past and some dirt under their fingernails and has little interest in police or professionalgumshoes. That streetwise attitude makes him a valuable addition to Chicago crime lit, a landscape currently dominated by authors of detective stories (Sara Paretsky) and legal thrillers (Scott Turow). A promising start from a writer willing to get deep into a city's grit. Agent: Scott Miller/Trident Media Group
T. Jefferson Parker
From the Author of The Fallen:
The Blade Itself is a terrifically good debut -- streetwise, heartfelt, and exciting. I loved this book.
George Pelecanos
From the Author of The Night Gardener:
Taut, involving, and memorable. Marcus Sakey is an authentic, original new voice in crime fiction.
Victor Gischler
From the Author of Gun Monkeys:
Simply put, Marcus Sakey has penned one of the most stunning and appealing words of fiction I’ve ever read. It's quite possible that The Blade Itself will be recognized as the crime debut of the decade.
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