Blood's a Rover by James Ellroy

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: September 2009
  • 656pp
  • Sales Rank: 2,843

    Reader Rating: (6 ratings)

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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2009
    • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 656pp
    • Sales Rank: 2,843

    Synopsis

    Summer, 1968. Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy are dead. The assassination conspiracies have begun to unravel. A dirty-tricks squad is getting ready to deploy at the Democratic Convention in Chicago. Black militants are warring in southside L.A. The Feds are concocting draconian countermeasures. And fate has placed three men at the vortex of History.

    Dwight Holly is J. Edgar Hoover’s pet strong-arm goon, implementing Hoover’s racist designs and obsessed with a leftist shadow figure named Joan Rosen Klein. Wayne Tedrow—ex-cop and heroin runner—is building a mob gambling mecca in the Dominican Republic and quickly becoming radicalized. Don Crutchfield is a window-peeping kid private-eye within tantalizing reach of right-wing assassins, left-wing revolutionaries and the powermongers of an incendiary era. Their lives collide in pursuit of the Red Goddess Joan—and each of them will pay “a dear and savage price to live History.”

    Political noir as only James Ellroy can write it—our recent past razed and fully reconstructed—Blood’s A Rover is a novel of astonishing depth and scope, a massive tale of corruption and retribution, of ideals at war and the extremity of love. It is the largest and greatest work of fiction from an American master.


    From the Hardcover edition.

    The Washington Post - Bill Sheehan

    Blood's a Rover, like the volumes that precede it, is clearly not a conventional thriller. It is, rather, a rigorously constructed, idiosyncratic novel that uses the materials of crime fiction to examine the forces that have shaped—and warped—our recent history: racial tension, ideological warfare, greed, corruption and unbridled fanaticism in all its forms. Ellroy's bleak, brooding worldview, his dense, demanding style and his unflinching descriptions of extreme violence will almost certainly alienate large numbers of readers. But anyone who succumbs to the sheer tidal force of these novels will experience something darker, stranger and more compelling than almost anything else contemporary fiction has to offer.

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    Biography

    James Ellroy was born in Los Angeles in 1948. His L.A. Quartet novels—The Black Dahlia, The Big Nowhere, L.A. Confidential, and White Jazz—were international best sellers. His novel American Tabloid was Time magazine’s Best Book (fiction) of 1995; his memoir, My Dark Places, was a Time Best Book of the Year and a New York Times Notable Book for 1996. His novel The Cold Six Thousand was a New York Times Notable Book and a Los Angeles Times Best Book for 2001. Ellroy lives in Los Angeles.


    From the Hardcover edition.

    Customer Reviews

    Worst novel I've ever read!!by TreadmillReader

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    November 21, 2009: Writing style is so uninteresting and difficult, that I nearly stopped reading several times throughout the book.

    I will never buy another book by this author.

    Ellroy's latest concludes the hallucinatory series about the recent pastby BerkeleyBob

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    November 15, 2009: Blood's a Rover was hard to follow until about the half way point. It is the conclusion of a trilogy that revisits the 60's and 70's with some of the characters re-appearing from the earlier novels. Ellroy said it was difficult to write. It has a hallucinatory edge, and portrays J. Hoover and Howard Hughes in an unflattering and near libelous light. There is some speculation about JFK's murder. It is a brilliant work and picks up considerable momentum at about the half way point. It gets the tone of the time, in the same way that television's Mad Men does. I have read almost everything Ellroy has written over the years--his personal story is dramatic, and the drama does not appear to be over. This is one of his best.


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