Rachel Lopez loves her work, too. By day she is a parole officer, helping people - Lorenzo Brown among them - along a path to responsibility and advancement. At night she heads for the city's hotel bars, where she can always find a man who will let her act out her damage. She loses herself in sex and drink and more. But Rachel's nights are taking a toll on her days. Lorenzo knows the signs. The trouble is, he truly needs her right now. There's an eruption coming in the streets he left behind, the kind of territorial war that takes down everyone even near it. Lorenzo needs every shred of support he can get to keep from being sucked back into that battleground. He reaches out to Rachel - but she may be too far gone to help either of them.
Writing with the grace and force that have earned him praise as "the poet laureate of the crime world," George Pelecanos has created a novel about two scarred and fallible people who must navigate one of life's most brutal passages. It is an unforgettable, moving, even shocking story that will leave no reader unchanged.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
March 1, 2005 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
- ISBN: 9780316144827
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780759513372
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780759513372
- File size: 1858 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
February 21, 2005
Pelecanos's later fiction, set on the drug-saturated streets of ghetto Washington, D.C., is charged with the dark, unrelenting inevitability of Greek myth. In the author's 13th novel, "dog man" Lorenzo Brown, a street investigator for the Humane Society, has recently completed an eight-year stretch in prison for narcotics and is determined to stay clean and free. Rachel Lopez, Lorenzo's parole officer, spends her days chasing down clients and her nights getting drunk in bars and having rough sex with strangers. The ignition point for the violence that eventually engulfs these two fully realized, attractive characters—characteristics that in Pelecanos's world mark them as quite probably doomed—is a minor argument between local drug kingpins that inflates into a series of revenge killings. Pelecanos is known for his bleak, uncompromising outlook (Hard Resolution
; Hell to Pay
; The Sweet Forever
) and while the death and destruction are still here in full force, some fans may question the turnaround in his ending. Might it be an attempt to hit the megabestseller stardom that fans think he deserves? Hope and redemption are fine subjects for many novelists, but it's the stark world of violence and despair that this author really owns. Agent, Sloan Harris at ICM. 7-city author tour. -
Library Journal
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Booklist
Starred review from February 15, 2005
Pelecanos continues to expand the parameters of crime fiction by focusing not on a particular crime or, in this case, not even on a particular crime solver. His real subject is the streets themselves: the nature of daily life in an American inner city--the potent mixture of resolve, weakness, violence, and love that percolates in Washington, D.C.'s roughest neighborhoods, where obstacles far outnumber opportunities. Lorenzo Brown, an ex-con determined to stay straight, works for the Humane Society, rescuing abused animals. Rachel Lopez, Brown's probation officer, works the same streets, tracking her "offenders" and encouraging them to avoid further offenses. Employing a kind of days-in-the-lives narrative strategy, Pelecanos follows Brown and Lopez on their daily rounds as they intersect in different ways with members of two rival drug gangs. Inevitably, the gang and straight worlds collide, forcing Brown to choose between his need for revenge and his commitment to a new life. What Pelecanos does best is to expose the vulnerabilities of his characters, the parts of themselves they hide from the world. It might be Lopez, asserting control over men in bars to mask the lack of control she feels on the streets, or it might be a gang soldier dreaming of seeing Paris ("All's he needed was one of them passports, buy a plane ticket, and go. But how did you get a passport? How did you buy a plane ticket?"). Though set on the same streets as Pelecanos' earlier books, this novel works on a smaller scale, lingering on the everyday, "the smiling faces and sad, all kinds of faces in between." It's not a view we see much in genre fiction, making it all the more welcome.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2005, American Library Association.) -
Publisher's Weekly
April 4, 2005
One of the finest writers in crime fiction today, Pelecanos once again delivers a moving story of life, death and survival on the streets of Washington, D.C. This time, he focuses on Lorenzo Brown, an ex-con who returns to his old neighborhood after serving eight years in prison. Doing his best to keep straight, Lorenzo prowls the streets rescuing abused animals as a Humane Society officer, but the violent actions of two rival drug gangs threaten to drag him back into his former thug life. Pelecanos knows the world he writes about—his streets, and the characters inhabiting them, throb with vivid authenticity. Unfortunately, Coleman, an articulate actor with a well-modulated voice, delivers Pelecanos's emotionally rich and descriptive prose in a dry, matter-of-fact tone. His is a competent line-by-line reading, but in the end, his detached delivery fails to capture the vitality and intimacy of the author's work. This is a shame, since the audio's abridgment, editing and incidental music are all top-notch. Simultaneous release with the Little, Brown hardcover (Forecasts, Feb. 21). -
Library Journal
March 15, 2005
After serving eight years for a drug rap, Lorenzo Brown is trying to live a straight life. Working as a Humane Society officer in Washington, DC, doesn't provide the life of wealth that Lorenzo had enjoyed as part of the drug game, but he's doing okay. His parole officer, Rachel Lopez, is fighting her own battle against a tough past and reckless behavior. A violent act committed by a character from Lorenzo's old life places both Lorenzo and Rachel in jeopardy. Now, Lorenzo must decide whether to risk his second chance at a straight life for a shot at vengeance. Pelecanos's writing is intelligent and engaging, and the characters of Lorenzo and Rachel are well formed and all too believable. More than a simple drama, this is an excellent look at the choices people make and the consequences of those choices. Not as dark as many of his previous works ("Soul Circus"; "Hell To Pay"), this standalone effort nonetheless shows why Pelecanos is among the best currently writing in any genre. Highly recommended for all public libraries. [See Prepub Alert, "LJ "11/15/04.] -Craig Shufelt, Lane P.L., Oxford, OHCopyright 2005 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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