The Cold Six Thousand

by James Ellroy
The Cold Six Thousand  
published May 8th 2001 by Knopf
first published 2002
binding Hardcover
isbn 0679403922   (isbn13: 9780679403920)
pages 688
description With its hypnotic, staccato rhythms, and words jostling, bumping, marching forward with edgy intensity (like lemmings heading toward a cliff of thei...more
date added
05-24-07



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Ira
07/30/07

recommends it for: pulpers
This is the 2nd book in a planned 3 part series that began with American Tabloid. 6K picks up exactly where AT began (late November, 1963 in Dallas).

The only difference between books is that Ellroy seems to have run out of innovative plot and moved to a machine gun form of storytelling. 7 out of 10 sentences are no longer than 3 words a piece. Many are shorter. or Most. Are. Shorter.

The main characters of Ward Littell, Pete B and Wayne Jr. Hoover is back for more as is Hughes, who Ell...more
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David
David rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
07/10/07

recommends it for: masochists, or those who fild Elmore Leonard too prolix
This book is the worst car crash you've ever heard of, unfolding in excruciating slow motion. The characters are monsters. The action starts at the Kennedy assassination and ends at one of the other assassinations of the 60's, Bobby I think. I winced my way through this book and at the end I wondered why I had stuck with it. I have never been so horrified and repulsed by characters in fiction. But the writing has a force and brutal brevity that I found fascinating. I may read more Ellroy in the ...more
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Prateek
Read in March, 2006
The second in Ellroy's still unfinished trilogy, Cold picks up right where American Tabloid leaves off -- the Kennedy Assassination. All the same elements are in place -- the sleazy underworld who, in Ellory's world, are in charge of everything, the pulpy lowlifes, and caustically cynical worldview that leaves zero room for optimism. Here, Ellroy offers his unique take on the RFK and MLK assassinations. But it cuts deeper than American Tabloid. There are more double-crosses,...more
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Cari
07/13/08

Read in July, 2008
In all fairness, I should confess that I only made it 100 pages in. But I pretty much never stop reading a book unless I'm really pretty miserable. In my opinion, Ellroy took his sparse, slang-soaked writing style a bit too far in this one. with the exception of the FBI "reports", there are no sentences longer than 6 words in the first 100 pages. I felt like the book was shooting the story at me with a semi-automatic weapon. I was able to adjust to his style in American Tabloid, b...more
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Brett
03/18/08

Read in March, 2008
A worthy continuation of American Tabloid complete with Ward Littell and Pete Bondurant in tow. This time Ellroy spiels his fictionalized behind the scenes take on the Civil Rights Movement, the Vietnam War, and the Assassination of RFK. Folks with a sensitive disposition need not apply as mad dog Ellroy generously doles out graphic violence, moral relativsim, and cringe-worthy racism without a blink. This one goes down like that first shot of bourbon.
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David
06/23/08

bookshelves: junk-in-the-trunk
Three and a half stars really. I think we can agree the inherent malice and subterfuge don't quite match the crescendo of those in American Tabloid. But an entertaining slide down the helix of the nation's corruption in the sixties. So Pete B. makes it through alive. I can only wonder if and how he'll figure into the proposed third volume - if we ever see it.

Ps. why dope up the object of your vengeance? Doesn't that spare him?
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Brian
11/20/07

Ultra-stylized, over-complicated, and ultimately uninteresting. Ellroy's voice, once one of the most unique in modern fiction, comes off as gibberish here. One can only hope that if he ever finishes "American Underworld" (which at this point is looking like the "Chinese Democracy" of crime fiction), it will be a return to form for Ellroy and not a further descent into self-parody.
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Sean
06/25/08

Read in January, 2001
recommended to Sean by: James O'Brien
The Cold Six Thousand is an amazing novel. A story of brutality and revenge following the days after the assassination of JFK. While it is a part of a quartet of stories beginning with LA Confidential, it stands on it's own as a very compelling and exciting read. I would urge readers to indulge a little and begin with the first, "LA Confidential" and follow suit accordingly.
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Adam
Read in July, 2008
Again, brilliant. This continues in the true Ellroy fashion. It weaves a complex web of political intrigue, power, drugs, murder, and men operating in the criminal underworld of America in the 1960's. It starts where American Tabloid ends, and pace doesn't relent. Nobody satisfies in crime fiction so exceptionally as does James Ellroy.
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Randomanthony
Read in June, 2004
I can't keep my Elroy straight...the books start to run together, and I've never read a bad one, but this was the best. Elroy is a genius at setting up intricate, intense storylines and catching the smell of hope and desperation from the bottom of the barrel. If you liked L.A. Confidential, check this book out. Great read.
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Dev
06/04/07

Tightly drawn characters battling for some crude sense of justice and sanity in a world where the world turns a deaf ear to depravity as long as it's on the side of the Law. These later works, though, seem marred by Ellroy's rush to become almost as caricature of himself.
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emily
07/21/08

Read in January, 2008
recommends it for: tough guys
everyone here is so tough and hip that I feel like I can hardly measure up. it's a violent, confusing (though probably because I hadn't read the other books in the series), drug-riddled car wreck of a book, and it's hard to look away
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Scooterscum
07/24/08

bookshelves: to-read
I hate the Kennedy(s)/King/Cia/mafia assasination theories in real life, but this book is really great.The sentence structure is unusual at first and I almost quit reading it.I soon got used to it.
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Leonard
bookshelves: fiction
Probably my favorite of Ellroy's books, and the one that really nails that short, choppy, nihilistic style he uses so well. I'm excited about the third book finally coming out.
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Jerry
04/07/08

Read in April, 2008
Probably the most brutal -- and one of the best -- books I've ever read. Not an easy read, but a sweeping story of crime, corruption and -- most fascinating -- sin.
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Robinson
Not as good as American Tabloid, but still better than most historical fiction. Ellroy's stacatto style ramps up with dogged intensity.
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Cory
11/01/07

The follow-up to Tabloid, this book is satisfying in many ways. It may not be a masterwork like Tabloid, but it packs plenty of punch.
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Dan
07/03/07

Read in July, 2002
Watch yet again as Ellroy's bad guys do bad things, and Ellroy's good guys do worse things. A perfect follow-up to "American Tabloid."
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Aaron
05/28/07

recommends it for: cops, robbers, and everyone in between
The sequel to American Tabloid. A part of this moves too quickly, but this book is still a necessity.
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Steve
05/20/08

Read in January, 2002
Stellar follow-up to American Tabloid in the old pulp tradition, with some new twists. Incredible!
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.75 (432 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.82 (11 ratings)
number of reviews: 32






other editions

The Cold Six Thousand (Paperback)
The Cold Six Thousand (Audio Cassette)
The Cold Six Thousand (Paperback)