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Paul
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Feb 17, 2016 07:56PM


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I have that on my Kindle, but yet to read it.


I discovered A.I. Bezzerides after seeing Thieves Highway. Bezzerides wrote the screenplay based on his novel

Both novels are about truckers, which leads me to the question: are there enough books and movies about truckers for there to be a "trucker noir" subgenre? I've seen several B noir movies from the '50s about truckers, but I've never found a definitive list of these types of stories.

:)



I have that on my Kindle, but yet to read..."
My review is here if you're interested Rory:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Started The Long Goodbye


Suffice to say it's a much more mature work than Clandestine, which I enjoyed but had some major issues with. As usual, Ellroy really represents the detective novel as high-minded literature on a level beyond what even Raymond Chandler and Ross Macdonald aspired to.
You really get the sense of how both the plot and the characters' internal emotional lives represent the microcosm of an entire society's zeitgeist, in this case post-WW2 Los Angeles, that again I do with very few other crime novelists.
Though maybe it helps Ellroy that he's usually writing in historical hindsight...

Suffice to say it's a much mo..."
I dig The Black Dahlia and most of Ellroy's work, though I'll have to say that his work gets better as you go along in order of publication. His newest Perfidia was fantastic. LA Confidential is another of my favorites...

I wager that "Foucault's Pendulum" is kind of in the same ballpark, though... being largely a satire of conspiracy thriller fiction along the similar lines of The Illuminatus! Trilogy, though nowhere as goofy.



Most history profs love Eco. I did history, and one of my historiography professors insisted we read his work on semiotics. It was so hard, but it made so much sense. That's how I came to him.


I'm a big fan of Joe Lansdale and am looking forward to watching Hap and Leonard which premiers tomorrow on the Sundance Channel. I just finished The Bottoms last month and gave it five stars. I've only read one H&L but am looking forward to reading the series from the beginning.


Worth checking out Frank. I've read the first 2 in the series as well as several of Lansdale's stand-alone. Excellent writer.
I Loved "The Bottoms" and I hear good things about Hap and Leonard. I hope to read the books before checking out the TV series



I rarely reread due to huge TBR, but Huston is well worth it. In 2017 I'll reread his Joe Pitt, Vampire PI series (5 books). #1 is Already Dead.
Any Ken Bruen, with co-author Jason Starr, Max & Angela series fans?
News of a #4 Pimp published in paperback (rel. date 3/15/16) by Hard Case Crime was a big surprise. Books 1-3 were all 5 star books for me:
Max & Angela series - Hard Case Crime
https://www.goodreads.com/series/5949...
Regretting not keeping the Joe Pitt (Charlie Huston) and Max & Angela books. Oh well, that's what money is for ...
https://www.goodreads.com/series/5949...


Also bought The Drop by Dennis Lehane. Loved the movie, and I am sure I will like the book. It just felt good in my hand walking around Barnes & Noble.

Started a bit too slow, with nothing really happening. The main plot was a bit too simple and it didn't seem to really matter. Didn't care for the (anti)political bullcrap, I guess I'm like Leonard that way. Trudy was a great Femme Fatale.
So, it was a good first book. Hope it gets a bit faster and just a better plot in general. I heard this book was the main plot in the tv show, so I guess the show isn't starting out GREAT either. Maybe they are expecting to make many more seasons after this one?
started the third Cliff Janeway mystery by John Dunning The Bookman's Promise
like the previous two, this one is a crime novel set in the cutthroat world of book collectors, book sellers and very rare first editions. Early days yet, but the central puzzle seems to be about the life and works of a Victorian gentleman adventurer and libertine named Richard Burton (not the actor, the translator of "Arabian Nights")
like the previous two, this one is a crime novel set in the cutthroat world of book collectors, book sellers and very rare first editions. Early days yet, but the central puzzle seems to be about the life and works of a Victorian gentleman adventurer and libertine named Richard Burton (not the actor, the translator of "Arabian Nights")

These are all around 200 pages and reading them is more like watching episodes of a TV crime drama than anything else. There's a case, or cases, to be solved in each one and then an overall story arc where the main characters are gradually fleshed out.

I managed to find a copy of a Woolrich novel at the library, Might take it on if I get time, Fright

I managed to find a copy of a Woolrich nove..."
Auster is good, isn't he? I love his work. Tough, but so satisfying.

That's a totally new name for me.
It only took, oh, a couple of decades, but I finally finished Andrew Vachss' Burke series. While the last book, Another Life, only deserves three stars, I rate the series as a whole at four. And extra points awarded to Vachss for using a fictional character to expose the dark world of child abuse.


Edwin wrote: "Ozark Nurse (1965) by Fern Shepard, great title, reviewed on this wonderful site - http://vintagenurseromancenovels.blog..."
What an absolute trip - a website devoted to nurse romance novels! How I love you, internet!
What an absolute trip - a website devoted to nurse romance novels! How I love you, internet!
I'm enjoying Swamp Sister, a title that was suggested to me by Amazon when I went looking for Carny Kill.
Sometimes, their recommendations are right on the money.
Sometimes, their recommendations are right on the money.


I'm reading
by Tana French, and I have a feeling it will be one of my favorites of 2016. The style reminds me of Dennis Lehane in Mystic River and the humorous exchanges between the two principal investigators of Ben Aaronovich.



Frank wrote: "Pick-Up by Charles Willeford. Its written in a pulp noir style, but the plot really isn't. It's a bit like if Jim Thompson wrote a Bukowski novel; very bleak, almost without any hope at all, still ..."
I'm still undecided between "Pick-Up" and "Cockfighter" for my next Willeford.
I guess I will end up reading both.
I'm still undecided between "Pick-Up" and "Cockfighter" for my next Willeford.
I guess I will end up reading both.


Both are good. But Pick-up is levels above Cockfighter in my opinion! And to disagree, I think Pick-up is total noir.
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