Read more
Zusatztext A superb first novel! based on a true story ... Written in a style that is the prose equivalent of a Dorothea Lange photograph ... Extraordinarily moving reading Informationen zum Autor C. Joseph Greaves is a former L.A. trial lawyer now living in Colorado. His first novel! Hard Twisted! was a finalist for the Oklahoma Book Award in Fiction and was named Best Historical Novel in the SouthWest Writers' International Writing Contest! in which Greaves was also honoured with the grand prize Storyteller Award. Writing as Chuck Greaves! he is a Shamus Award-finalist for his Jack MacTaggart series of legal/detective mysteries. A gripping novelization of one of the most colourful - and fateful - courtroom showdowns in US history, between special prosecutor Tom Dewey and Lucky Luciano, the Mob's ruling overlord FINALIST FOR THE HARPER LEE PRIZE FOR LEGAL FICTION 2016 FINALIST FOR THE MACAVITY AWARD 2016 Zusammenfassung FINALIST FOR THE HARPER LEE PRIZE FOR LEGAL FICTION 2016 FINALIST FOR THE MACAVITY AWARD 2016 The year is 1936.Charles 'Lucky' Luciano is the most powerful gangster in America! Mob overlord and bootlegger millionaire. Thomas E. Dewey is an ambitious young prosecutor determined to bring him down! and Cokey Flo Brown - grifter! heroin addict and sometime prostitute - is the witness who claims she can do it.Only a wily defence attorney named George Morton Levy stands between Lucky and a life behind bars! and between Dewey and the New York Governor's mansion.As the Roaring Twenties give way to the austere reality of the Great Depression! four lives! each on its own incandescent trajectory! intersect in a New York courtroom. The events of this seminal Mob trial will introduce America to the violent and darkly glamorous world of organised crime! and leave its culture! laws and politics for ever changed.
Report
A fast-paced collection of set-piece chapters that infuse popular-history with the wild energy of a 1930s Warner Bros. crime-movie. The novel's prose-style shifts in tune to the events it chronicles, and we watch the protagonists change (if not quite grow), through experience and necessity, from youthful types into archetypes Wall Street Journal