The big nowhere

James Ellroy, 1948-

Book - 1998

Set in Los Angeles in the 1950s as the Red scare blazes, three men--an unheeded deputy, an opportunist D.A.'s assistant, and a high-rolling pimp--become immersed in a nightmarish reality.

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MYSTERY/Ellroy, James
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Subjects
Genres
Noir fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Fiction
Thrillers (Fiction)
Published
New York : Mysterious Press 1998.
Language
English
Main Author
James Ellroy, 1948- (-)
Physical Description
406 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780446674379
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Returning to Los Angeles a few years after World War II (the setting of his last novel, The Black Dahlia ), Ellroy has come up with an ambitious, enthralling melodrama painted on a broad, dark canvas. The novel's first half interweaves two stories of lonely, driven lawmen investigating the crimes of social outcasts. In the county sheriff's office, Deputy Danny Upshaw finds that his probe of a series of homosexual murders is unleashing some frightening personal demons. Meanwhile, DA's investigator Mal Considine is assigned to infiltrate a cadre of Hollywood leftists, knowing that in the red-scare atmosphere, any hint of Communist conspiracy he uncovers will advance his career. Impressed by Upshaw's intensity, Considine decides to use him as a decoy to seduce a powerful woman nicknamed the ``Red Queen,'' and the two cases and their implications of corruption, deceit and past violence converge explosively. At once taut and densely detailed, this is a mystery with the grim, inexorable pull of a film noir, shot through with a strictly modern dose of extreme (though not gratuitous) brutality and a very sure sense of history and characterization. (September) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Los Angeles in 1950 is a city characterized by sleaze and sexism; racial, religious, and ethnic hatred; and corrupt, gangster--controlled police organizations. In this work, the LAPD and its competitor, the L.A. County Sheriff's Department, are thrown together to combat the "Red scare": the Communist infiltration of Holly-wood. Toss in a few perverse murder--mutilations, historic figures such as gangsters Mickey Cohen and Johnny Stompanato, and playboy filmmaker Howard Hughes, and the listener is confronted with a semihistorical mystery novel that plumbs the depths of depravity. Although this is an engaging work of fiction, listeners will sincerely hope that the real 1950s L.A. wasn't that corrupt and that we've come a long way socially since then. The book is given a terrific reading by Jason Culp, whose characterizations add to some very interesting, sometimes scary characters. VERDICT Recommended for adult collections, though with reservations for listeners sensitive to racial and ethnic slurs. Ellroy fans will love it.-Cliff Landis, Georgia State Univ. Lib., Atlanta © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

More noir bombast from Ellroy (The Black Dahlia, etc.), who sets this cops, Commies, crooks, and creeps saga in 1950 L.A. When upright, uptight Sheriff's Deputy Danny Upshaw catches the squeal, it's particularly gruesome: someone removed the victim's eyes, ejaculated into the sockets, shredded his back with a ""Zoot Stick,"" then chomped on the innards with wolverine teeth. Three more murders, same M.O., follow, but Danny's investigation is slowed by his assignment to a grand jury team investigating the Commie menace in the UAES (United Alliance of Extras and Stagehands), including rich, nympho Claire DeHaven, her ""queer"" actor fiancÉ Reynolds Loftis, and their left-wing pals. With HUAC tactics--blackmail, mostly--much of Hollywood's homosexual community is threatened, while the emerging Teamsters Union under Mickey Cohen is bashing heads and panel member Lt. Dudley Smith--with a murder of his own to keep under wraps--is making sure that Danny's investigation goes nowhere. Still, there are leads: to Loftis; to a Hollywood agent who arranged ""pansy"" parties; to jive musicians; to a plastic surgeon; and to the official Communist Party psychiatrist. Meanwhile, panel members Considine and Meeks have their own agenda: Considine and his wife are wrangling over child-custody; Meeks, a pimp for Howard Hughes, is sleeping with Cohen's girl and has to blow away bent cop Niels to keep it secret. Danny is accused of the murder--and commits suicide rather than submit to a lie detector test that will reveal his homophilia. Out of guilt, Meeks, with the help of Considine, picks up on his homicide investigation and uncovers a tale of homosexual incest, homosexual betrayal, rage, murder, and revenge, all neatly documented by the Commie psychiatrist. Despite all the Commie-baiting, the jive talk, the wisecracks, this is a cop story--too long by at least a third but propelled by a mean, dark vision of the world, with dank, sleazy language. Depressing, with a convoluted beginning, an impossible ending (the psychiatrist's rehash of the case), but there's a truly strong middle at 200 pages. On balance: O.K. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.