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Book reviews for "Ellroy,_James" sorted by average review score:

L.A. Confidential: The Screenplay
Published in Paperback by Warner Books (1997)
Authors: Brian Helgeland, Curtis Hanson, and James Ellroy
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"No hush, hush here."
L.A. CONFIDENTIAL is one of the most riveting movies I have seen in years and was more than deserving of its Best Picture nomination (another one that bit the dust because of a sinking ship). The movie is really fast-paced and it is easy to miss things. Even after repeated viewings there are lines that you don't quite understand and clues here and there you don't pick up. After reading the screenplay, everything comes together and one can find the missing pieces in this murder mystery modern film noir. An excellent screenplay to compliment an superb movie.

The best movie of the decade!
L.A. Confidential, winner of 2 1997 Academy Awards, is a classic thriller that is completely unforgettable. The script includes characters who were portrayed by Kevin Spacey, Russell Crowe, Guy Pearce, James Cromwell, Kim Basinger, (in her oscar winning performance) and Danny Devito. They all live in Los Angeles and are involved in a conspiracy in which is a mystery of who killed who? Anyhow, there are several plots to the script involving cops, reporters, and even HOOKERS THAT LOOK LIKE MOVIE STARS (Kim Basinger) I give this Academy Award winning script a superb rating that should be recommended to numerous people across the country. It's an unforgettable suspense classic you don't want to miss!

Astounding
When I saw this movie, I was blown away. Now, being a kid, I didn't really get the full effect of the movie and didn't understand some of the plot, until, that is, I bought thi Screenplay. it made a lot of things clear. And also, it tells you the stage directions, which, if you want to use a piece from this a a monologue is a whole lot easier... A few complaints, though. There are some great lines in the movie that weren't included in the book and some extra ones that you don't see in the movie. For example, Captain Dudley is not Irish! Anyway, that only matters to nuts like myself. In closing, it's a great book and is worth it. I memorized the entire movie!


Fallen Angels: Six Noir Tales Told for Television
Published in Paperback by Grove Press (1993)
Authors: James Ellroy, Raymond Chandler, and Cornell Woolrich
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A good book for James Ellroy fans
This would make a useful text for classes centering on film/literature: six short stories by noir writers are juxtaposed with the shooting scripts for film adaptations commissioned by Showtime cable TV. The book holds particular value for James Ellroy fans: Ellroy supplies the introduction, and his short story, "Since I Don't Have You," is among the adaptations. Stills from the various episodes of the cable series, "Fallen Angels" are also incorporated in the book. Worth a look for fans of noir and especially for the self-dubbed Demon Dog of American Crime Fiction.


Blood on the Moon
Published in Hardcover by Mysterious Press (1986)
Author: James Ellroy
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OPUS THREE
Third book of James Ellroy and first novel of the Lloyd Hopkins trilogy, BLOOD ON THE MOON has been published in 1984.

Adopting for the first time in his career an omniscient point of view, James Ellroy describes two destinies meant to meet for a deadly encounter. Both men have suffered a traumatic sexual experience in their teen days. Lloyd Hopkins has become the best criminal investigator of the Los Angeles Police Department and spends his life protecting "the Innocence". On the contrary, "The Poet" has developed a serial killer syndrome and murders young women, repeating indefinitely the same vengeance scheme.

Unlike Fred Underhill, the main character of CLANDESTINE, Ellroy's precedent book, Lloyd Hopkins doesn't consider his job as redemptive, he simply sees it as the most important thing in his life and will therefore lose his wife. He is a missionary to whom to be the best means to be alone, in his job and in his life.

I've liked a lot the way James Ellroy compares the psychology of his protagonists who have to react in front of the same situations. I also remember very well the shock I had when I discovered BLOOD ON THE MOON in 1985 ; it was the first time in my life as a reader that I had the feeling that a thriller could be also literature.

A book for your library.

MASTERPIECE
One of the best crime novels I've ever read. Ellroy is in superb control of his word choices, imagery, metaphors and symbolism. At one level the novel is a horribly realistic hunt for a serial killer. Simultaneously, it's the tale of a white knight out to slay the vampire who devours innocent blood. Watch whenever the words "blood" or "moon" are used. Robert B. Parker tries to do this with Spenser (at least he used to, before he found that comedy is his true talent), but Ellroy succeeds. The other two novels in the "LA Noir" trilogy are also great, but Blood on the Moon is the best. I understand that Ellroy's other work is set in 40's and 50's LA, but I wish he would do more contemporary work. This novel is pure gold.

Beyond Good and Evil
I'm an avid James Ellroy fan, and was disappointed to see that this paperback had gone out of print--thankfully you can get this classic Ellroy as an e-book. The book is a dark and somewhat macabre story about the cross-over between good and evil (a cop who understands a killer perhaps better than he should). If you liked LA Confidential you should check this one out.


American Tabloid
Published in Paperback by Vintage Books (2001)
Author: James Ellroy
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A Master at the Top of his Game
In "American Tabloid", James Ellroy achieves what few authors ever accomplish. He flawlessly writes his own characters into the political and mob world of the late 1950's and early 1960's, and he makes his plot believeable. As you read conversations that include, JFK, RFK, Sam Giancanna and other famous mob bosses, you have to wonder "this IS fiction, isn't it"

"American Tabloid" focuses on the mafia's role in the election of JFK, the Bay of Pigs, and the JFK assasination. As in all of Ellroy's books, no one gets away clean. Pete Boudurant, mob bagman and muscle; Kemper Boyd, FBI agent, CIA operative, looking out only for number one; and Ward J. Little, an FBI agent with a bizzare love/hate obsession with the Kennedy's. These ruthless men and their dealings provide the framework for one of the most brutal, ambitious novels ever written.

Ellroy has finally perfected his staccatto prose that he dabbled with in "LA Confidential" and experimented with openly in "White Jazz". The effect is like a literary high, as the book manages to develop several complex charchters with 50's/60's slang and short sentances. The book picks up quickly and never lets up. This book turned me onto the world of James Ellroy, and any reader with an interest in crime fiction needs to read this. Ellroy's second masterpiece, after "LA Confidential".

Kemper Boyd: American Anti-Hero
Some hardcore Ellroy fans might not enjoy American Tabloid and it's sequel, The Cold Ten Thousand, as much as they could, because these books represent a significant departure from Ellroy's 1940s and 1950s noir-detective novels. These readers should give them a chance, I think, because American Tabloid is arguably the best thing Ellroy has ever written. And if it is the best thing Ellroy has written, that means it is among the top American works of fiction in the past fifty years.

Ellroy creates a truly memorable cast of characters, including the unforgettable Kemper Boyd - Kennedy family insider aspirant - and Pete Bondurant - rock-hard extortionist, bag-man, killer - and he sets them loose in a wonderland of early 1960s American mayhem: J. Edgar Hoover's diabolic machinations; the Bay of Pigs; the apex of Mafia power. And all the events, all the characters, roar ceaselessly if unconsciously toward a singular end - the assassination of JFK.

Fantastic book. Strongly recommended.

FANTASTIC!

This book is tremendous -- I'm so glad that I decided to pick up "L.A. Confidential" (my first Ellroy novel) a few months ago. Since then, I've read six more, including "American Tabloid." I have to say that it runs a CLOSE second to "L.A. Confidential," which I'm partial to probably only because it was my first experience with Ellroy.

"American Tabloid" was fascinating to me, partly because (since I'm only a teenager) I'm unfamiliar with most of the events of the 1950s that the book refers to. This gave me a crash course in recent American history and made it a hell of a lot more exciting, jaded, cynical, and distorted than any textbook possibly could. "American Tabloid" shows us a view of the Kennedys that sharply contrasts the reverent adoration of today's America. The other reason I was fascinated by "American Tabloid" was because of Ellroy's great characters -- the three main characters (Ward, Kemper, and Pete) undergo drastic transformations throughout the novel, making them alternately despicable and likable. Like his other works, the character development is this novel's greatest strength!

This is a fantastic read -- absolutely unforgettable and compelling. It's a must-read for the Ellroy fan! If you liked his take on L.A., you'll definitely like his take on the great U.S.A. I can't wait for the next two of this trilogy!!!


L A Confidential
Published in Audio Cassette by Barr Audio (1992)
Author: James Ellroy
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Flawed, but intelligent and gripping crime drama
Set in the dark, bloody atmosphere of 1950's Los Angeles, James Ellroy's "L.A. Confidential" is a brutal, harsh, unsettling, disturbing, confusing, intelligent, and, ultimately, masterful crime drama. The plot is a thickly layered story involving three detectives, Edmund Exley, Wendell (Bud) White, and John Vincennes, and their exploits considering their own lives during the timeframe of the novel. The plot also revolves around the slayings of six people at the Nite Owl, a diner whose infamy spreads throughout the course of the novel. This is just one of many different plots that intertwine to make an incredibly complex novel, filled with hundreds of characters rich in depth and characterization.

Ellroy's genius lies in his development of plot and characters. This novel is wildly different from the movie and its screenplay. The screenplay was a masterpiece, simply because Ellroy's novel is basically unfilmable in its present state. The novel is too dense, too dark, and too complex to make a movie that makes any sense within time constraints. Brian Helgeland and Curtis Hanson deserve considerable credit for taking this mammoth novel and condensing, stripping away plot lines and characters by the dozen. Some of the changes they made were masterful, some detract from the overall impact of the film. Ellroy's fixation is on characters. He has many of them, all deeply constructed. No character is without flaws. The character most interesting in this maze is Jack Vincennes, the smart detective whose life takes a variety of turns throughout the novel. It should be mentioned the novel is ABSOLUTELY nothing like the movie. The movie takes place during months; the book takes 7 years to complete its saga. The character of Jack Vincennes in particular is investigated much more in depth through Ellroy's version. The matter of Ed Exley's father, the involvement of Hollywood, and a Hispanic woman named Inez Soto, all missing from the movie, are central characters to this novel.

Somehow, Ellroy keeps all these characters straight. He has a shocking conclusion, and truly keeps a reader riveted. At its dullest, L.A. Confidential can be a confusing mess, but Ellroy always sprinkles scenes of savage violence and brutality to waken the reader. It must be said that this is not a novel for the faint-of-heart. Ellroy exposes the bigotry of 1950's Los Angeles through its hatred of blacks, homosexuals, and other minorities. This, combined with plots on smut, rape, murder, and the like, make this a book which is very powerful, graphic, and brutal. Ellroy's style is not beautiful, but rather shocking. He tries to stun the reader into submission, using very little description but rather blunt, graphic passages to get his point across. His only distinctive writing style is his use of newspaper clippings to tell about 10% of his story: the method is remarkably effective, since it diverts the reader from the profane, blunt, and direct writing of Ellroy just enough to keep the reader's sanity.

This is not an easy book by any means. Its language is very difficult, for it is colloquial profanity, mixed with language so graphic that the book takes on a dirty, forbidden tone. Its positives, however, far outweigh its negatives. It is truly a work of art, not graceful, but brutally intelligent. The plotlines are brimming with inspiration and rich color, the characters are distinctive and memorable, and the conclusion is a devastatingly pure and noble ending. Ellroy is a master of writing, and during most of the book, it shows. He is inspired at the end, taking his myriad of loose ends and combining them into one glorious plot that leaves the reader in awe.

The trick is getting to the end. The plot lines are wickedly confusing; Ellroy challenges the reader to keep with his pace. Moreover, the action is spread out over a long period of time. Many characters, though provided for color, are expendable, and it is easy to see why Hanson and Helgeland condensed the novel so much. It is quite difficult to get to the end of this book while understanding all of the numerous happenings and plots. However, despite the numerous flaws, and the often dull spots in the middle (though combined with gratuitous violence and sex), L.A. Confidential is a winning story and novel after everything is said and done. It is quite memorable, simply because it works at the end, it is an enjoyable, though exhausting ride. The violence and sex, although gratuitous, makes a rich atmosphere unparalleled since the days of Hammett and Chandler. It is a read quite worth it.

Overwhelmingly fast, dense, and satisfying
For better or worse, I'd seen the film before I picked up this book. I guess it's for the better, actually, because if the film hadn't been so intense and enjoyable I would not have read the book (I haven't read too much in this genre or any of Ellroy's work). Ellroy has said that he enjoyed the movie but that the actors don't quite match up with his visions of them. I agree. It took a few chapters to make the transition from what I'd seen in the film to what I was reading, but before long I had my own conceptions of the characters and no longer saw Kevin Spacey and Danny DeVito. This is a tribute Ellroy's ability to convey tones of character in few words -- there's very little exposition in this book! Ellroy has created characters who reveal themselves through action, not discussion (although the L.A. gangland dialect is a lark). In a byzantine plot such as "L.A. Confidential's", you need good characters to latch onto for the ride. Ellroy succeeds in creating characters that are dark, unpredictable, yet highly sympathetic. Ellroy also scores major points with his use of newspaper "stories" (both legitimate and tabloid) to propel the story down it's path pell-mell. Violent, jaded, cynical, you name it -- this book keeps you riveted, even if you sometimes have to go back and reread a chapter or two to remind yourself exactly what's going on.

This book will blow you away!
As a huge fan of film noir and a sometime writer focusing on short crime stories, I was in awe of this book. At first I was daunted by the size of this volume, but I loved the movie so I figured I'd give it a shot. Dark, complex, full of flawed heroes, this book was the DEFINITION of noir. I dove into Ellroy's detailed explanations of why his characters are the way they are. I found myself holding my breath during the action scenes as if I were a hack reporter for a scandal rag watching the events unfold before me. Ellroy's tense prose made me feel a part of the investigation behind the Nite Owl murders. I wanted this mystery solved as surely as if I were investigating it, thanks to the caliber of writing (and Ellroy has a gift of transporting you to L.A. in the 1950's...opening this book is like jumping in a time machine). All-in-all a top-notch, must-read by the best crime writer of our age


My Dark Places
Published in Audio Cassette by Books on Tape, Inc. (16 April, 1997)
Author: James Ellroy
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An Incredible Memoir
On a spring Sunday afternoon of 1958, 10-year-old James Ellroy returned to his El Monte residence after spending a weekend with his father. He wondered why the residence was surrounded by police cars and uniformed officers. Ellroy was quickly informed that his mother had been killed.

Jean Ellroy, a former Midwest beauty contest winner who had come to Southern California in hopes of becoming a film star, had been raped, then strangled, her body left in an empty lot next door to a school. The tragic death prompted Ellroy's life to spin into a web of tragedy and confusion and he did not find himself and end his turbulent existence until he reached his thirties.

After his mother's death young Ellroy went to live with his father. His parents had divorced and his father, an accountant who once worked for screen siren Rita Hayworth, was going to seed through alcohol. At a time when Ellroy needed stability and proper attention he received neither.

Ellroy sought recognition in the wrong way. Attending a predominantly Jewish school in West Los Angeles, he successfully shocked and antagonized his schoolmates after riding his bicycle to Hollywood and obtaining anti-Semitic right wing hate literature from the notorious John Birchite local bookstore, "Poor Richard's," reading the material, then unleashing it on his schoolmates. He also lost himself in a world of alcohol and drugs, holed up in an abandoned residence at one point, and burgled homes in the area.

His life began taking a different turn when he went to work at a ritzy local country club. Though he was ultimately fired after a physical altercation, it was here that Ellroy stumbled on what would become a lucrative profession that would make him an international celebrity. Still seeking to comprehend the meaning of his mother's unsolved murder, Ellroy began reading Jack Webb's magazine regularly. Webb became famous in the fifties as the creator of the hugely successful "Dragnet" television series, which he produced and starred in, playing a Los Angeles police detective. Ellroy read the magazines religiously, began reading crime novels of the greats such as Chandler and Hammett, and finally began writing himself. It was anything but coincidental that one of Ellroy's biggest hits was "The Black Dahlia" based on the character Elizabeth Short, who came to Los Angeles in hopes of becoming a film star, was brutally murdered, and left in a vacant lot by her killer. The facts closely paralleled the life and death of Jean Ellroy.

When Ellroy achieved riches and renown, also producing such runaway bestsellers as "American Tabloid" and "L.A. Confidential," the latter becoming a highly successful film, he turned his attention to the detective case which had dominated his mind from 1958, the unsolved murder of his mother. Ellroy secured the services of retired Los Angeles homicide detective Bill Stoner to assist him in his effort to crack the case. Ultimately Stoner would become the detective novelist's best friend as they revisited crime scenes in and around El Monte and closely re-examined all available evidence.

While their cumulative efforts would not result in finding the killer or killers of Jean Ellroy, the novelist would find the experience cathartic. He came to know his mother in a way he never had earlier.

One of the most interesting aspects of the investigation was the interview of a woman who had been working as a car hop at a drive in, believed to be the last person to see Jean Ellroy alive aside from her killer. The woman described Jean as a gregarious, friendly woman. The man with her, however, was uncommunicative. The description she gave of a tall, swarthy, dark-haired man correlates with the disclosures of others who earlier that night saw Jean drinking with a man fitting that description at an El Monte nightclub-bar. The same man had been seen at the same establishment as well as another in the area prior to that night. He would never be seen again in the area.

Speculation further abounded over the murder by strangulation of a woman not far from where Jean Ellroy met her death about a year later. If the suspect in question had been a serial killer, however, using that MO, then a question emerged: Why was there no further evidence of future murders or attempts?

The best guess as to what happened to Jean Ellroy was furnished by those who concluded that her killer, expecting sex, ran into resistance. Deciding to take her despite her resistance, spurred on by alcohol, he ultimately concluded that it was better to kill Jean Ellroy rather than risk her reporting the rape to the police. It was very late, dark, and there was presumably no one around so the rapist decided to opt for murder to silence Jean Ellroy. Police investigators speculate that he was an intelligent, perhaps well educated man due to the thoroughness displayed subsequent to the killing. In that he was never seen in El Monte again he might well have been from another area.

This is a work perhaps even more riveting than Ellroy's traditional page-turning fiction in that this is a story of a young boy who lost his mother at the impressionable age of 10, and who was determined to understand Jean Ellroy better and reach a measure of closure in his life.

A Dark and Disturbing Memoir of Real Life Noir
Over the past twenty years, James Ellroy has written nearly a dozen novels that have established him as the foremost contemporary successor to the noir crime fiction of forerunners such as Raymond Chandler, Dashiel Hammett and James Cain. Set primarily in Los Angeles (although some of his novels, such as "American Tabloid", have taken on bigger settings and themes), Ellroy's narratives are marked by what one critic has described as a "telegraphic" style, one short sentence following another in a breathless staccato of hard-boiled language, graphic (at times grisly) description, and a pervasive, and often seemingly morbid and pessimistic, obsession with sexual crime and violence.

Ellroy is an astonishingly good writer, albeit a writer who is not for everyone: his vivid and grotesquely detailed explorations of rape and murder, of men preying on woman, of brutal police practices, often make the reader squeamish and uncomfortable. The effect is powerful testimony to the talent.

But where does Ellroy's remarkable writing come from? "My Dark Places," subtitled "An L.A. Crime Memoir," provides an answer: from the real life noir of Ellroy's life.

On a Sunday morning in June, 1958, James Ellroy's forty-five year old mother, Jean, was murdered. Her body was found in a vacant lot next to a school in El Monte, California, a gritty, working class city east of Los Angeles. "A nylon stocking and a cotton cord were lashed around her neck. Both ligatures were tightly knotted." James Ellroy was ten years old at the time. His parents were divorced. He had just returned home from a weekend visit with his father when he was told about the murder. While a "Swarthy Man" was seen with the victim, the murder was never solved.

"My Dark Places" tells the story of Jean Ellroy's murder in 1958. It also tells the story of the next twenty years of James Ellroy's life, when he drifted to drugs and alcohol, to an obsession with crimes of sex and violence, to a kind of noirish bottom which was the prelude to his life as a writer. It tells the story of how the noir obsessions of Ellroy's fictions were the creative and self-sustaining response to the dark episodes of his real life. And, finally, it tells the story of Ellroy's renewed search for his mother's murderer and, along the way, his search for his mother herself. In Ellroy's words:

"I knew things about us. I sensed other things. Her death corrupted my imagination and gave me exploitable gift. My mother gave me the gift and the curse of obsession. It began as curiosity in lieu of childish grief. It flourished as a quest for dark knowledge and mutated into a horrible thirst for sexual and mental stimulation. Obsessive drives almost killed me. A rage to turn my obsessions into something good and useful saved me. I outlived the curse. The gift assumed its final form in language."

"My Dark Places" is a dark and disturbing memoir, an intimate plunge into the life and the psyche of James Ellroy. It is also, like his novels, a chilling exploration of real life crimes of sex and violence in Los Angeles, Ellroy's search for his mother's murderer being the touchstone for a narrative contrail of grisly and perverse crimes that he encounters along the way.

Brutally Honest Hardboiled Look at Author's Dark Places
My Dark Places is James Ellroy's fascinating and dark look at his relationship with his mother who was murdered when the author was 10. Leaving nothing to the imagination and writing in the same style he has used in his previous fiction works, Ellroy treats us to a fascinating if sometimes macabre look at his personal life following the death of his mother. Ellroy's mother was strangled and left near his home in El Monte when the author was 10. Ellroy uses this book to talk about the feelings he had as a child, his behavior after, and his search as an adult for the killer of his mother. Through his search, he gets in touch with all the forbidden feelings he's had locked up inside for many years. Few authors would dare to write what Ellroy has here, revealing a combination of feelings which few of us would ever even admit to having for our parents. This remarkable book also shows the redemptive nature of getting in touch with those feelings leaving his soul to bare for the world to see. Compelling.


The Big Nowhere
Published in Audio Cassette by Books on Tape (1988)
Author: James Ellroy
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A skillful piece of crime drama
After more than enjoying Ellroy's Black Dahlia and L.A. Confidential, I gripped this book. Maybe it was a tiny disappointment, since the story didn't really get going until I was halway through, but in the end I felt satisfied anyway.

Ellroy is really a tough guy, his books are among the most brutal and cynical I've ever read. There is humanity, he seems to say, but it's destiny is always to give way for lust of power and money. A realistic view, truly. The Big Nowhere is maybe even darker than his other books - in the end, all there's left is... well, the big nowhere, and man driving through it, probably heading for his own death. That's what they call existentialism, I suppose. Ellroy has something to say, which is rare nowadays.

An American Masterpiece
I picked up a paperback copy of this book on a whim years ago and became a life-long Ellroy fan. Brutal? Yes. Compelling? Even more so. The book grabs your head in a vise and will not allow you to look away no matter how painful. Ellroy wrote several books before this, not showing too much promise until The Black Dahlia when suddenly he burst onto the scene as a writer to be reckoned with. The Big Nowhere is a full-fledged masterpiece of American Mystery Fiction and can not be ignored. My 19 year old son tried to read it but gave up saying, "I'll try again when I grow up." The writing style exhibited here has evolved way beyond that of ordinary thrillers and, to Ellroys credit, it keeps evolving through his next books culminating in the unique White Jazz. Again, to his credit, he returns to his more conventional, but still one-of-a-kind style for American Tabloid. Still, if you only read one Ellroy novel, indeed, if you read only 1 mystery The Big Nowhere is the place. An astounding novel.

One of the high points of American crime fiction
James Ellroy's so-called "L.A. Quartet" (The Black Dahlia, The Big Nowhere, L.A. Confidential, and White Jazz) is one of the seminal bodies of work in American crime fiction. I have chosen to include a review under "The Big Nowhere" not because I feel it is the best book of the four (L.A. Confidential has a broader scope, takes greater risks, and is more compelling); simply, none of the other books moved me as much as this one did.

Danny Upshaw, Mal Considine, and Buzz Meeks are among the most vividly-drawn and complex characters ever found in a crime novel. Despite the glaring character flaws in each one of them, some of which border on repugnance, I still managed to empathize with them completely. Ellroy is an absolute master when it comes to tying characters' actions to their various motivations and desires. This gives his works a depth that goes beyond the mere telling of a story. The ways in which Upshaw, Considine, and Meeks relate to the action--the ways in which they internalize it and bend it to their own specific set of needs--force the reader to take a personal interest in them. They are no longer merely the vehicle to draw the reader into the action, as most "detective" characters are in this genre; instead, each one provides a distinct point of view of the action, shaping it as much as they are shaped by it. Not since Philip Marlowe went to jail for Terry Lennox--and Marlowe's own ideals--has a crime novel so tightly woven plot with character.

The story itself is too complicated to do justice in a brief review so I won't even try. The sheer number of subplots and ancillary characters could fill out the entire oeuvre of lesser writers, but Ellroy seamlessly integrates it all into a story that will have you playing the angles long after the book is finished. In fact, a second reading is almost necessary to catch all the nuance.

If you're a fan of detective fiction, these books are required reading. Even if you're not, Ellroy is a fine writer on any level. If you're squeamish at all, you should take a pass.


Big Black Bear
Published in Paperback by Houghton Mifflin Co (1996)
Author: Wong Herbert Yee
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The most engaging book I've read in 5 years.
I'd never heard of James Ellroy until a friend gave me his copy of "The Black Dahlia" and said, "Read this, and then you can thank me." To be honest, this was also my first time reading crime fiction. But I gave it a chance, and when I finished I thanked my friend. About 50 times. The story is based on a real case in the 1940's, the gruesome murder of a young woman/Hollywood wannabe. At the center of the investigation are two policemen, both obsessed with the case for personal reasons. The mystery of who killed her unravels so intelligently, the dialogue is so sharp, and the setting so noirish, that I found myself reading the book very slowly--not because it's difficult, but because I did not want it to end. Well, of course it ended, but not before some very fun surprises. I'm not exaggerating when I say that I found something clever, juicy or funny on every page.

Simply the Best
James Ellroy's "The Black Dahlia" is almost too dark, too gripping and too believable. It stands out among a crowd of mysteries (sub-genre police procedural) as simply a great novel. Most mysteries I put down and forget that I've read them. The characters from Ellroy's noir vision of L.A. in the late 1940s and early 1950s are indelibly etched in my mind, as is Ellroy's characterization of the period and location itself. This is the most visceral book I've ever read.

I picked up this book myself from Partners and Crime's Top 100 shelf (P&C is an awesome mystery bookstore in Manhattan's Greenwich Village). I loaned my copy to a friend, who gave it back to me a week later and said he didn't want to read the rest of the series or any other mystery novel again in his life -- this one was perfect and anything else would just ruin his ability to savor "The Black Dahlia". I loaned it to a second friend who finished it in a week, and then went out and bought the complete Ellroy ouevre. This is not a one-night read unless you have strong eyes, strong coffee, heroic concentration and an iron will.

If you get a chance, hear Ellroy read from these books in person.

Sequencing Ellroy's books is tough, because they're all similar in terms of time frame, setting, and characters. The L.A. trilogy plus one is:

* 1947: The Black Dahlia
* 1950: The Big Nowhere
* 1951: L. A. Confidential
* 1958: White Jazz

Dudley Smith also appears in Ellroy's second novel, "Clandestine", set in 1951.

Gritty, Graphic, Vividly Imagined Noir
On January 15, 1947, the mutilated body of a beautiful young woman was found in a vacant lot at 39th and Norton in the City of Los Angeles. The woman was twenty-two year old Elizabeth Short, a femme fatale who had moved from Medford, Massachusetts to Southern California as a teenager and lived an itinerant and promiscuous life in post-World War II Hollywood. Her body had been cut in half at the waist and disemboweled. It also showed signs of extreme torture. It was a gruesome murder that caught the undivided attention of the Los Angeles press, particularly the Hearst papers, as well as that of the Los Angeles police and district attorney's office. Quickly dubbed the "Black Dahlia" murder, the real-life crime remains unsolved to this day and has been a fertile source of books and articles speculating on the perpetrator of this noirish horror.

"The Black Dahlia" is James Ellroy's fictional re-working of the story, a gritty, graphic and vividly imagined crime novel that marks Ellroy as the finest, and perhaps only, contemporary successor to Chandler, Hammett and Cain.

"The Black Dahlia" is the first-person, hard-boiled narrative of Bucky Bleichert, a member of the LAPD Warrants Squad at the time of the Black Dahlia murder. Bleichert, and his partner, Lee Blanchard, are both former boxers. They also share the friendship and romantic attention of a young woman named Kay Lake, a woman with intellectual interests and a somewhat checkered past. From this starting point, Ellroy writes a fascinating, complex and cynical tale of how the fascination with the murdered Elizabeth Short-the Black Dahlia-marks the lives of all the books characters (and this book is bursting with characters and motives).

Ellroy is brilliant in developing a wide range of realistic characters, in writing and successfully resolving a complex and extraordinarily imagined plot, and in depicting the corrupt and often self-serving underbelly of the LAPD and District Attorney's office in post-World War II Los Angeles. In a tone which suggests the subversive and conspiratorial elements of Don DeLillo's "Underworld", but written in the starker style of a noir novel, Ellroy uses the real-life story to show the manipulation and corruption that often belies what we read in the popular press and what lives on in the popular imagination.

"The Black Dahlia" is not intended to be a factual accounting of the real-life murder. Rather, it is a fiction that brilliantly uses the real-life murder to develop a vivid (and at times gut-wrenchingly graphic) description of how the lurid fascination with the Black Dahlia became obsessive, fetishistic, in the lives of Ellroy's characters. If you're interested in noir, or even if you're interested in just plain good, hard-boiled crime novels, "The Black Dahlia" should be at the top of your reading list.


White Jazz
Published in Paperback by Vintage Books (2001)
Author: James Ellroy
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Great, fine, off-kilter crime novel - decision? Must read.
White Jazz: novel, long, odd.

James Ellroy: author. Turns out a good sentence. Knows his stuff. Tough. Uncompromising. Not afraid of risks.

Style: Unusual. Off-putting. Jangled. Nervy. Hard to follow. Worth the trouble.

Dudley Smith: Ellroy's signature character. Evil. Obscene. Brutal. Good to see him again.

Problems: Confusing. Often. Get. Lost. In. Stacatto. Prose.

Plusses: Stream of Consciousness choice inspired. Gets in mind of Dave Klein. Doesn't judge him. Lets us into his world.

Overall: Don't miss. L.A. Confidential - Big Nowhere - Black Dahlia - White Jazz. Terrific. All.

Don't Be Put Off - Riff On White Jazz
Dig: Every book in the L.A. Quartet is a must. Every one of them. Feature you read just one or start in the middle, you're a chump. White Jazz - a great closer. Can't miss.

After reading the first three novels in the series, I was reluctant to read White Jazz. I was scared off hearing so much about Ellroy's deepening usage of staccato prose and unattributed dialogue. I was led to believe the book was almost written in an experimental language. Well, I am writing this review for one purpose: to keep people from being fearful of this amazing book. If you like Ellroy, and if you've enjoyed the quartet thus far, you'll love it.

Is White Jazz my favorite in the series? No. I still prefer L.A. Confidential, followed by The Big Nowhere. But White Jazz is much more evolved than The Black Dahlia. And as brutal and dark as it is, White Jazz has more laughs than all the other quartet novels combined. While the novel's halting presentation doesn't allow you to roll through the pages, that's almost a blessing, because every line is dense with nuance and information. You want to pay attention.

I absolutely recommend reading the series in order, and if you're through L.A. Confidential, you simply must complete the quartet. White Jazz strikes the perfect notes in capping the series, and ties up a few ends along the way. It is beautiful, savage, powerful and stunning.

Feature it's more challenging than a Grisham book. Feature that's a good thing. Dig: No big deal. Don't get scared off. Brass knucks/brain swelling/reading in bed. Big fun - big reward. CRAAAAZY.

Hard-boiled brilliance
(Actually 4.5 stars) As a reader I was relatively new to James Ellroy and his work. Having purchased this book at an airport shop I wasn't expecting a great deal from it. Boy was I mistaken! What amazed and enthralled me more than anything about White jazz was the way in which the characters draw you inexorably into their own corrupt, upside-down world. Weaving together a cast of magnetic (if morally suspect) people and a Byzantine plot Ellroy manages to immerse us totally and effortlessly in Dave "the enforcer" Klein's seedy L.A habitat. This being my first brush with Ellroy I (like a few others evidently) found his staccato, machine gun style of prose hard to follow at first. But after a while I found that the writing style suited and complimented the content greatly, and if anything it added to the overall effectiveness and weight of the story.

White jazz works both as a good old fashioned crime noir, and as a fascinating look into the darker recesses of the human soul. Brilliant stuff.


Relentless 3
Published in VHS Tape by New Line Studios (29 August, 1995)
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solid crime novel but not his best
This was Ellroy's first published novel. It's a good, solid crime novel. It's mostly in the tradition of his predecessors like Chandler and Hammett, but some of his future trademarks are there, like the seedy anti-hero who eventually discovers and follows his own moral imperative. It's a bit bumpy in spots, and sometimes the plot falls into place a bit too neatly, but it's a good read. It's not nearly as amazing as the L.A. Quartet or American Tabloid, all brilliant books for which he has become justifiably famous. I read this after reading those (as well as My Dark Places and Crime Wave). Had I read this first, I would have been shocked by his later work. Maybe The Black Dahlia is a better place to start for the Ellroy novice.. This one seems almost quaint in comparison.

Not the best, but still a very good book
This is a story of the low-lifes of LA, the white trash doing whatever they can to get a few dollars. The low-life character is not built upon their low finacial status or their academic unability, but rather on their non-existing ethics. This, I think, is one of the major contributions Ellroy has made for the crime novel in our times. Crime and crime-solving are not the works of good samaritans, but rather scrupulous anti-christs, wheter it's the early 1980's (as in Brown's requiem) or the post-war era (as in the LA Quartet). This is why Ellroy is, in my point of view, the master of his genre. If you consider the fact that Brown's Requiem was his first novel, and that the book didn't turn out exactly as he planned, then you have to admire him, since the book is very good. OK, it couldn't qualify into the LA Quartet, but still. If you've read every book from the Black Dahlia and forwards and are thinking about reading works from other authors, don't, because this novel is in its structure a lot like those marvellous books and therefor an excellent choice for Ellroy fans. If you haven't read an Ellroy-book before, I suggest that you'd start with this one (Brown's Requiem) and thus giving yourself a concrete foundation and a greater reading experiece when going on to read the LA Quartet.

Ellroy's First Kicks Ass
Getting into Ellroy? Why not start at the beginning? Watch his style develop. I think folks get disappointed when they read this and other earlier works after they read "the hits" like "L.A. Confidential" and "American Tabloid." But hey, had he come out of the gates with "American Tabloid" he'd probably be done by now. Fortunately for us, Ellroy started off slow. "Brown's Requiem" is a much more straightforward hard-boiled novel. But just like his later work, it rocks, it rolls, it leaves you on the side of the road hitchiking back to town. As I read this book, I couldn't help thinking of it as an updated "The Big Sleep." It has that sad, broken, 3 am undertone to it. If you dig that tough, L.A. stuff, you'll dig this. Note: The story does involve caddies and golf (which I know nothing about) but it doesn't matter. The golf element is merely a backdrop. The book is also about murder, arson and Mexican porn and, regardless of what my friends will tell you, I know nothing about these subjects either and still enjoyed the Hell out this book. Put it this way: You won't be reading any excerpts from "Brown's Requiem" in "Chicken Soup for the Golfer's Soul."


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