21 of 23 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Cause Wrapped Up In A Novel, Sep 24 2006
By Brett Benner - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Ethical Assassin: A Novel (Hardcover)
Many people have commented on how this could be something that Carl Hiaasen could've penned, and I couldn't agree more. Set in Florida in the mid eighties the book begins with a seventeen year old encylopedia salesman named Lem Altick who, while pitching his product to a couple, witnesses their brutal slaying. Their assassin turns out to be a charming, intelligent guy whose agenda, or more appropriately 'mission', reveals itself later in the book in a didactic (to the point of bashing you over the head) way. However, before this, the book is ripe with a madcap plot and cast of off the wall characters that flavor Hiassen novels including, an oversexed redneck sheriff, and the surviving half of Siamese twins. The book is genuinely funny, and even though the shady dealings that are going on are not that unique, his characters are.
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Liss masters a different genre, Aug 25 2006
By Cory D. Slipman - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Ethical Assassin: A Novel (Hardcover)
David Liss, so accomplished in his previous forte, the historical fiction, has penned a highly entertaining contemporary thriller that borders on the absurd in a style similar to Carl Hiassen.
The story evolves in the relating of the experiences of 17 year old South Floridian, Lem Altick. Lem, a bright and perceptive young man had been accepted to Columbia University. Circumstances arose which left him $30,000 short of the tuition required. He was attempting to make money by selling encyclopedias door to door, with a mostly motley crew presently canvassing the vicinity of Jacksonville.
Lem had apparently struck gold in a foul smelling trailer park known as Meadowbrook Grove. He was giving his best sales pitch to a sketchy looking couple named Karen and Bastard when suddenly someone bursts into the trailer and dispatches the couple with two gunshots to the head. This was Lem's startling introduction to the "ethical assassin", the bleached blonde, ghoulish looking Melford Kean.
Kean wishing to assure Lem's silence planted clues that would implicate him should Lem squeal. Kean, a rational psychotic was unwilling to harm Lem and recruited him to help him cover his tracks concerning his actions. We soon learn that Melford is a fervent animal rights activist and vegetarian. All through their interactions, Melford tries to sway Lem to his particular ideology.
Meadowbrook Grove, it turns out, is a separate principality governed by corrupt mayor and police chief Jim Doe, who had set up the trailer park as a speed trap. The mullet coiffed, dentally challenged Doe is also a front man for the local enterprises ensconsed in Meadowbrook Grove owned by Miami Vice attired, borderline pedophile B.B. Gunn. Gunn owns a foul smelling pig farm which also serves as a front for an illegal crystal meth lab. Gunn is also connected with the encyclopedia business, whose leader known as the Gambler (real name is Kenny Rogers) was a former leg breaker in Las Vegas.
The double homicide witnessed by Lem has potential to expose the whole slimy operation in Meadowbrook Grove. Liss navigates us through the odyssey of Lem Altick as he tries to stay out of harm's way while coming in contact with a bevy of bizarre characters.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
Big Departure for Liss, Jan 20 2008
By S. Schwartz "romonko" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Ethical Assassin: A Novel (Paperback)
I too am a huge fan of David Liss's writing, and I love his two Benjamin Weaver books. This book is as different from these as possible. For one thing the setting is 1985 Florida, not some much earlier historical time in Europe. For another, this book has a different storyline altogether. It chronicles one wild weekend in a 17-year-old Enclopedia salesman's life when he gets on the wrong side of the law, and on the right side of a strangely ethical assassin. Poor Lem doesn't know what he has gotten himself into when two potential customes are shot right in front of him. The book kept my interest, and it was actually quite funny, but somehow it fell short at the denouement stage. The book is certainly worth reading if only for the sheer fun of it, and its probably as bizarre as fiction can get. But I can't help hoping that Liss will get back to a much earlier time in history with his next book.