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Hell to Pay
 
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Hell to Pay (Hardcover)

de George Pelecanos (Author)
4.2étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (28 évaluations de client)

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From Amazon.com

In Hell to Pay, Washington, D.C., is just one more thug in an endless list of thugs who brutalize the poor, the weak, and the young. The primary victim this time is a rising star on Derek Strange's Pee Wee football team. In this city where making T-shirts for bereaved families of young murder victims is a full-time business, the boy is an accidental victim in a war between drug dealers and lowlifes.

Private investigator Strange, in his second George Pelecanos outing (after 2001's Right as Rain), has seen enough of this face of D.C. His relationship to his secretary/lover Janine sputters in the wake of increasing, irrational infidelities. His moral compass swings wildly as he tracks the killers, Garfield "Death" Potter and friends. Not knowing if he can be satisfied seeing these men in prison, Strange contemplates other brands of "justice."

For fans of Pelecanos, all the usual trappings are here: the hyper-real dialogue, the bloody street fights, the immersion in classic R&B, and the most current music on the streets. Pelecanos does stumble in a few places. His narrative becomes wooden at times, and his plot features a couple of glaring coincidences (e.g., Strange just happens to jot down the license plate of a car that later turns out to be the one driven by the murderers). But Pelecanos is the real deal in noir. If Dennis Lehane owns Boston and Michael Connelly is master of L.A., Pelecanos is dark D.C.'s intimate chronicler. --Patrick O'Kelley



From Publishers Weekly

You know you're in Pelecanos country when the music begins early a trio of street thugs on their way to a dogfight listen to "the new DMX joint on PGC, turned up loud" and continues to throb all the way through this second book in the author's hardboiled and heartbreaking series centered around Washington, D.C., private detective Derek Strange. A black man in his 50s, Strange first notices these particular thugs when they hang out around a Pee Wee football team he is coaching. Their appearance comes to seem more sinister in retrospect, when Strange's nine-year-old star quarterback is shot and killed at an ice cream stand. While Strange hunts for the men who shot the boy, his partner, Terry Quinn, an Irish Catholic ex-cop, gets pulled into an attempt to save a young runaway turned prostitute from a big-time pimp and falls for one of the tough women organizing the rescue. Meanwhile, Strange goes through a rocky period with his longtime lover (and secretary) Janine, forced to consider what his massage-parlor habit is doing to their relationship. The novel's turf the nontourist parts of Washington, D.C., neighborhoods where so many young black children die that selling T-shirts with their pictures on them at their wakes and funerals has become a cottage industry was staked out successfully in Pelecanos's earlier books about the sons and grandsons of Greek immigrants and now is extended to focus chiefly on the District's black majority. It is Pelecanos's intimate understanding of this volatile D.C. and the complexity of Strange a rich, sometimes frustrating but always warmly human character that should keep this series fresh for a long time to come. (Feb. 19)Forecast: Little, Brown is betting $100,000 in marketing dollars (not to mention a 20-city author tour) that this will be the book that propels cult favorite Pelecanos onto the bestseller lists and they may be right. Few writers deserve a boost as much as the hardworking, fearlessly gritty and engagingly idiosyncratic Pelecanos.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


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L'avis des consommateurs

28 évaluations
5 étoiles:
 (18)
4 étoiles:
 (4)
3 étoiles:
 (2)
2 étoiles:
 (1)
1 étoiles:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
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4.2étoiles sur 5 (28 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Hell of a Read!, Jui 8 2004
I really enjoyed this second novel in the Derek Strange series. HELL TO PAY is an action novel from beginning to end with a great deal of substance in between. I didn't read any of the Derek Strange books in order. I read this novel after reading SOUL CIRCUS. I found out how Terry Quinn got that scar on his face from his run in with a seemingly larger than life pimp named Worldwide. The character Terry seems a lot more developed in this novel than in SOUL CIRCUS. This novel develops both characters personal lives such that they actually seem more like three dimensional characters. I've yet to read HARD REVOLUTION to find out the connection between Granville Oliver's father and Strange. Granville Oliver is the fictional drug kingpin introduced towards the end of this novel who figures more prominently in SOUL CIRCUS. I found this novel a joy to read it's a serial novel but newcomers to the series can pick up any of the Derek Strange novels and start from any point in the series.
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1.0étoiles sur 5 Hell to Read, Avril 19 2004
Par Pen Name (Fairbanks, Alaska) - Voir tous mes commentaires
I'm not a big fan of crime fiction, but I had read some good reviews on this story in some Men's magazine and figured I'd pick it up. Thankfully I had the sense to borrow it form the library instead of purchasing it.

"Hell to Pay" was insanely boring. This would be the perfect novel to turn into a Steven Segall movie because it is already lacking a plot. Pelecanos jumps around way too much, and at too many times when he should be fleshing out the story more or adding some more action, which "Hell" is seriously devoid of. It seems like he used this book as a chance to describe the seedier side of Washington and to mention all of the urban hip-hop artists he knows rather than trying to tell an entertaining story.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 In the End We Find Redemption and Hope, Mars 15 2004
Par Faith Donovan (New Orleans) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
Derek Strange is a tough but sensitive black private eye with his own agency, an honorable ex-cop somewhere in his middle fifties, who prides himself on being a role model for his neighborhood. His partner in the agency is the hot-tempered, white ex-cop Terry Quinn.

Strange is working a background check on a young man who is engaged to a friend's daughter. Also a couple of crusading young female ex-cops, who specialize in locating minors, hire them to help liberate an underage prostitute named Jennifer Marshall from the clutches of a pimp named Worldwide Wilson.

Strange is coaching a peewee football team of poor kids with the help of a couple of fathers, a couple of cops and Quinn. As Quinn tangles with Wilson, three young thugs begin to linger at the fringes of football practice. Are they there because of Strange's investigation? Then one of the stars on Strange's football team is killed in a drive by. Strange and Quinn set out to find the killers and their investigation leads them deep inside the city's labyrinth of crime and to the very lethal Worldwide Wilson.

Strange and Quinn are assailed on all sides by young, gun toting players in the drug trade, who demand respect at the point of a gun. Strange deplores the way these kids act, trying to prove they are real men, backing it up with their guns, and he longs for a time in the nation's capital that he has idealized from his youth.

For all its violence and its portrait of what's wrong with parts of our society, and despite the emotional ride you'll go on in this story, this book is strangely not depressing. It's actually a story of moral accountability, redemption and hope and I can't recommend it highly enough.

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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 One of the best of the year
One of today's finest writers of crime fiction is George Pelecanos. He has previously written the "Washington quartet"-- a group of books, actually historical mysteries,... Read more
Publié le Mars 4 2004 par Larry Gandle

5.0étoiles sur 5 Memorable
If you are feeling down and are looking for a book to pick you up, this is NOT the one. It is a grim and depressing story about the harsh realities of inner city life. Read more
Publié le Oct. 30 2003 par John D. Costanzo

1.0étoiles sur 5 I can't bring myself to pick up another book by him
There are very few authors who have that result after having read one of their books. He hits the winners list. The story dragged. Read more
Publié le Oct. 20 2003

4.0étoiles sur 5 gritty, realistic crime drama; Pelecanos on form..
George Pelecanos is deservedly earning a loyal following of folks who like his urban Washington-based stories of crime, drugs, and residents who are sick of it yet can't escape... Read more
Publié le Oct. 13 2003 par lazza

4.0étoiles sur 5 " Noir" novel complete with the music and language...
George Pelecanos drags the reader into the heart of Washington D.C. and changes a "statistic" into a real, living, breathing child with a future that is torn from him,... Read more
Publié le Juil 29 2003 par jeanne-scott

1.0étoiles sur 5 Hell to listen to
This audio book, like many of those by "Brilliance Audio" is difficult to listen to...especially while driving. Read more
Publié le Fév 28 2003 par Kai Dozier

5.0étoiles sur 5 Wonderful!
It took me a while to get on the George Pelecanos bandwagon, but with "Hell to Pay" I am in the fan club. Read more
Publié le Fév 12 2003 par nobizinfla

5.0étoiles sur 5 Return to the Mean Streets of DC
I've lived in DC for 20 years, my family is from here, and Pelecanos is only the second author I've come across who writes about the DC that I know and recognize (the other is... Read more
Publié le Oct. 18 2002 par A. Ross

3.0étoiles sur 5 Good book, but quite odd at times.
In general, Hell to Pay was a very good book. It kept me reading and never really bored me all too much. Read more
Publié le Aoû 23 2002 par Aaron Scott

4.0étoiles sur 5 An Enjoyable, Quick Read
George Pelecanos Hell to Pay is an enjoyable read full of quick wit and fast dialogue. Pelecanos focuses on Derek Strange, a private investigator in DC and his partner Terry... Read more
Publié le Aoû 16 2002 par Elizabeth Hendry

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