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'46, Chicago: A Novel
 
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'46, Chicago: A Novel (Hardcover)

by Steve Monroe (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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From Amazon.com

Crime fiction readers who insist that the good guys win and the bad guys lose, and that you ought to at least be able to tell the two apart, should steer a wide course around Steve Monroe's '46, Chicago. Moral compromise and relativism are the very foundations of this somber yet compulsively driving yarn about power and greed and the corruption they engender.

Gus Carson used to be as mendacious and brutal a cop as the Windy City could produce. But after barely surviving a World War II Japanese submarine attack in the Pacific, he's turned positively respectable. "No fights, no bribes, no extortion," his superior recalls, approvingly, "not even a restaurant owner complaining that you demanded free doughnuts and coffee." Then one night, Carson shoots a black man who's just killed a white lawyer in a brothel, and he's suspended from the force--just in time to go to work for a Republican mayoral hopeful, who promises him reinstatement and $500 if he can find a kidnapped black racketeer named Ed Jones. Sounds straightforward enough, except that Carson suspects the attorney's death and the Jones case are connected. To whose benefit, though? And how do these crimes relate to an underworld struggle for control of Chicago gambling?

As he did in his first novel, '57, Chicago, Monroe brings distinction to a fairly conventional noir plot. His juxtaposition of caviar-class white and worker-class black cultures adds depth to this occasionally violent drama, his exposure of Carson's conscience is patiently and convincingly done, and some of the dialogue here is sharp enough to cut lips. '46 Chicago treads where more practiced detective novelists, such as Max Allan Collins, have already been, but still leaves tracks worth following. --J. Kingston Pierce



From Publishers Weekly

Tough-talking copper Gus Carson has been trying to walk the straight and narrow ever since he got back to Chicago after a tour in WWII, but a visit to a whorehouse proves his undoing when he kills a man who's just murdered a john and his gal and gets suspended from the force. Steve Monroe's classic hard-boiler follows Carson through the city's underbelly in pursuit of a kidnapped swindler (who's also on the payroll of a political mover and shaker) before he uncovers the truth in a veritable bloodbath in '46, Chicago.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Estelman meets Pelecanos, Mar 3 2003
By John Schmutz (Glen Cove, NY United States) - See all my reviews
If you like gritty city tough guys Chicago '46 is for you. It has the taste of inner city grime in every bite. As George Pelecanos flays D.C.'s skin open to reveal the infernal workings of the city's walking wounded, down and out junkies and brown bag alchoholics, Monroe shows us the stomach if not the heart of post-war Chicago. Monroe echoes Estelman in Gus Carson as a post military angel with skinned knuckles and part time conscience. All in all Monroe has built an extraordinary foundation for multi-volume series. Dave Robichaux and Earl Swagger watch out!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Not just another mystery thriller, Dec 2 2002
By A Customer
This book is awesome. This just isn't another waste of time Patterson/Grisham or Balducci book. This guy has talent. It's a page turner and not predictable. As the title suggests set in Chicago shortly following the war, this book follows a rogue Chicago cop caught in a whorehouse and follows him in his chase as Chicago politcs intermingle with North Suburban money. Monroe describes it as if he were there.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Going back gets even better, Aug 26 2002
By Bruce K. Stelzer "brucestelzer" (cincinnati, ohio United States) - See all my reviews
Steve Monroe's '57 CHICAGO brought us the seamy world of late '50's Chicago. Now, '46 CHICAGO takes us back a decade, exposing the pain of post-war trauma, and the effects on a man caught in the middle. I loved this book. The words, sentences and structure fit the short, brunt, to-the-point nature of the characters of this story. Good guys, bad dames, chump or hero? We really don't know which is which or who is who until the last pages. This was a fun read.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Couldn't put it down.
Intriguing characters dealing with moral ambiguities in a well devised plot line. Sharp dialog with a surprising amount of humor. Read more
Published on Aug 11 2002

5.0 out of 5 stars Monroe Does It Again
Steve Monroe has done it again. His second book is every bit as dominant as the last. If you are an Ellroy fan or a fan of crime fiction, buy this immediately. Read more
Published on Aug 10 2002 by M. M. Lo Cascio

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