Amazon.com Review
Freelance journalist Vincent Zandri was collaborating on the memoirs of a Sing Sing prison guard when he got the idea for a thriller about a warden who has to solve a crime to keep his job and his self-respect. This solid base of reality plus Zandri's lively writing give
As Catch Can a definite edge.
Jack "Keeper" Marconi knows he's in trouble when a cop killer named Eduard Vasquez escapes from his Green Haven Maximum Security Prison in upstate New York after a trip to an outside dentist which he had approved. Keeper is clearly being fitted for a frame by his superiors in the state's penal system--men with whom he shared a baptism of fire as young guards during the bloody riots at Attica 26 years before.
Haunted by these ghosts of his former self and a time when justice seemed more clear-cut, Keeper goes off on his own to see who really helped Vasquez escape. Recently widowed and fogged by too much booze, Keeper could easily have become a rerun of an all-too-familiar genre icon. But Zandri makes both the man and job interesting and original by paying attention to details--from the way the weather affects the prisoners' behavior to the delicate balancing act that governs the relations between guards and prisoners. And there's more than enough creativity and research left over for a promised sequel. --Dick Adler
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Publishers Weekly
A jailbreak at the Green Haven Maximum Security Prison in Stormville, N.Y., leads to the escape of cop killer Eduard Vasquez and no end of grief for Jack "Keeper" Marconi, the prison warden. Marconi has to investigate the escape on the q.t. as his superiors are clearly setting him up for a fall. The prison guards who escorted Vasquez on a trip to the dentist are faking the injuries they allegedly endured in the escape; drugs are planted in Marconi's office; the escapee's girlfriend, Cassandra Wolf, appears in porno photos with Marconi's superiors, the same men with whom he survived the Attica prison riots 16 years earlier as an 18-year-old guard. Vasquez's trail leads to a small town in upstate New York where Cassandra is hiding out. When a major character dies, she and Marconi must go on the lam to clear themselves of the murder. In his impressive debut novel, Zandri writes strong prose that rarely strains for effect, and some of his scenes, particularly the Attica flashbacks, achieve a powerful hallucinatory horror. His characters aren't wholly original?like too many macho heroes, for instance, Marconi is a widower who likes his whiskey?but they add lots of color to a tough-minded, involving novel that deserves its promised sequel.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.