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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Memo to self: don't hire psychopathic hit-man,
This review is from: Bust (Hard Case Crime) (Mass Market Paperback)
The CEO of NetWorld, Max Fisher, wants his wife dead. He's decided that he's ready to marry his girlfriend Angela -- a fiery Greek-Irish executive assistant with amazing new components -- and start over. Divorce is not an option, what with half of his formidable assets on the line.
So Max agrees to meet Angela's cousin's buddy, a hit-man named Popeye. What Max doesn't know is that Popeye is actually Angela's real boyfriend. He's a psychopathic Irish "proveen" -- a small-time enforcer for the "Ra" (IRA), who are smart enough to keep him at arm's length. Predictably, given this cast of characters, the hit goes down, plenty of things go awry, and things start to spin out of control. Compounding matters is a hood named Bobby Rosa, now confined to a wheelchair, who makes his living blackmailing couples engaged in compromising relationships. Through sheer coincidence, Rosa happens to snap some shots of Max and Angela "celebrating" his wife's departure. Once Rosa confronts Fisher -- who is already under heavy police scrutiny -- with the photos, the plot swings in a rush of completely unpredictable turns. You'll be hard-pressed to tell where Bruen's work ends and Starr's begins. The story is seamless and pulse-pounding. The characterizations are deep; you'll feel you've gotten under the skin of Max, Angela, and even the nutcase hit-man. My guess is you won't be able to stop reading until you flip the last page.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A dark, gritty, and inappropriately hilarious cautionary tale,
By Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bust (Hard Case Crime) (Mass Market Paperback)
BUST is the result of an unholy alliance between Ken Bruen and Jason Starr, two modern masters of noir fiction. They bring together a fearsome and wondrous mix of vile characters on the streets of New York City to create a caper novel worthy of Westlake or Leonard, but with the dark edge of...well, Bruen and Starr.
Max Fisher is a software millionaire who's tired of Deirdre, his shrewish, ungrateful and unappreciative wife. The fact that Fisher is seeing Angela Petrakos, his Greek-Irish secretary, isn't helping matters. Angela is the perfect combination of angel and hooker, with a bit of gold digger thrown into the mix. When Fisher wonders out loud what life would be like without Deirdre, Angela wastes no time in setting up a meeting between Fisher and a very strange hitman known only to him as "Popeye." The shooter is Angela's paramour, Dillon, fresh off the boat from Dublin. Their plan is to acquire Fisher's fortune for themselves. The only problem is that Angela is no longer crazy about Dillon, and Dillon feels the same way about Angela. Dillon is without question a bad guy, but there's no one here who is truly likable --- except perhaps for Bobby Rosa, a redoubtable paraplegic who spends his days brooding bitterly over his past career as a criminal and surreptitiously taking photographs of women. Rosa's likeability is only made possible by the revelation of a soft side one would not expect. When he has the chance to blackmail Fisher, however, he jumps at the opportunity. Everyone in BUST is caught in a dark, swirling whirlpool that takes everything and gives nothing. This is a dark, gritty and inappropriately hilarious cautionary tale --- exquisitely conceived and flawlessly written --- about getting what you think you want and regretting it, and the endless consequences of evil deeds. BUST may have spoiled me for reading anything else for a while. I haven't had a book make me feel this entertained in such a warped fashion since I read DIG THAT CRAZY GRAVE by Richard Prather at the tender age of 10. But that's another story. For now, don't let another sun set without reading BUST. --- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Gritty book full of despicable characters! Exactly what it should be...,
By
This review is from: Bust (Hard Case Crime) (Mass Market Paperback)
BUST is a never-before-published book in the Hard Case Crime series. Hard Case Crime books contains classic crime novels as well as new thrillers. One thing all these stories have in common (I've read six of them) is that none of the characters are good people. Bust takes that to the extreme. Max Fisher is having an affair with Angela. Max hates his wife and hires someone Angela knows to kill his wife. Angela lives with Dillon and is only after Max for his money. Bobby is a wheelchair bound criminal blackmailing Max. And that is just the tip of the iceberg. Each character commits a heinous act after heinous act, each plot turn worse than the one before, each character action is usually a crime to cover up a previous crime. None of the characters are sympathetic. All of them are clueless. And that is why I recommend this violent, gritty novel. It fits right in with the genre. If you like Hard Case Crime books, then you must read this one. If you are new to the series, I suggest checking out a classic to get familiar with what to expect. There is nothing uplifting in BUST, but that doesn't mean you still can't enjoy the awful selfishness of the evil characters.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Bruen And Starr Hit This One Out Of The Park!,
By
This review is from: Bust (Hard Case Crime) (Mass Market Paperback)
When I first heard of this Bruen/Starr collaboration, I was thrilled as this are two of the best (and two of my favorite) new master of the hardboiled tradition. So expectations were high when I sat down to read the result.Well, BUST delivers. In spades! Watching a "simple" murder plan unravel chapter by chapter is BUST in a nutshell. And what a ride! The pace is rocket speed, the characters wonderfully crooked, crazy, obsessed, inept and memorable. The dialogue is sharp and, at times, laugh out loud funny. If you like great hardboiled fiction, you can't go wrong with BUST. It's everything a great crime novel should be. Destined to be a classic. Don't miss it.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
wast of talent,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Bust (Hard Case Crime) (Mass Market Paperback)
Ken Bruen is a fine writer with a gift for creating truly nasty villians and that surely accounts for the appeal his dark vision of the nature of some humans has for readers. But this book has the look of a story he knocked over a lost weekend or two so he could pay his bar bill. It's like a rough draft of the first book of a diabolically clever series. He just doesn't seem to have the time or energy to work out the plot details that sustain even a shred of credability. Disappointing.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Down and dirty fun,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Bust (Hard Case Crime) (Mass Market Paperback)
Something needs to be made clear about Bust: You will not like a single character in the book, especially by the end. This is far from a feel-good novel. It will drag you through the dirt more than once and leave you a bloody mess by the time everything is said and done. And, because of that, it's wonderful.
The characters in Bust are all self-absorbed, and none of them are looking out for anything beyond their own interests. Every time Bruen and Starr give you some glimmer of humanity for a character, they make them do something despicable which firmly cancels out any sort of empathy you may have for them. Thus, Bust becomes a game of seeing who will get their comeuppance first...and believe me, they get it. In terms of plotting, the book is really solid. One would think a book with two authors and four points of view would turn into a tangled mess, but Bruen and Star interweave things perfectly, elegantly merging character stories and viewpoints with each chapter, leading to a tense plot where you wonder who's going to mess up next. The book will not make you feel good, but it is a tightly written gritty book that will keep you entertained for the short time you are reading it (it's a quick read, too...I read it over the course of a couple of afternoons)
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"Men don't want lunch, they want tits",
By
This review is from: Bust (Hard Case Crime) (Mass Market Paperback)
I found this book to be hysterical. I'm not sure how much you would understand if you weren't acquainted with Irish colloquialisms, which I am, maybe you would. I just laughed out loud every few pages at the relentlessly vulgar nature of all of these characters, conscious and unconsciously, how even the 'classy' ones were still common as muck. beautiful study of hard nut people tested to their limits in the most profane way.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Hard Core Crime Read,
By
This review is from: Bust (Hard Case Crime) (Mass Market Paperback)
If sparse prosed, fast moving crime noir is your cup of tea then this is the book for you. Clocking in at just 250 pages doesn't leave much room for wordy exposition. Which is refreshing because they get to the heart of the matter real fast. There aren't any good guys here but there are some memorable characters and the plot just keeps twisting round and round. The most annoying thing in the book is that each chapter starts with some nonsensical quote that isn't germain to anything you're about to read. But don't let that minor bit deter you. There is style and substance here.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Outstanding Crime Novel,
By G. Simmons "GS" (Washington State) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bust (Hard Case Crime) (Mass Market Paperback)
Wow, I was blown away by this book. Going in, I wasn't sure what to expect because Starr and Bruen have such different voices. But the Publishers Weekly review puts it best--this is a seamless crime novel. It has a great characters, outstanding dialogue, and what a plot! There are many great twists and turns and toward the end I was turning the pages faster and faster because I just HAD to see what happened next. I've read a lot of great crime novels over the last several years, but this is one of the best. It's right up there with the best of Cain, Willeford, Leonard, etc. Highly recommended.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Better than the sum of its participants,
By
This review is from: Bust (Hard Case Crime) (Mass Market Paperback)
"Bobby came back from the supermarket and cooked himself dinner.... Even Def Leppard couldn't get him out of his funk. When the Def couldn't crank you, it was way past time to shoot someone." -- from Bust
Often, two authors working together get in each other's way, cancelling out the individual contributions of each in favor of a homogeneous whole. But modern noir authors Ken Bruen and Jason Starr fit together like a married couple with complementary flaws -- all the pieces making a perfect jigsaw relationship, while still retaining those aspects that draw each author's particular cadre of followers. In the new Hard Case Crime offering, Bust, Bruen (who won the 2004 Shamus Award for The Guards and has another solo novel, Calibre, coming out this July) and Starr (2004 Barry Award winner for Tough Luck, with Lights Out coming in September) combine their dark talents to remarkable effect, resulting in a novel that is more than the sum of its participants. Bruen brings his skill at dark humor, downward-spiral characterization, and his familiarity with Irish culture, while Starr offers a simple yet familiar plot with plenty of opportunities for disaster, and characters with a tendency toward casual, unflinching violence. Put together, they make up an absolutely pitch-black novel that ranks with the best of their peers. That said, Bust was hard to get into at first -- I couldn't detect a consistent voice, as if the authors were writing alternating chapters (but perhaps they are merely writing alternating characters). Work your way past the first few chapters, though, and things smooth out and really get flowing. Max Fisher, CEO of NetWorld is having an affair with his Greek-Irish executive assistant, Angela Petrakos. Max wants his wife dead so he can marry Angela, and Angela's cousin knows a guy named Popeye who can do the job right. Trouble is, there is no cousin, and "Popeye" is actually Angela's boyfriend, Dillon, an Irish "Proveen" with an unpredictable streak. Meanwhile, Bobby Rosa, a wheelchair-bound ex-robber, is looking to get back into the game with his old pal, Victor, who has gone straight. When these stories come together, all hell breaks loose, and there's no guarantee who is going to come out with what, or even make it to the end with life intact. The limited third-person POV makes the events slightly distant yet still immediate enough to have stunning impact when several shocking events take place that even I, who have read all of the Hard Case Crime novels, could not have predicted. If you sit down with Bust, be ready to stay down for the duration. As a bonus (and a little unintended cross-marketing, perhaps), each chapter begins with a literary quote, like the Inspector Morse mysteries of Colin Dexter. Only these quotes are from other (mostly) modern crime thrillers, including one each from Bruen (The Hackman Blues) and Starr (Tough Luck) individually , as well as a few other Hard Case Crime authors like Allan Guthrie, Richard Aleas, and Domenic Stansberry. Some of my other personal favorites, like Joseph Finder and Joe R. Lansdale, are also represented. What is most remarkable, however, is how apt the quotes are to the chapter contents, considering how limited their sources were. This bit of unnecessary but much appreciated extra effort raises Bust even further above the fray by focusing on clever lines from other entertaining books that are just waiting for me to discover. |
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Bust (Hard Case Crime) by Ken Bruen (Mass Market Paperback - May 2006)
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