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54 of 54 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wambaugh's best book
When The Choirboys was published almost thirty years ago, I was a young Marine thinking of becoming a police officer. I read Wambaugh's fiction back then because it provided a unique combination of humor and truth about police work. Or at least it seemed as if it might be the truth - Wambaugh had been a cop and I hadn't. And of all his fiction, Choirboys was by far the...
Published on April 20, 2002

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7 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars One of his better books
and better than most about True Crime, but still a collection of "stories cops tell each other." The plot is structured like a Medieval tragedy of revenge--you know what's going to happen at the beginning & have to wait to the end to see it. It isn't a novel; it's a docudrama, because many stories are drawn from headlines. Some have appeared on TV, in various cop...
Published on November 3, 2004 by James Hercules Sutton


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54 of 54 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wambaugh's best book, April 20, 2002
By A Customer
When The Choirboys was published almost thirty years ago, I was a young Marine thinking of becoming a police officer. I read Wambaugh's fiction back then because it provided a unique combination of humor and truth about police work. Or at least it seemed as if it might be the truth - Wambaugh had been a cop and I hadn't. And of all his fiction, Choirboys was by far the funniest... and at the same time, its story the most tragic and bittersweet.

Now I'm an old cop in a big metro area, looking towards retirement. Every couple years, I read Choirboys again. It amazes me and overwhelms me to find that it rings more true with every reading. The more I see of police work and of life, the more I realize how much humor and truth Wambaugh really was able to put into this book. It's all there: the amazing things that happen in life, some horrible, some hilarious. The camraderie, kidding, and practical jokes that cops constantly use to keep their perspective. The way Wambaugh's cops don't always like each other, but they always look out for each other. The supervisors and administrators - some good, far too many bad. It's the truest book I've ever read and gets better every time I read it. I've given away a lot of copies of this one.

I'm not sure, but I believe Choirboys was written at about the time that Wambaugh was leaving police work to devote all his time to writing. The book is definitely written from the perspective of someone who is willing to burn some bridges. It is unflinchingly realistic regarding the careerism and hypocrisy that Wambaugh saw in many police supervisors and administrators, and in the politics of the department itself. But Wambaugh never preaches, he satirizes, and he makes his reader laugh out loud again and again.

The bottom line is - this is the best cop book I know of. I hope you'll think so too, and I'm willing to bet that you do.

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20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Indispensable Classic of American Literature, December 1, 2004
By 
"The Choirboys" is not only Joseph Wambaugh's best novel to date; it belongs up on the shelf of modern American classics along with David Mamet, Raymond Chandler, and Joseph Heller. It's just that good and unforgettable. Wambaugh puts everything he knows about being a cop into this novel along with slashing, satirical prose, Vonnegut-like black humor, and a sorrowful humanism to produce a masterpiece.

I mentioned Heller. It's pretty clear that Wambaugh based much of the style and technique of his novel on Catch-22: A Novel (Simon & Schuster Classics) but it's an inspired borrowing. There was a flowering of comic literature about the absurdity and cruelty of the world during the 1960's and '70's and Wambaugh was part of it. You can see it in the fragmented way he tells his tale, how piece by piece he leads us on suspensefully to the heart of the story. It's seems there's been a killing in MacArthur Park, but we don't know the details. We gradually meet the choirboys, those cops on the front lines of the new war in the urban free-fire zone. Wambaugh provides a terrifying story for each one of them, along with generous helpings of "Animal House" type humor, until it becomes impossible to distinguish between laughter and screams.

I wonder if this book, with its scorching language about race and sex, could be published in the same form today. "The Choirboys" is, if anything, a triumph of political incorrectness, a plea that candor about our humanity is a primary virtue. You walk away from "The Choirboys" with that indispensable feeling that comes only from great literature; you feel like you have entered the heart and soul, the world, of other human beings.
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Singing In The Choir..., August 15, 2001
Stark and realistic, this novel depicts the real life of a working cop and brings the reader so much more than a week in front of the tube watching "COPS." Wambaugh's cops are nasty and gentle, mean and kind, liars and cheats, honest men and women, crude and harsh and sensitive and quiet and in other words, real working folks. The narrative style works for me like being told a mysterious tale from a world I could never be part of, but for a brief moment am allowed to view. There is the usual bit of rollicking and raunchy humor, but there is also a heavy dose of pathos because these cops typify the real COPS. Read it.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Even a Brit loved it, August 28, 2002
By 
Matthew Whittall (Stuttgart Germany) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I'm not a cop, not even American, but could somehow sense that this book had to be an accurate depiction of policework in LA 25 years ago. The way Wambaugh slowly, but compellingly, builds up the reader's understanding of all the different characters is brilliant. The ending is extremely powerful.
The dangerous side-effect is that the next book you read will probably seem pale, construed and have an "untruthful" feel to it.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Cop Book, February 21, 2001
OK kids, take it from a cop, although this book is fiction it hits pretty close to home. The strange misadventures of the police, the horsing around and the problems inherent in "the Job", they're all here. Wambaugh does a great job telling a number of chapter-long stories of LA cops and their partners in this book. Some of the stories will cause you to laugh while others will cause you to commiserate with the officers. Wambaugh has written some great books, but "The Choirboys" stands ahead of the rest. If your idea of what us cops do is formed by network television, then read this book and see that NBC has nothing on Joseph Wambaugh.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Choirboys-Best Police Book ever written, November 3, 2000
By 
Pete Klismet (Grand Junction, Colorado) - See all my reviews
From Roscoe Rules making everyone "do the chicken" to Francis Tanaguchi's vampire teeth to Spermwhale Whalen's "blue veiner" and/or "diamond cutter", I believe this is the best and most realistic book about police work I've ever read. I read it when I was a police officer in Southern Calif. in the 1970's, and am now reading it for the second time, about 25 years later. I'm considering using it as a text for a "Human Relations and Social Conflict" class I'm teaching at a Colorado Community College (Criminal Justice Program). I can't imagine a book that better depicts the reality of being a police officer, the crazy and depressing situations that continually arise, and the officer's means of dealing with the problems they encounter daily. Joseph Wambaugh became an icon with this book in my opinion, at least with the police culture in America. My only criticism of the book is that the style is a little narrative at times, but the points are made exceedingly well none-the-less. Every time Roscoe talks about making someone do the chicken, I can't help but laugh, since I used this phrase many times over the years, and only made one person "do the chicken" in 30 years in law enforcement. Great book and well worth reading.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars acurate protrayal of urban police work, May 4, 2000
By A Customer
I am a retired police officer who spent over (20) years with an urban PD. This book was right on the mark, relative to city police work in the 1970's. I read the book when it was first released and again recently. It was even better the second time. I highly recommend it as both informative and very entertaining.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars choirboys, March 10, 2000
By A Customer
I am a police officer,I can relate to the stress and problems the choirboys are having.Society has no idea what the inner workings of a police officer are like.This is a great book and I would recommend it for all rookie officers.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The greatest cop book I've ever read...., January 26, 2000
By A Customer
Despite what other readers may say about this book being too crude, I am convinced this is by far the most gripping police story ever written. From stories of on the job chaos to the ways these officers "wind down" after work, this book keeps you interested all the way through. Even if you don't usually read police books, I highly recommend that you read this and other Wambaugh novels.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Catch-22 in Wilshire Division, January 2, 2006
Okay, he stole the voice and the ideas from Joseph Heller. There's way too much narrative. And there's no plot. SO WHAT. Wambaugh's Choirboys is his finest work, and it's what I love the most, gritty reality. It's a book that needs badly to be read in this era of fantasies, king kongs, hobbits and other escapisms.
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The Choirboys
The Choirboys by Joseph Wambaugh (Paperback - August 28, 2007)
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