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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Author Caunitz Is The Master Of Police Thrillers,
This review is from: Cleopatra Gold (Hardcover)
Author and former lieutenant of the NYPD Caunitz is the best of the police procedureal novelists, the most innovative, and one writer who gives you uncensored dialogue. You recognize it as fact; he's been there. His other books tell stories from the police side of things. This one tells about the narcotic trade from the inside as the reader follows the dangerous life of a detective who goes undercover. There is a crushing anaconda, a mysterious feminine killer, and much more. Novelists are able to deduct travel from their income tax which is why we see so many exotic locations in these books and this one is no exception. Some authors end up sounding like travel writers but Caunitz makes it work. Other thriller writers have achieved more fame but no one makes police/detective stories LIVE the way this author does. Try it, you'll like it.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
An interesting thriller.,
This review is from: Cleopatra Gold (Paperback)
I read the first three books from this author when they appeared in the mid to late 1980's. I liked 'One Police Plaza' but wasn't so impressed with 'Black Sand' and 'Suspects' so I moved away from this author. About 18 months ago, I picked up his sixth book 'Pigtown', read it and liked it. This is the preceding novel.There is a group of people smuggling heroin (Cleopatra Gold) into the US in general and New York in particular. The NYPD try to infiltrate this ring, but after three of their undercover agents are killed, they have to try an alternative route. The investigating officer then asks if there is a deep undercover agent ("Who runs the Job's deep undercovers?" "I really don't know. I'm not even sure we have any.") that could be used to infiltrate the network. The book then focuses around a half Irish, half Indian nightclub singer who emerges to take on the network. The author is a retired NYPD detective lieutenant and this shows in all of his books. The investigative work carried out by the LEAs is described in detail, often using expressions found in the NYPD. The technology used is also described in detail, making this book seem very realistic, to the point of this reader feeling that it could almost have been based on true events. This however, is also to the disadvantage of the book. For me, a thriller is supposed to keep up a quick pace, but I found that some of the lengthy, detailed descriptions of equipment and procedure slowed the pace of this book down a bit too much for my liking. I do realise that these things are part of any investigation, and it isn't all fast-paced action. Having said that though, I would say that a little more action would have improved this book for me, rather than a little less description of the bits and pieces involved, IMO. Hence the summary, an *interesting* thriller. 3.5 out of 5 for this one, I think. David Lucas (davidlu@sco.com).
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great build up, lousy ending,
By "curtcow" (Short Hills, NJ USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cleopatra Gold (Hardcover)
Alejandro Monahan is the son of a NY cop and Mexican Indian mother. The old man "retired" to raise his family in the Baja and was killed by drug lords tied to the title drug. Alejandro is now a sexy club singer and also Chilebean, a deep cover agent with the NYPD looking to avenge his father's death. Ther characters are great: Che-Che, Roberto Barrios and Pizzaro on the drug side; Too Tall Paulie, Sal Elia and Joey the G-man for the cops. You're never sure who's the real boss is or where the line between undercover agents and the drug business is drawn. Amidst a lot of action Alejandro convinces Che-Che he can guarantee safe importation of heroine using a military guided parachute technology. With 100 pages to go, the shipment has landed and the multiple Cleopatra lines develop: the drug, the queen and a woman whose father called her that. I had it at five stars until the end, which was just too Hollywood and dropped it down to four. A lousy ending, but an otherwise great cop / druggie story.
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