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The Last Dark Place: An Abe Lieberman Mystery (Abe Lieberman Mysteries)
 
 
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The Last Dark Place: An Abe Lieberman Mystery (Abe Lieberman Mysteries) [Mass Market Paperback]

Stuart M. Kaminsky (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Abe Lieberman Mysteries November 29, 2005
Abe Lieberman is a veteran Chicago detective who prefers to use his head and heart more than his gun. He and his Irish partner, Bill Hanrahan, are known on the streets as the Rabbi and thePriest and their commitment to justice is sorely tested everyday.
The extradition of a mob enforcer goes horribly awry when he is gunned down at the airport...while Lieberman is escorting him. A police officer's wife is raped and Lieberman and Hanrahan have to find the perp before the hearbroken, furious cop settles the matter himself. Lieberman and Hanrahan struggle with one vital question: which is better, to be a Just man or to be the instrument of the Law?
And if that's not enough angst, somewhere in all this Lieberman has to plan a bar mitzvah that will surely bankrupt him....



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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Edgar-winner Kaminsky's eighth Abe Lieberman mystery (after 2002's Not Quite Kosher) gets off to a dramatic start. After a prologue in which a gunman confronts a young Lieberman in the middle of a morning prayer service in 1969, the action flashes forward 33 years to find the sardonic 60-something Chicago cop handcuffed to the same gunman, a professional assassin facing extradition back to the Windy City. When an unassuming elderly janitor shocks the veteran lawman by gunning down the assassin in the airport, Lieberman takes on the thankless task of identifying the person who ordered the hit. As that inquiry proceeds, Lieberman tries to defuse a Latin-Asian gang war. Meanwhile, Lieberman's Irish partner, Bill Hanrahan, juggles a rape case and a stalker who's targeting his pregnant wife. Long on vigilante justice, the book succeeds more as a character study than as a whodunit, though the resolution of the sexual-assault inquiry does contain a decent twist. The confluence of the plot threads might strike some as far-fetched, but Kaminsky's sympathetic hero and his believable family relationships make this an entertaining crime novel that should send new readers in search of its predecessors.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

The eighth entry in Kaminsky's Abe Lieberman series about two embattled North Side Chicago cops should delight fans but confuse and frustrate newcomers. Fans of Kaminsky's work in other series (Toby Peters, Inspector Rostnikov, Lew Fonesca) will find him a tight-lipped guide here. There is barely any backstory about the two cops, one Irish (Hanrahan), one Jewish (Lieberman), or their lives, and much depends on backstory in this series. But for the Lieberman true believers, this installment is rich in conflict and atmosphere. Lieberman has been sent to Yuma, Arizona, for the extradition of a Mob hitman, who himself gets whacked while handcuffed to Lieberman at the airport. On the home front, partner Hanrahan and an insufferable substitute partner are trying to track down youths who practice assault and battery, most notably on the wife of an up-and-coming Chicago cop. It's great to see the growth of these two characters and their relationship throughout the series, but anyone trying to start the series by leaping onto this moving sidewalk is sure to stumble. For fans only. Connie Fletcher
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Forge Books (November 29, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765343843
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765343840
  • Product Dimensions: 6.6 x 4 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,937,758 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars One for the old folks!, May 30, 2005
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I've been a Porfiry Rostnikov fan forever. But since Kaminsky hasn't written a Porfiry mystery in well over three years I decided to try one of his other series.

The Abe Liebermann series has quite a bit in common with the Rostnikov mysteries. Both protagonists are over sixty and both are dedicated family men. But perhaps the major similarity is the Ed McBain influence. Rostnikov has a couple of underlings who are usually involved in their own cases. Liebermann has a partner named Bill Hanrahan, who calls Abe "The Rabbi." Abe calls Hanrahan "Father Murphy." These are working cops and they have more cases than a Budweiser brewery.

The book starts with Abe escorting a Mafia hitman back to Chicago from Yuma, Arizona. An elderly janitor shoots the hitman before Abe can get him on the plane. The janitor is an elderly man who claims he agreed to the contract to pay for his grandchildren's college.

Back in Chicago, Hanrahan and his temp partner, O'Neil are investigating a series of muggings and rapes. Hanrahan must also deal with O'Neil's racist and sexist remarks as well as the crime spree.

This wouldn't be a Kaminsky mysteries if the detectives didn't have personal problems to match their professional concerns. Liebermann's grandson, who lives with Liebermann and his wife, is having his bar mitzvah and Liebermann is trying to scrape together the money to pay for it. His daughter, with whom he doesn't get along, is also arriving for her son's big day. Meanwhile, someone has been calling Hanrahan's pregnant Chinese wife, warning her not to have the child.

Throw in the case of a sign painter, who is stalking a country western singer, whom he wants to kill, and you have quite a few story lines to keep track of.

Probably the most impressive aspect of the book for me was the theme of "respect for family and the elderly" that runs throughout the book. For instance, when Abe's grandson tells Abe he doesn't think he should go through with his bar mitzvah because he doesn't believe in God, Abe convinces him to do it for his grandmother, his other relatives, and all of the people who were looking forward to the event. Mr. Woo, an elderly Chinese crime lord, negotiates a truce between the Puerto Rican and Chinese gangs. Kaminsky puts a capper on this theme when the most deplorable human being in the book takes the fall for his grandmother when she's implicated in a shooting.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A gem, December 11, 2004
I've only recently discovered police procedurals. Or should I say compelling, interesting police procedurals? I've read others along the way, but until I discovered John Sandford's "Prey" series, I found them trite and boring for the most part.

Now with my discovery of Stuart M. Kaminsky and his Abe Lieberman character, I admit to becoming a fan.

Abe Lieberman is a 60-ish Chicago detective. I should note that this is Kaminsky's eigth Lieberman book, so presumably he started the series with a younger man.

Lieberman is no superman. He has ordinary problems like high cholesterol, insomnia and an adult daughter who can't find happiness, so blames her father for her unhappiness.

The story begins with Lieberman in Yuma, Arizona, about to escourt a prisoner back to Chicago. An elderly black airport janitor kills Lieberman's prisoner at the boarding gate - and we're off to a cop's life.

Hannrahan, Abe's partner, is an Irish Catholic, a reformed alcoholic, with a second wife. In Lieberman's absence, Hannrahan is teamed with O'Neill, who appears to be extreme racist.

Life's misfortunes provide the cloud through which these men. Elderly Jews gathering at Leiberman's brother's delicatessen; a bunch of kids who get their kicks beating and finally murdering and raping women on the street; a demented young man who happily sets out to kill a rising celebrity. It's all part of day's work for Lieberman and his colleagues.

Several stories at once flow in the narrative and Kaminsky keeps them all straight, never missing a beat, never forcing the reader to suspend credulity.

Kaminsky and Lieberman have a new fan.

Jerry
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A thrilling 8th novel in the Abe Lieberman series, December 7, 2004
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Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
Part of the appeal of mystery novels comes from the multiple vehicles that authors use as Connelly's Harry Bosch and Ed McBain's Steve Carella. Recently, however, a new cop on the block has appeared on my book table, Detective Abe Lieberman of the Chicago Police Department.

THE LAST DARK PLACE by Stuart M. Kaminsky is the eighth novel featuring the sixty-year old Chicago detective confronting the crimes of a big city along with the difficulties of life. Lieberman is a Job-like figure, a small, cynical and fatalistic man looking ten years older than his actual age, battling crime and his cholesterol count at the same time. He resides on the North Side of Chicago and does the majority of his crime fighting in the Rogers Park area of the city, a modern ethnic melting pot for Jews, Hispanics, Asians and even Caucasian criminals. The trademark of a Lieberman escapade is a juggling act of multiple crimes, committed by several criminals investigated by Lieberman and his Irish Catholic partner Bill Hanrahan, "the Rabbi and the Priest," as they are known on the streets of Chicago. Compounding his crime solving battles are the personal predicaments in Lieberman's life --- from his children, grandchildren, synagogue and community.

The opening scenes of THE LAST DARK PLACE find Lieberman in an Arizona airport handcuffed to Connie Glover, a fugitive from justice that the detective is returning to Chicago. Before they can board the plane, Glover is gunned down, and finding out why the killer was killed becomes Lieberman's next assignment.

Abe Lieberman is more than a police detective. He is a mixture of philosopher, psychologist, rabbi and diplomat. In the melting pot neighborhoods of Chicago, the turf wars between rival ethnic gangs are of prime concern to law enforcement. Lieberman has the respect of the community and he wields his respect as a neighborhood Henry Kissinger, using his skills to mediate and avoid disputes while always being prepared for the use of force if required. Kaminsky, a former resident of the North Shore area, has a remarkable insight into the various communities and nationalities that populate the Chicago area. Through the vehicle of Abe Lieberman he creates characters who are real, and plots that are both simple and complex while always enjoyable and expertly crafted.

Celebrated fictional detectives are engaging because they do more than solve mysteries. Along the way they often face personal dilemmas easily identified by most readers. Abe Lieberman is not only a detective; he is a father and grandfather. Life's personal difficulties take as much of his time as the misdeeds of the criminals he tackles on his job. In THE LAST DARK PLACE, his grandson's bar mitzvah requires Lieberman's attention. That event demands that he cope with major financial and philosophical issues while continuing his criminal investigation. This is the balancing act that is Lieberman's life. He can successfully face those problems because, above all, Abe Lieberman is a mensch, a Yiddish word meaning decent human being, a good person who always takes the high road.

In the hands of an accomplished and skillful writer, an exciting mystery is a wonderful journey to another world. Stuart Kaminsky has taken readers on that journey in countless mysteries set in locales across America and around the world. If you have not had the pleasure of meeting Abe Lieberman, THE LAST DARK PLACE is a wonderful opportunity to get acquainted with the Chicago detective and his community. It could be the beginning of a beautiful relationship.

--- Reviewed by Stuart Shiffman
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First Sentence:
The little old man was nodding his head and mumbling to himself as he walked down the gray corridor of the synagogue. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
alter cockers, hard drinking woman
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Rabbi Wass, Lee Cole Carter, Parker Liao, Billy Johnstone, Twin Dragons, David Sen, Ida Katzman, Sean O'Neil, Easy Dan, Hugh Morton, Puerto Ricans, Wayne Czerbiak, Bill Hanrahan, Clean Cut, Connie Gower, Father Murph, Howie Chen, Captain Kearney, Herschel Rosen, Iris Chen, Master Hongzhi, Morrie Greenblatt, Paul Berg, Victor Tung, Abe Lieberman
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Books on Related Topics (learn more)
 
The Big Silence by Stuart M. Kaminsky
Lieberman's Law by Stuart M. Kaminsky
Not Quite Kosher by Stuart M. Kaminsky
 

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