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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What a Great Racket!!!
John Ridley seems to have been inspired by the works of James M. Cain and Jim Thompson. He takes that inspiration and mixes it with his unique updated style and creates greatness.

This story of Jeffty Kittridge trying to rise up from the bottom is funny, exciting and sad. If you are familiar with an urban environment, you will recognize some of these realistic...

Published on October 19, 1999

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Yeah it's good -- but not that good!
Lot's of 5 star reviews for this book, but I want to disagree some. Yes, there's some very good writing and humor packed into this book. But a lot of it really seemed pointless - like what was the point of having Nellis with his brilliant trick -- only to get blown away? The real plot develops 3/4 into the book, and I'm not sure I even liked the ending. I kept expecting...
Published on August 12, 2003


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What a Great Racket!!!, October 19, 1999
By A Customer
John Ridley seems to have been inspired by the works of James M. Cain and Jim Thompson. He takes that inspiration and mixes it with his unique updated style and creates greatness.

This story of Jeffty Kittridge trying to rise up from the bottom is funny, exciting and sad. If you are familiar with an urban environment, you will recognize some of these realistic characters. People like these really exist in cities all across this country.

I really enjoyed this novel. I can't wait to read more from Mr. Ridley.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The art of the con, artfully told, May 29, 1999
By 
A Fan (Two Steps From The Blues, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Love Is a Racket (Hardcover)
It would be too easy to say that Ridley puts Jim Thompson's characters in the sub-basement of Raymond Chandler's Los Angeles. There are echoes of both masters in this book, but mostly in the sense that the people and places are made real by Ridley's skill. The pace is brisk, and the dialog sparkles. If there is one quibble, it is with one (unnecessary) sentence that telegraphs the ending, but this doesn't detract from the entertainment the book provides. It may not be great literature, but it is great fun.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Another Stepping Stone to Greatness, December 8, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Love Is a Racket (Hardcover)
I read John Ridley's first novel, 'Stray Dogs' and was pleased. Beyond that, however, it didn't blow me away. It was nasty, compact and smartly written, but in the end I deemed it merely servicable. Thank God I picked up his sophmore effort to show me exactly how much Ridley has grown as a writer. Love is a Racket is smarter, funnier, edgier, more densely plotted and filled with a cast of deeply written characters. Plus, the ending was brilliant; both unexpected, and, if you think about it, the only way the whole thing could have ended up. All great writers get better with age; it's part of the evolution of their craft. With a second book this good, I can't wait for the release of Mr. Ridley's next book, 'We All Smoke in Hell.'
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Funny and moving noir, November 23, 2004
"Truth: Whenever there are two people sharing space there's somebody trying to pull something on someone else. The plans aren't always big and grand, and the scam isn't always strictly illegal, but everybody's got a racket." -- Love is a Racket

It starts with the sound of broken fingers and lauches into a darkly funny attack on free health care, letting us know immediately that Love is a Racket by John Ridley (the author of Stray Dogs, which was turned into Oliver Stone's U-Turn) is no lighthearted romp.

Ridley quickly shows us that his protagonist Jeffty (the owner of those broken fingers) is a real loser. He can't even seem to sell drugs properly and he drives a GM Corvair. As he tells it, "In L.A., you are what you drive. Me? I'm unsafe at any speed" (citing the famous book by social activist Ralph Nader). When he attends a double feature of films starring Gene Tierney and Dana Andrews (Laura and Where the Sidewalk Ends), he paints himself instantly with a negative brush as he describes his co-patrons. "Losers all," he says, then adds, "I fit in quite cozily."

In the midst of trying to pay back a steadily-increasing debt to Haitian bookie Dumas, our loser -- er ... hero -- gets a visitor that looks like a n easy payday. His friend, Nellis, with whom he shared a life-changing event for both of them -- turns out to be a sure hand at zen poker: he can tell who at a poker table has (or will have) the winning hand; if it's not him, he folds. Jeffty sees in Nellis a way out of his predicament and they head on the road to Vegas.

Most of Love is a Racket consists of Jeffty looking for myriad ways out of this hole he has dug for himself, with Dumas continually getting angrier and using increasingly more violent methods of persuasion. Making him a failed screenwriter was a smart move, because it not only gives him a broken dream to lament, but also makes him instantly sympathetic and makes the articulate prose of this sad sack realistic. Mainstream readers can follow the plot and musings with getting distracted by slang or dialect. It also makes him seem smarter than the average person and his creative methods for getting out of trouble more entertaining.

And Love is a Racket is definitely entertaining. The autobiographical aspects of the book make it fascinating on another level, but it is on its own a satisfying and moving read, especially after the entry of what amounts to a loser's love interest in vagabond Mona. (I learned from Lawrence Block's Grifter's Game to steer clear of women named Mona.) They have a fascinating conversation about Frank Sinatra films, the kind that only happens in fiction (and usually that written by Elmore Leonard). Ridley also shows some of Leonard's skill in his ability to milk humor out of even the most shocking and disturbing events, the likes of which continually seem to happen to Jeffty.

The ending gets a little crazy as Ridley attempts to wrap up several plot points simultaneously within thirty pages, but the majority of Love is a Racket is a remarkable variation on modern noir that fans of the genre (and especially of the new paperback imprint Hard Case Crime) would enjoy.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars youll need a shower to wash off the grime, April 29, 2002
By 
Derek Wade Robertson (Los Angeles, California United States) - See all my reviews
hmm... what does a man do after scooping some dudes brain and skull bits off of his floor with a spoon? Read this excellent book and find out! The Hollywood that everybody sees, and pretends not to, is vividly, and excellently portrayed in this gritty noir excersise. The protagonost is the classic underdog in which all of us can relate to. It is through his eyes, that a story of crushed dreams, and one last chance at redemption unfolds. This novel is dark, but VERY funny. A hard trick that Mr. Ridley pulls off deftly. Youll love this book!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the joke's on you, August 1, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Love Is a Racket (Hardcover)
John Ridley's new novel put's him right up there in the company of America's greatest crime writers. His first novel, "Stray Dogs", was a smart, nasty little noir, all full of twists and turns that kept Ridley and his book at least one step ahead of the reader, but in "Love is a Racket" he tells a great story and he creates some of the most memorable characters you'll meet in any recent fiction. He's also got a wonderfully sly sense of humor . This is a novel where someone's always the brunt of a con or a good joke, the reader included. (Yep, and when you've been fooled by a master -- and Ridley is a master -- it's surprising how good it feels.) Read "Love is a Racket" and you'll be reminded that Elmore Leonard's just a pit stop on the way to better stuff.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ridley is brilliant!, July 24, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Love Is a Racket (Hardcover)
I enjoyed 'Stray Dogs', 'U-Turn', and 'Cold Around the Heart' - 'Love is a Racket' shows Ridley's gift to continually entertain and keep the reader intertwined within the main character's fortune (or lack thereof). You won't be disappointed!!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I love this racket, July 16, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Love Is a Racket (Hardcover)
This one is as good as it gets. Tough, dark, funny and it even has room for some heart. Classic noir reborn for the modern age. I loved Ridley's Stray Dogs, and this is even better. The characters are incredibly vivd and plenty wry, and the plot is a pretzel of a mind blower. Even if you don't normally dig noir, I think you'll love this.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Yeah it's good -- but not that good!, August 12, 2003
By A Customer
Lot's of 5 star reviews for this book, but I want to disagree some. Yes, there's some very good writing and humor packed into this book. But a lot of it really seemed pointless - like what was the point of having Nellis with his brilliant trick -- only to get blown away? The real plot develops 3/4 into the book, and I'm not sure I even liked the ending. I kept expecting Jeffty to be a better man than he was, and Ridley kept letting me down.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A Fine Hardboiled Novel Set in Los Angeles, December 16, 2010
By 
This review is from: Love Is a Racket (Paperback)
John Ridley first came to my attention when an adaptation of his novel Stray Dogs became the Oliver Stone film U-Turn. I read Stray Dogs and liked it, but somehow I didn't come back to Ridley's work again for a long time. When I finally got around to reading Love is a Racket, however, I really enjoyed it.

Love is a Racket focuses on Jeffty Kittridge. Jeffty is a total loser - an alcoholic con artist who is deeply in debt to a savage Haitian bookmaker named Dumas. Jeffty spends his days roaming around Los Angeles alternately pulling small scams and trying to avoid getting beaten again by Dumas' henchman.

Ridley originally set out to become a stand-up comedian, but became a writer instead. Love is a Racket is a very funny book, albeit in a bleak, cynical way. In fact, there are several "laugh-out-loud" moments. The reader is entertained as Jeffty's journey through hell gets progressively worse. Eventually, Jeffty devises one, desperate, final con that will either save him or end his life.

The first half of Love is a Racket is as strong as any mystery novel that I've read. The second half - while still good - cannot quite sustain the momentum. Another flaw is that the book isn't realistic in places - the reader has to suspend disbelief in order to enjoy the story.

Nevertheless, Love is a Racket is a fine novel. Fans of hardboiled mysteries should find a copy and read it.
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Love Is a Racket
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