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48 of 51 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pelecanos best book yet
One thing that is sure about George Pelecanos, he gets better with each new book. Shame the Devil is the final book to use the cast of characters that center around the Washington D.C. bar, The Spot, where recurring character Nick Stephanos is the bartender (when not working as an unlicensed detective). This book offers fast paced action as well as satisfying...
Published on January 24, 2000 by Doug Vaughn

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23 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Some parts good, some parts not so good
Pelacanos does some things quite well. He knows how to write an action scene, and he knows how to keep the pace of the book moving. Unfortunately, he needs a lot of work on the stuff that comes between the action scenes. We get way too much detail about how a restaurant kitchen operates. I don't really need to read about how the meatloaf was prepared. The worst...
Published on January 20, 2000


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48 of 51 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pelecanos best book yet, January 24, 2000
This review is from: Shame the Devil: A Novel (Hardcover)
One thing that is sure about George Pelecanos, he gets better with each new book. Shame the Devil is the final book to use the cast of characters that center around the Washington D.C. bar, The Spot, where recurring character Nick Stephanos is the bartender (when not working as an unlicensed detective). This book offers fast paced action as well as satisfying character portrayals and, more than any other of his books, probes fundamental human issues of faith and life's meaning in the face of arbitrary violence and cruelty.

One of the things that make Pelecanos so popular with the D.C. audience is also protentially a problem for readers elsewhere; his books are so detailed with references to streets and neighborhoods that would mean nothing unless one knew them personally that readers might wish for some exposition to explain where and 'what' Georgia Ave. or Anacostia are. Still, the sense of place is fundamental to his writing and his stories come alive because they are about real people in a known setting. He is almost alone in creating Washington stories that don't focus on the President or some Senator or one of the Federal law enforcement agencies. Pelecanos's books are peopled by blue collar workers, common criminals, D.C. cops, and a sprinkling of hard working attorneys and small businessmen.

This book starts with a bang - an armed robbery that goes wrong and ends up with multiple victims - and it progresses to a dynamite conclusion in which revenge is is coupled with self-discovery and redemption. A really thrilling and satisfying reading experience.

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25 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A poignantly fine novel, December 22, 1999
This review is from: Shame the Devil: A Novel (Hardcover)
In 1995 Washington DC, May's Pizza Parlor is the scene of a massacre in which three employees, the getaway driver, and a little boy are dead. Additionally, Officer William Jonas is badly injured when he exchanges bullets with the criminals. Though he has no remorse over four of the dead, CEO (criminal executive officer) Frank Farrow escapes with his booty, but feels rage over the death of his brother.

Frank decides he must return to DC to kill the cop who killed his sibling. However, Frank is not the only person filled with overflowing anger from the pizza parlor incident. Dimitri Karras wants to get even with Frank for running over his little five-year old boy when he evaded the local police. Other relatives of the dead also suffer from deep grief and their efforts to share their feelings have minimally eased some of the ache. Dimitri learns from private investigator Nick Stephanos that after three torturous years have passed, Frank has returned to enact his own vengeance, unaware that his victims have individuals seeking him out to get their own form of vengeance.

SHAME THE DEVIL is an inner city tale of grief and revenge. The story line centers on the survivors struggling very poorly with the '95 slaughter. The plot shifts among several deteriorating neighborhood locales in which the characters meet to discuss the aftermath. Fans who enjoy a character-driven, angst-laden tale will want to read George P. Pelecanos' poignantly fine novel.

Harriet Klausner

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23 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Perhaps it's not a "mystery"..., January 28, 2000
By 
T. Lundregan "toml30" (Alexandria, VA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Shame the Devil: A Novel (Hardcover)
But George Pelecanos continues to write some of the best fiction that's out there. I would rate this a great mystery, even if you know "whodunnit." The characters are smartly written and the book is superbly paced. I first discovered Pelecanos with his last book "The Sweet Forever" and it was great to see how his characters from that book have evolved. If you're tired of reading the same old, same old from writers such as James Patterson and Steve Martini, definitely read this book. Pelecanos is right up there with Dennis Lehane and Michael Connelly (two writers whose positive reviews of Pelecanos inspired me to try him). Also, if you're at all familiar with the DC area, Pelecanos captures the setting beautifully. I cannot more highly recommend this book.
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23 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Some parts good, some parts not so good, January 20, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Shame the Devil: A Novel (Hardcover)
Pelacanos does some things quite well. He knows how to write an action scene, and he knows how to keep the pace of the book moving. Unfortunately, he needs a lot of work on the stuff that comes between the action scenes. We get way too much detail about how a restaurant kitchen operates. I don't really need to read about how the meatloaf was prepared. The worst part about the book was the incessant references to songs and Pelacanos' (or his characters') opinions about the songs. This went from tedious to annoying by the time the book was half over. I had the feeling the author was trying way too hard to come across as cool. There also are a few sloppy points in the plot, most notably that the killer sends a threatening letter days before he learns where the letter receiver lives. But if you're looking for a quick, light read (albeit a bit violent in places), this one should work.
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16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars 2/7/00 Addendum, February 9, 2000
This review is from: Shame the Devil: A Novel (Hardcover)
Everyone's entitled to his/her own opinion, but I strongly disagree w/some of these 5 star reviews. STD is better than most of what's out there, but it is not in the same ballpark as Big Blowdown or Sweet Forever (both of which I loved). One can't deny that it has far less action and it takes far longer to get moving than BB and SF. Pelecanos is a wonderful writer, but this is not his best work.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Perhaps it's not a "mystery"..., January 28, 2000
By 
T. Lundregan "toml30" (Alexandria, VA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Shame the Devil: A Novel (Hardcover)
But George Pelecanos continues to write some of the best fiction that's out there. I would rate this a great mystery, even if you know "whodunnit." The characters are smartly written and the book is superbly paced. I first discovered Pelecanos with his last book "The Sweet Forever" and it was great to see how his characters from that book have evolved. If you're tired of reading the same old, same old from writers such as James Patterson and Steve Martini, definitely read this book. Pelecanos is right up there with Dennis Lehane and Michael Connelly (two writers whose positive reviews of Pelecanos inspired me to try him). Also, if you're at all familiar with the DC area, Pelecanos captures the setting beautifully. I cannot more highly recommend this book.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars a tight, well-developed crime novel.., April 7, 2003
By 
lazza (Fort Lauderdale, Florida) - See all my reviews
'Shame the Devil' is the last in a series of novels by George Pelecanos tracing the lives of Greek immigrants and their decendents living in downtown Washington. While there is no need to read all the previous three novels, which I haven't done, I suggest reading at least one (perhaps the first, 'The Big Blowdown') to gain a historical perpective to the characters, the setting, etc.

'Shame the Devil' is very well-written, complete with excellent characterizations. While it doesn't have much of the drug culture found in the author's other novels it does contain more than its fair share of violence, extreme sadistic violence. The book drips with evil. Simply put, the story is about revenge and redemption. Certainly not in the same league as 'Crime & Punishment' but nonetheless a fine story. My only criticism is that at times, especially towards the end, the author gets a bit soppy. The good guy characters start hugging and snivelling. Why the author chose to insert "Kodak moments" into this hard-hitting novel is anyone's guess.

Bottom line: George Pelecanos is really a terrific crime writer. Enjoy.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Powerful, gritty storytelling, December 28, 2004
By 
William Merrill "eclecticist" (San Antonio, TX United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
I'm new to George Pelecanos with this book, but it seems like the world at large is now getting to know him through his involvement in the HBO series The Wire (writing and producing). Shame the Devil is an interesting character study that becomes tremendously suspenseful in the 2nd half. I enjoyed the shifting focus, back and forth from Nick Stefanos the ex-cop and PI, to Dimitri Karras and the other members of the survivors group, and of course to the bad guys. There was no single lead character in this book, but I was glad just to go with the flow of the story. This is also a tale that builds grippingly to a grim conclusion. It was literally a page-turner -- I had to force myself to slow down and not skip anything. I picked this up as a bargain book, and feel grateful to be introduced to an author whose other works I will seek out.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Noir in the Unknown Washington DC, April 2, 2001
George Pelecanos writes convincingly about the underside of Washington DC, the flip side of the glamorous branches of government. We have all waded through those tiresome DC-based legal and political thrillers that would have you believe that Washington DC is the exclusive enclave of the hyper-rich, powerful and wonderful. Pelecanos paints a vibrant picture of life in a downscale bar, the customers, the employees, and the lives that touch them. Nick Stefanos is a part-time private investigator and a full-time bartender. It is never a pretty picture. Alcoholism is front and center; lives of desperation, futility, corruption and crushing poverty are touched. The local DC government is portrayed as decaying and failing.

An interesting quirk is that all of the characters love music. Each scene has a piece of rock music that the author describes enthusiastically. It is just one of the details that provides so much richness to the image.

In this dismal environment, Pelecanos creates characters that are real. They have hopes and aspirations. And, they are prisoners of their past. You enter Nick's world and are swept along in an interesting and exciting plot. This author has an uncanny ability to craft a plot that is always believable and inevitable, without being predictable. Nick finds the small links that pull the solution to an old mystery together in a totally credible manner. You will find yourself caring for and liking the exotic characters in this book. Many current mystery authors cite Pelecanos as personal favorites. I rate this five-stars with a bullet!

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fan-freakin'-tastic!, March 16, 2001
By 
Mary M. Schmidt "Lynx" (Silver Spring, MD USA) - See all my reviews
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Pelecanos does it again. The life paths of two old friends intersect in the non-power corridors of Washington DC. Nick, the PI, drinks a bit too much but never loses his sense of when something doesn't look right. Dimitri is deeply depressed and haunted by the memory of his little boy, killed by a getaway car. The years go by, the crime remains unsolved. Until the killers come back to town, ready to try one more spectacular robbery. Ready for just about anything...except these two wily Greeks. The plotting is superb, the characters jump off the page at you. You know these people. You care about them. You might want to close your eyes at the scary parts. Shame the Devil is a masterpiece of crime fiction that will leave you wanting more.
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Shame the Devil: A Novel
Shame the Devil: A Novel by George Pelecanos (Hardcover - January 11, 2000)
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