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Shotgun Alley [MP3 Audio, Unabridged, Audiobook] [MP3 CD]

Andrew Klavan (Author, Narrator)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

Price: $29.95 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

October 31, 2004
Honey---a vivacious, wealthy, seventeen-year-old daughter of a politician---has a penchant for drug dealers, mad-dog bikers, booze, sex, crank, and guns. She's run off with Cobra, the leader of a band of motorcycle-gang outcasts who have dubbed themselves the Outriders since they are too hotheaded and reckless for other rival gangs. But her father, who is running for the U.S. Senate, wants her back before she takes his career down in flames along with her hell-bent soul.

Enter Scott Weiss and Jim Bishop, Andrew Klavan's star private eyes from Dynamite Road. Weiss is a former cop who is an accomplished detective with a lot of connections. Bishop is a savvy, strong-willed tough guy and ladies' man who does the legwork for Weiss's agency.
Bishop's assignment: infiltrate the Outriders and seduce and steal Honey away from Cobra. But has Bishop finally met his match? Cobra is brilliant as well as bad---an oddly intellectual biker who is one step ahead of everyone on his trail. And Honey is not only rich and beautiful, she is hotter than the hinges of hell, irresistibly alluring, a black widow who draws the hardest, toughest, sharpest hustlers into her lethal web---where she consumes them whole.

Bishop, falling for a woman like never before, is drawn into Honey's web, and even with the diabolically clever Weiss in his corner---working with the cops, scheming with the politicians, pulling the strings, and calling the shots---Bishop may be going down.

Has Bishop finally met his match? Is Honey too hot to handle?
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Scott Weiss is a middle-aged PI based in San Francisco, an ex-cop with a basset hound's face, a romantic's soul and an empath's ability to read others. Jim Bishop is a young, handsome live wire with a taste for violence, drugs and loose women. Bishop works for Weiss, and the interplay between them is only one reason of many to read this memorable thriller from Klavan (Hunting Down Amanda, etc.). Last (and first) seen in last year's Dynamite Road, Weiss and Bishop here tackle separate cases, with Bishop taking the foreground as he is hired by a millionaire with political ambitions to retrieve the man's teenage daughter, Holly. She has shucked daddy for Cobra, head of a homicidal outlaw biker gang—and the only way to retrieve her is to seduce her. Meanwhile, Weiss takes on the case of an arch-feminist professor at Berkeley who hires him to track down the anonymous man who, she says, has been harassing her with erotic e-mails. Both cases hold major surprises that spin the narrative around. That narrative itself is a surprise, because although most of it is in the third person, Klavan breaks into it from time to time in his own first person, claiming in a foreword that the story is true and based on his early years working for a PI firm. In any case, the story is emotionally true: Klavan's understanding of the human heart and how it can be torn or salved by eros is uncanny. There's sharp action throughout and the interplay between Bishop's wildness and Weiss's moral gravity is a wonder. The book's only flaws are the jarring first-person intrusions, but they're bumps in a joy ride that's as exciting and real as any this year in thrillerdom.
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

In this breakneck hard-boiled mystery, Klavan brings back the compelling duo who premiered in Dynamite Road (2003): hulking PI Scott Weiss, a brooding, tarnished knight whose hangdog expression oozes weltschmertz, and Jim Bishop, a badass adrenaline junkie saved from a life of crime by Weiss to do the firm's dirty work. His current walk on the wild side involves infiltrating a vicious biker gang to wrest the wayward daughter of a local politico from the clutches of Cobra, a Charlie Manson wannabe with an abrupt bayonet. Meanwhile on the streets of San Francisco, Weiss hunts for the unreconstructed male behind a spate of erotic e-mail aimed at an icy feminist professor with secrets of her own, assisted by a callow intern whose candid first-person asides bring the whole thing down to earth. The mixture of intense action, fierce sexual obsession, and disillusioned longing is irresistible, and as for the hairpin plot, remember this: follow the money, cherchez la femme, and habeas corpus. This is a sure bet for fans of down-and-dirty thrillers ranging from Vachss to Pelecanos to Lee Child. David Wright
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • MP3 CD
  • Publisher: Chivers Sound Library; MP3 Una,Unabridged edition (October 31, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0792733304
  • ISBN-13: 978-0792733300
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 6.1 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #5,768,783 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Andrew Klavan has been nominated for the Mystery Writer of America's Edgar award five times and won twice. He is the author of several bestselling novels, including Don't Say A Word, filmed starring Michael Douglas, True Crime, filmed by Clint Eastwood, and Empire of Lies. He is currently writing a series of thrillers for young adults called The Homelanders. The first two novels in the series are The Last Thing I Remember and The Long Way Home. Klavan is a contributing editor to City Journal and his essays have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times, among other places. His satiric video commentaries can be seen on PJTV.com.

 

Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Weiss and Bishop are back, February 7, 2005
By 
Untouchable (Sydney, NSW Australia) - See all my reviews
Scott Weiss and Jim Bishop burst into the private investigation spotlight for the first time in the thrilling Dynamite Road . Together they form an unlikely but very effective combination, so effective that they have remained in business long enough to feature in Shotgun Alley, a sequel that picks up where Dynamite Road left off.

Andrew Klavan has put an interesting spin on his hardboiled private detective series that just tweaks it a little to give it a refreshing nuance. It's not the investigative work that is carried out although they are very adept at their jobs and the action flows in waves; it isn't Weiss and Bishop's character traits or personalities, although they are very distinctive and well-developed; it's not even the way they operate, although undercover work has featured in both Dynamite Road and Shotgun Alley and is rich in suspense and intrigue. All of these qualities would have drawn me to the series anyway, but the quality that gives the series that little distinctive twist is that it is narrated by Andrew Klavan who is working as a young office clerk in Weiss's firm.

Shotgun Alley is the name of a bar frequented almost exclusively by bikers and, in particular, by a group known as The Outriders. Not an official gang, they display no colours on their jackets, they are considered too violent and unstable to be part of the more formalised biker gangs. Scary thought, huh? They've already proven what they're capable of when Jim Bishop moves into their midst in a not-so-subtle way. The raw, tough, sneering persona of the biker outlaw comes easily to Bishop making him the ideal operative for the undercover job he has been assigned. His job in this case is to infiltrate this criminal crew and lure away the leader's girlfriend, Honey. Honey happens to be a rich man's daughter and he doesn't want her shenanigans jeopardising his future political plans. Yep, he's a sentimental, loving rich man.

Bishop's operation isn't the only job keeping Weiss in business. The agency is also approached by Professor M.R. Brinks who has been receiving a long series of sexually explicit and harassing emails. She wants Weiss to find out who is sending them, claiming to be outraged and promising all sorts of repercussions. Weiss is not so sure about her real reasons for finding her cyber-stalker but takes the job.

It's this job that Weiss gives the young Klavan his big chance to do some real detective work. Klavan confesses that as a fan of Chandler and Hammett he has always dreamt of becoming a private detective like Marlowe or Sam Spade. He idolises Weiss, pointing out that he's everything a hardboiled private detective should be, even down to the bottle of Macallan Whisky in the bottom drawer, and he's eager to impress him.

So what is this Scott Weiss like anyway? According to Klavan he's a big ugly man with a paunch, basset hound features, mournful, world weary eyes and a habit of feeling sorry for everyone else. He has an uncanny knack for tracking people down and almost a second sight when it comes to problem solving (much to Jim Bishop's good fortune).

Jim Bishop, on the other hand, is a dangerous dude who plays by his own rules. He's at his best when the adrenaline is pumping and all hell is about to break loose, which seems to be a regular state of affairs where he's concerned.

Klavan's two protagonists are richly developed characters who are as vastly different to one another as it is possible to get, yet they manage to work together successfully, possibly because they rarely meet each other during the course of the story.

The tone of the story maintains a dark and dangerous edge throughout as we live with the volatile bikers. You can sense the barely contained rage in every confrontation that Bishop has with Cobra, the gang's leader. Switching the focus across to Weiss doesn't lighten things any, either. He seems to wander around with a black cloud above his head and a hangdog expression on his face, sighing at every opportunity, to the point where it starts to become an amusing attribute of the man. He is constantly haunted by the spectre of Ben Fry, known as the Shadowman and acting as an ever-present threat to Weiss. This looming presence carries over from Dynamite Road and remains just beyond Weiss's peripheral vision, lurking as a constant reminder that he lives in a dangerous world. (Weiss would sigh heavily at this point...)

Shotgun Alley is a hardboiled detective story that delivers a brooding story of gang violence highlighted by sudden scenes of frenetic action balanced with periods of introspection and self-absorption. Apart from a short section where Weiss's reflections become particularly tedious, the book maintains a solid pace that will be sure to keep all private detective fans glued to the pages.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Weiss and Bishop make for a pretty good team, January 12, 2006
By 
clifford "akitonmyers" (Portland, OR, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This book has a few starts and stops that kind of leaves the reader feeling like they were on a bumper car ride. The writing is very jagged. Klavan has a style that feels like he were narrating the entire novel from the vantage point of a 1940's MGM/Bogart voice over. In my opinion, I think that Klavan heads away from his stronger areas and concentrates too intensely on too many action scenes.

The parts of the book that just click and are kind of magical are when Klavan writes beyond Weiss and Bishop and concentrates on the third character in his series... himself. I could have just kept reading and been a very happy camper if Klavan had forgone the rest of the story and focused on the relationship that is touched upon between himself and the girl in the pizza joint.

What I have put into this review here are some of the stronger negative points that I encountered. Its a pretty good book. I can think of many protagonist series' that I would rather have another sequal to instead of another Weis/Bishop book, but its not that bad either.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Follow-Up to a Very Strong Debut, November 29, 2004
By 
Craig Larson (Maple Grove, MN USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
Over the weekend, I read Andrew Klavan's second Weiss and Bishop novel, _Shotgun Alley_, and really enjoyed it, though in retrospect, the book is chock-full of cliches: the tough guy hero who infiltrates a biker gang and proves himself to be just as virile as the rest and a femme fatale right out of film noir. But Klavan writes with such power and assuredness, that the whole thing comes to vivid life and it moves.

Jim Bishop is charged with bringing back the daughter of a rich man who is planning a senate run. In an act of rebellion, she's joined a biker gang made up of misfits and castoffs too crazy to be accepted in the traditional gangs (there's even a "Mad Dog"; at one point, a character says "What does a biker have to do to earn the nickname Mad Dog?"). They're the Outriders and they're not above killing a few innocent bystanders who might get in the way of their smash-and- grab thefts.

Back at the office, Weiss has been hired by a feminist professor to track down the person responsible for a string of sexually-harassing emails. The only problem is she's been receiving them for over nine months--it turns out she's fallen in love with the sender and wants help tracking him down. The process of finding out who the sender is allows Weiss some time to reflect on his own unrequited love for his fantasy woman from the previous
novel. He knows that there's an unstoppable killer out there, just waiting to follow him should he try to find this woman, but he's not sure if that should stop him from trying.

There's a great scene where the unnamed "I" narrator (if we believe the book's foreword, this is Klavan himself, though it's hard to believe these books are really based on real events as the narrator assures us) meets a woman who seems to be his perfect match and they have a wonderful conversation which ends with her giving him her phone number and eliciting a promise for him to call. Very soon after, he drifts into an all-consuming sexual relationship with Weiss' female operative Sissy, and forgets all about Emma McNair, his perfect woman. Very sad, really.

We learn more about the backstory of the relationship between Bishop and Weiss and how they started working together. It all builds to a raid on a warehouse during a dark and stormy night, with police and FBI agents, tipped off by Bishop, waiting to capture the gang.

I really had a great time with this book and it was literally a page-turner that wouldn't let me go. There were several times that I was about to put the book aside and do something else, but I read just one more sentence and that was enough to draw me into the next chapter and then the next. I liked _Dynamite Road_ a lot, but _Shotgun Alley_ is even better. Hopefully, this series will continue for some time.
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