13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
There should really be a "Mac's Place", December 28, 1999
It is a testiment to Ross Thomas's skill at invention that my wife and I have frequently lamented that there really isn't such a bar as Mac's Place. After reading the several novels in which it figures, along with its owners, McCorkle and Padillo, I have a hard time believeing that the dark and excellent establishment, with its distintive staff and quiet mysterious air, can't actually be found if one were to look hard enough among the side streets in D.C.'s Northwest quandrant. But alas, it's all made up. Yet what a great invention. Thomas makes every aspect of the fictional world he presents to the reader totally believable. This book, like most of his others, has enough plot elements to fuel three or four books by any lesser author, yet he binds these together in a compact story that both surprises and satisfies. McCorkle and Padillo may be older and slower, but the world they inhabit is as dangerous, treacherous and interesting as ever.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Introducing Granny Haynes, former LAPD Detective, December 27, 2000
This is a later McCorkle and Padillo adventure set in Washington, D.C. Thomas again uses their bar and grill as a focal point. The real hero of the story is Granny Haynes, former LAPD detective and now aspiring actor. I consider this book to be one of Ross Thomas' better efforts, full of insights on maneuverings within the CIA and the Washington power elite.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
D.C. confidential., June 11, 2006
Readers familiar with Ross Thomas' work are likely to recognize a few of the characters in Twilight at Mac's Place from some of the author's other novels. Most notably, Mac McCorkle and Mike Padillo, the restaurant owning duo with more than a passing knowledge of the dark arts associated with international espionage.
Twilight at Mac's Place transpires in and around Washington, DC during the month of January, 1989. George H.W. Bush has just been sworn in as President. The third person narrator helpfully reminds us that Mr. Bush is the first President to have previously served as Director of Central Intelligence. That interesting bit of information helps to set the mood for the tale of cloak and dagger intrigue that is about to unfold.
A man named Steady Haynes dies suddenly of natural causes the evening before the inauguration. Though never officially an agent of the CIA, Haynes has spent most of his career unofficially facilitating the carrying out of some very nasty things on the Agency's behalf all over the world. When Granville Haynes, Steady's son and a former LAPD homicide detective, comes to Washington to attend his father's funeral, he learns that Steady had let it be known that he had recently written his memoirs.
It soon becomes very apparent that there are people out there who do not want Steady's manuscript to ever see the light of day. And they are not above commiting murder to see that it doesn't. The complex plot of Twilight at Mac's Place revolves around the younger Mr. Haynes, with the help of McCorkle and Padillo, uncovering who the anonymous literary suppressors are.
This very appealing book contains plenty of the byzantine twists and turns Thomas is famous for. Moreover, there are plenty of interesting characters and the dialogue is unfailingly smart and entertainingly clever. Recommended to those readers who like their political mysteries laced with sophisticated humor and an insider's view of the way Washington does business.
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