18 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What it Is, January 25, 2012
This review is from: What It Was (Kindle Edition)
I've long been a fan of Pelecanos' work, my initiation starting with his novel RIGHT AS RAIN, and continuing along after that joyride to include his other works. I was struck from the beginning by the authenticity of his characters, the rhythm of his writing, and his powerful handling of violence. His work has a verisimilitude often absent in genre fiction. He isn't a crime novelist, he's a NOVELIST, period. I'm of the opinion that Pelecanos never makes a wrong note. I've read SHOEDOG, one of his lesser known novels, more than a handful of times. Now, to his latest work. I was pleasantly surprised to discover a new Pelecanos shortly on the heels of THE CUT, his hardcover released late last year (another gem, by the way). The surprise was then elevated upon learning that this newest novel would return to the world of Derek Strange, a character I've grown to love. But then, I love all of the characters in Pelecanos' world, from Nick Stefanos, to Terry Quinn, to...well, you get the point. This newest novel gripped me from page one and never let up steam. Written in scenes both cinematic and rhythmic (vignettes)told from the points of view of several characters, WHAT IT WAS is a study in how a crime novel should be written. Violent but emotionally satisfying, poignant in its rendering of the human condition (here you have the criminal perspective, the police perspective, the private investigator perspective, the girlfriends riding shotgun with their criminal boyfriends perspective--all handled with aplomb). To say that Pelecanos is a master is an understatement. I'd read a new book every month from him. Kudos.
Phillip Thomas Duck
author of
Triage: A Thriller (Shell Series)
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34 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
This is no George Higgins but ok for $ .99, January 25, 2012
This review is from: What It Was (Kindle Edition)
Not a bad story for the 99 cents I paid for it. Reads fast like an episode on television with about as much depth. Parts of the story seem to be put there just to make it juicy; like an HBO series in that it has pops of gratuitous sex or sensuality that don't really do much for the story and seem kind of unnecessary. For example lines like this "...his thick, helmeted c*#k plunging in and out of her warm, wet box, a pure physical act, which was what both of them were there for." It seems that the sex is just put there to be there. None of the characters sexual interactions have anything to do with what's going on with the story.
I'm a fan of noir and crime fiction and this story does fit into the genre but not high on my list. I thought the dialogue was a little flaky and there wasn't much depth in any of the characters; I would dare say zero development on the female characters. Maybe it would work out well on the big screen with a "Sin City" like vibe but didn't do much for me in print. I finished it feeling the story could have been much more than it was.
I wouldn't go out of my way to reccomend it to someone nor would I read it again; it was good for passing some time. If you want to read a gritty crime novel with real dialogue and characters check out "The Friends of Eddie Coyle" by Higgins or "Muscle for the Wing" by Daniel Woodrell. I guess I measure all books in this genre up against titles such as those.
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Blisteringly Good, January 26, 2012
Much of the attention around George Pelecanos' new book, WHAT IT WAS, has focused on the quite brilliant way that the good folks at Mulholland Books are publishing and marketing it. In case you haven't read about it, instead of the standard e-book and hardcover release followed months later by a paperback edition, WHAT IT WAS is available now as a 99-cent e-book, a trade paperback for $9.99, or a limited-edition, signed and slip-cased hardcover for $35.
I think this is quite brilliant, but the reality is that it wouldn't matter a whit if the story contained on the paper or e-pages wasn't up to snuff. Luckily for us all, WHAT IS WAS is one of Pelecanos' best, second only to RIGHT AS RAIN in my estimation.
WHAT IT WAS is set in 1972. Derek Strange has hung out his private investigator shingle. His former partner, Frank Vaughn, is still on the force. Red "Fury" Jones, a villain for the ages, is wreaking havoc in Washington DC, which Pelecanos brings to life in a manner that makes the reader quite certain she was actually there.
Many have called WHAT IT WAS noir, and I'm sure the label fits, but for me, it's much more than noir. Derek Strange has been a favorite character for years and for him to remain surprising and engaging is testament to Pelecanos' awesome storytelling prowess. Pelecanos obviously respects his setting, character and stories because he shortchanges none of them. Even the ancillary characters--like Red's girlfriend and sidekick or Strange's mistress or mom--are so vivid that I wouldn't have been surprised to have any one of them knock on my front door (ok, a little surprised, but you know what I mean).
Pelecanos has always been unapologetic in his storytelling, both in his books and on TV shows "The Wire" and "Treme." WHAT IT WAS continues this tradition, and I hope he never gives this up. WHAT IT WAS doesn't flinch at violence or human frailty; on the contrary, it celebrates both.
This will sound frivolous to some, but I have to also commend Pelecanos for telling a complete and complex tale in less than 300 pages. In a world where publishers put authors under contract to deliver stories that run to 400 pages and more even when they don't need to be, WHAT IT WAS is exactly the length it needs to be. It includes not one extraneous word, scene or plot element.
If you've never read Pelecanos, WHAT IT WAS is a fine place to start. While the books featuring Derek Strange are a series, they're not bound by elements of surprise that make reading them in order necessary.
Come this time next year, I expect to have seen WHAT IT WAS on plenty of Best of 2012 lists. I know it will be on mine. It is blisteringly good.
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