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Damnation Street (Weiss and Bishop Novels)
 
 

Damnation Street (Weiss and Bishop Novels) (Paperback)

~ (Author)
Key Phrases: suede windbreaker, arm breaker, whoever men, John Foy, Adrienne Chalk, Julie Wyant (more...)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Damnation Street (Weiss and Bishop Novels) + Shotgun Alley (Weiss and Bishop Novels) + Empire of Lies (Otto Penzler Book)
Price For All Three: $28.19

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  • This item: Damnation Street (Weiss and Bishop Novels) by Andrew Klavan

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Two-time Edgar winner Klavan again puts his own quirky spin on classic noir in his slam-bang third contemporary crime thriller to feature PIs Scott Weiss and Jim Bishop (after 2004's Shotgun Alley). Paunchy, moralistic Weiss, head of the Weiss Detective Agency in San Francisco, is still searching for bewitching prostitute Julie Wyant (aka Julie Angel), who's threatened by a relentless murderer the press has dubbed "the Shadowman." Weiss's nihilistic operative, Bishop, ignores all caution to help his boss. The terse, third-person narration occasionally switches to first person as Klavan, who claims to have worked for Weiss, inserts himself in the story, which he describes as a fictionalized memoir. While this authorial intrusion may interrupt the main action, it leads to some hilarious consequences. After drawing the reader in with a gripping plot and engrossing characters, Klavan produces a jolt at the end when he slyly reveals that... it's all fiction!
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


From Booklist

*Starred Review* A haunted, hard-drinking PI. A whore with a heart of gold. A remorseless killer with a gift for disguise. Blood, rain, and long nights behind the wheel. It takes genuine talent to make these tropes feel fresh--and Klavan's got talent to burn. In the successor to Dynamite Road (2003) and Shotgun Alley (2004), shambling, intuitive Scott Weiss is trying to save Julie Wyant, a hooker he has never met, from the Shadowman, a psychopath intent on torturing her to death. Weiss hunts Julie knowing full well he is being followed, leading the killer to his prey in order to bring him into the open. It's a great plot device, creating a bizarrely symbiotic relationship between Weiss and the Shadowman. Adding to this book's pleasures is the way Klavan posits it as a fictionalized memoir, inserting himself into the story as a budding writer and wannabe tough guy. His youthful naivete casts Weiss' weary-souled musings on the dark side of human nature into even sharper relief. Damnation Street has it all: great characters, inventive plotting, darkness, light, horror, and humor, all fused into a relentless tale of suspense that will have readers in agony to know how the final shot is fired. Keir Graff
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Harvest Books (September 10, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0156032627
  • ISBN-13: 978-0156032629
  • Product Dimensions: 7.9 x 5.3 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #244,224 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

More About the Author

Andrew Klavan
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12 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pushing the envelope of noir, September 21, 2006
By Lynn Harnett (Marathon, FL USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
This review is from: Damnation Street (Hardcover)
Klavan pushes the envelope of hard-boiled noir with this third non-stop but not quite over-the-top Weiss and Bishop tale, again narrated by the callow youth, Andrew Klavan.

Scott Weiss is a big man with a basset hound face, an ex-cop turned PI with a soft spot for prostitutes. Jim Bishop, an adrenaline junkie and definite bad-boy-lost, was one of Weiss' operatives until he betrayed his trust ("Shotgun Alley"). Andrew Klavan is the Jimmy Olsen of the operation, an earnest young man who has met his soul mate but been diverted by lust.

Weiss has taken up the trail of Julie Wyant ("Dynamite Road"), a prostitute "with the face of an angel" who spent one night with the sadistic "Shadowman" and has been on the run from him ever since. As evil and clever and crazed as psycho "specialist" killers come, the Shadowman is using Weiss to find Julie - as Weiss is using Julie to find him. When Bishop comes cross a crucial piece of information about the elusive killer he joins the hunt, bent on saving Weiss from certain death.

And Klavan is left to hold down the fort. Under the direction of Sissy, the lonely, lovely, older woman who has distracted him from his true love, Emma. And he gets his first client. A Pulitzer Prize winning author who wants his daughter Emma followed - yes, that Emma.

Klavan gleefully uses every cliché in the genre, punching the story to the edge of parody. And it works. The relentless story moves so adroitly that every skillful twist seems as plausible as it is clever - the ratio of lighted motel lights to cars in the lot, for instance, alerting Weiss to the killer's presence, and the killer's use of disguise and misdirection to slip away once again. The pace ratchets up so tightly that at one point it almost seems to spin out of control.

But Klavan - the author Klavan - reins it in with finesse, demonstrating that character drives action and while his characters may have the outlines of clichés they have souls and torments and aspirations and skills that make them behave the way they do.

There are a few preachy moments, when the prig in Klavan threatens to overwhelm the romanticist, but a sense of humor and a lack of respect for proportion redeems the sentiment. His fictional counterpart provides some hilarity along with a wide-eyed gallantry that's as refreshing as it is old-fashioned.

Cinematic, funny, violent, and riveting, this is Klavan at his manic best.

-- Portsmouth Herald
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "Good thugs are hard to find nowadays.", September 8, 2006
This review is from: Damnation Street (Hardcover)
Narrated by a writer who has decided to give up writing "bad smart novels" to work for private investigator Scott Weiss, this action-packed novel has "movie" written all over it. Weiss, formerly with the San Francisco Police Department, has been looking for Julie Wyant, a young prostitute with a mysterious past. A psychopathic killer-for-hire, John Foy, known as Shadowman, is trailing Weiss, hoping to find Wyant--the woman he wants for his own.

Jim Bishop, a violent and street-smart former employee of Weiss, is at a crossroads in his life. Having stolen money from Weiss, he is now charged with being an accessory to murder, thanks to his "girlfriend," who has killed four people. Bishop feels some loyalty toward Weiss, though he lacks the discipline to work in the "civilized world," but he becomes involved when he fears Weiss's life is in danger. The writer-narrator, a thirty-something klutz who has been having an affair with Sissy, a secretary in Weiss's office, is really in love with Emma McNair, daughter of a college professor. As these three plot threads interweave, the action is fast, furious, and often bloody.

Entirely plot-driven, the novel strives for sensation, relying on improbabilities, coincidences ("If this were fiction, you'd complain about the coincidences" says the narrator), horrors which may be dream sequences, characters who may be "undead," and every plot device of the early noir novels--hidden cameras, trap doors, and secret rooms. Because Weiss is described as able to "get inside people's thinking," he doesn't need to analyze events carefully or engage in brainstorming before taking action against the most threatening of villains.

Imitating the hard-boiled, noir style the writer-narrator says he admires, the novel is filled with very short, staccato sentences, a tough-guy attitude, and all the conceits of thirties detective stories, with constant, arch references to "the man who called himself John Foy." More a parody of noir novels than a serious contender for that label in its own right, this wild novel by author Andrew Klavan is chock full of violence, fast action, and the pseudo-macho style of noir detective stories from the thirties--a novel with the potential to become a blockbuster film. (3.5 stars) n Mary Whipple
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Damnation Street...Near The "Middle of Nowhere at Midnight", January 14, 2008
By TMStyles (California) - See all my reviews
  

Klavan ties up most of the loose ends of his Weiss/Bishop series (following "Dynamite Road" and "Shotgun Alley") in this hard boiled noir, "Damnation Street." Scott Weiss, ex-cop and head of his own PI office in San Francisco, is still tracking the elusive Julie Wyant, a prostitute that he may or may not be in love with...even though they have never met (don't ask).

The man who calls himself John Foy, dubbed "the Shadowman" by the media, is also still tracking Julie for his own perverted purposes which include his belief that he also is in love with her based on a one night encounter. Both these protagonists are obsessed with Julie, or what Julie represents to them. Scott has come to realize the only solution to this on-going cat and mouse game is for him to find Julie knowing "The Shadowman" will follow him setting up a final, ultimate confrontation. Foy also realizes the unhealthy symbiotic relationship that has developed between he and Weiss and also agrees to an inevitable confrontation with the three of them...of course, with a different predicted outcome than Weiss's.

Scott's former employee, the nihilistic, violence prone Jim Bishop, is still trying to find himself when he stumbles upon information that Weiss is in deadly peril from "The Shadowman" due to a secret strategy guaranteeing Scott's death. Bishop's respect for Weiss impels him to enter the chase and save Scott thereby redeeming his own self respect and meaning in life. Now we have four main characters all moving across the chessboard with similar plans yet vastly different motives.

Klavan's pacing is non-stop, full-speed-ahead action leaving little time to stop and catch your breath. It is one of those books that if you like these characters, you will find most difficult to put down. Reading the first two installments will give you a deeper appreciation of the characters but this effort can certainly be read as a stand-alone. Weiss's intuitive ability to "know" or sense things about people acts almost as a sixth-sense allowing him to keep a step ahead of others and to outguess the best plans of the villains. It is a unique "hook" that I find intriguing in this series.

The story is told from several points of view including a first person insertion of Klavan into the plot as an operative out of Weiss's agency. All in all, I found this a most enjoyable read that stretched the noir/crime thriller genre without going over the top. You'll laugh, you'll cringe, and you'll lose your breath at times...but, hey, isn't that what a good book should do for us?

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Challenging, tense, moving plot
THE BAD NEWS FIRST: You're going to want to read Dynamite Road and Shotgun Alley before you read this one. That's bad news because you'll have to find them first. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Arnold F. Williams

5.0 out of 5 stars Smart and funny detective story
Good storyline, interesting characters, plot twists and interesting insights about life that will stay with you long after you read it. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Sheepdog

2.0 out of 5 stars graphic realism
The writer reminds me of Tom Wolf in his graphic writing style. Klavan became a Christian and his writing took on redemptive characteristics. Read more
Published 8 months ago by an apt word

2.0 out of 5 stars reader be warned
I only read the first five chapters, so this is not a full review of the book. The writing and plot seem good enough but the reader will find foul language and explicit sex... Read more
Published on May 22, 2007 by cslipp

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Book, Excellent Series
This book Provides an Excellent End To An Overwhelming Great Series. Cannot Wait To Read Future Books From Andrew Klavan
HIghly Recommend Reading The Whole Weiss Bishop... Read more
Published on January 9, 2007 by Adam Forsberg

5.0 out of 5 stars To say that Damnation Street is hard-boiled is an understatement
As stated in its Author's Note, Damnation Street is part of the continuing story (following 2003's Dynamite Road and 2004's Shotgun Alley) of "two lost men," Scott Weiss, head of... Read more
Published on December 14, 2006 by Henry W. Wagner

5.0 out of 5 stars Almost a perfect "10"
This is the third outing of Weiss and Bishop, narrated by a young Klavan. PI Scott Weiss realizes the only for beautiful prostitute Julie Wyant to ever be safe and stop running... Read more
Published on October 22, 2006 by L. J. Roberts

3.0 out of 5 stars THIS BOOK COULD HAVE BEEN TITLED OBSESSION
PLOT LINE: A 50ish, overweight but intuitive San Francisco P.I. named Weiss is obsessed with finding and eliminating a professional killer known as The Shadowman, who considers... Read more
Published on September 18, 2006 by Bookworm

4.0 out of 5 stars "Something about the scenario he'd laid out in his mind didn't make sense."


A natural born serial killer with a twisted heart. A broken-down PI with one last good deed left in him. And a prostitute on the run for her life. Read more
Published on August 27, 2006 by Luan Gaines

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