From Publishers Weekly
Not for the faint-hearted or squeamish, Cooke's fact-based thriller takes a graphic look at a seamy side of 1930s Cleveland. A serial killer stalks male prostitutes and vagrants during Eliot Ness's post-Chicago tenure as Safety Commissioner. In-the-closet cop Hank Lambert recognizes the head lying near other parts of a dismembered body as that of homosexual pimp Eddie Andrassy, the first of many butchered corpses to be found in Cleveland's grimy Kingsbury Run section over the next five years. Lambert's association with a young male hooker with a heart of gold reveals the gay life of the period and eventually leads to the rich, politically well-connected killer, who taunts Ness by leaving gift-wrapped body parts closer and closer to his headquarters. Some readers will be offended by the explicit and kinky sex (notably a bathhouse episode involving a trucker and a chicken), and the ending is an into-the-sunset contrivance, but the talented Cooke ( Out for Blood ) has pulled an interesting switch by casting male characters in the classic women-in-peril roles of a typical slasher novel.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
In the politically corrupt Cleveland of 1935, a number of dismembered bodies, mostly male, are discovered in the seedier parts of town. New Safety Commissioner Eliott Ness, working with homicide detective Hank Lambert, suspects the killer may be a psychopathic homosexual. What he doesn't know is that Lambert, a closet gay, has formed an attachment to a young street hustler connected to the victims. Basing his story on actual unsolved murders, Cooke ( Out for Blood , Avon, 1991) nicely re-creates the atmosphere, squalor, and dubious morality of a Depression-era city and provides some nail-biting suspense as the murderer stalks his victims. Shallow characterizations, unnecessarily graphic sex, and a somewhat melodramatic ending mar the author's accomplishment, but this is still a compelling and unsettling read. For large fiction collections.
- Eric W. Johnson, Teikyo Post Univ. Lib., Waterbury, Ct.Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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