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The Cold Six Thousand Hardcover – May 8, 2001

3.8 out of 5 stars 140 customer reviews
Book 2 of 3 in the Underworld USA Series

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 688 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; 1st edition (May 8, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0679403922
  • ISBN-13: 978-0679403920
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.6 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (140 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #218,643 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Top Customer Reviews

Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
Read American Tabloid in '99 during my freshman year of high school (when I was 14 going on 58) and obsessed with all things '40's-'70's in American History from Old Time Radio Broadcasts to Classic Cinema as I knew quite early in life the generation I belonged to was the beginning of the end. American Tabloid fit the bill for me with its storyline spanning over the beginning of America's most interesting times (in my opinion) combining both fact and fiction in a hardboiled narrative second to none (which years later has served as a great inspiration to my professional life as a screenwriter, Ellroy's gritty and to the bone voice is a perfect guide for writing action in a screenplay and I traditionally to this day will read Ellroy whenever working on a project as his voice helps writing in the gritty fashion I've grown accustomed in writing my action blocks).

Years after I had found the Cold Six Thousand and couldn't be happier the piece I felt was written specifically for me as a kid who didn't fit in was important to Ellroy enough to continue the story and thus covering another fascinating span 63-68 picking up from one Assassination and concluding on another that shook the world.

Trading Kemper for Wayne Jr at first took some getting used to but not long before I accepted him into the fold and dove in without coming up for air til we were out of Nam and watching reels of three giants on TV with Ward during a poetic chapter preceding the last when Wayne Jr brings Janice for a round of golf with ol' dad.

Recently after buying a Kindle finally I decided to revisit Tabloid and Six Thousand now 30 and much more informed historically and grown up and a writer myself and both stories had the same magic for me they did when I was just a boy.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Fast paced, brutal, and uncompromising.Reading some passages of James Elroy's novel can seem like a slap in the face. The author draws the reader into a world of ruthless movers and shakers that are behind the headlines and events swirling around John Kennedy's, BobbyKennedy's and Martin Luther King's assasinations, Howard Hughes obsession with buying Los Vegas, and the drug trade from Vietnam. Whether you believe all the suppositions and subterfuge, this book is impossible to put down once you start..
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
Not for the faint of heart. A novel based on some real events and some fictional events and a mixture of real people and the author's characters (no doubt based on real people). Its actually the second book in a trilogy,and it can stand alone as a complete story.
It includes some rough language and some rough activities. But at the end of the day its one heck of a read. I liked it. I've read almost all of James Ellroy's books and enjoyed them all. If you are interested I suggest starting with some of his early writing and then advance as he polishes his skills an author. And in my book he is one heck of an author.
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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
Takes Ellroy's signature "less is more" approach to sentence structure to extremes. At times it feels like an incredibly violent "Dick and Jane" primer. Uses racial/homophobic/sexist slurs in a darkly comic way. Most readers will either love or hate James Ellroy, by my own estimation, and this is especially true with The Cold Six-Thousand.
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
I have to say I think this is my favorite James Ellroy novel. I galloped through the LA quadrilogy and then very nearly before I regained my nerve, I leaped back into the hell hole of the 1960s as depicted here-in . Crazy shenanigans abound , huge swaths of similarly minded brutal characters romp, rock, roll rampage, and rollick on every note in this raucous symphony. gallons of blood , drool, semen, and other wet surprises soak through the bindings of this book. If you havent read the 1st book in the serious, then dont bother applying to Mr Ellroys school of hard-knocks quite yet.
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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
Wow. This one is actually a bit better than the first in the series, because of the MLK assassination which was a heart wrenching moment in history--and in the book. That extra dose of emotional involvement on the part of the reader (me) made it feel less like a modern retelling of "Candide" and more like the story of all our lives that we don't want to admit to ourselves.
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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
I save the 5 stars for what I think of as exceptional books. This one started at a "3" and kept creeping up. If I could I'd give it a 4.5. I've read several Ellroy books and thought I was used to the style, but this one is pretty extreme. The story is compelling for those of us alive during that period of time. The insights into the Mob, FBI, CIA, Howard Hughes, and corruptions of other police departments, and the beginnings of the Vietnam War are very interesting.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
No commas. A world record. Just 47 commas in 672 pages. Not 700 pages. Some would have you believe that. Not so. 672 pages. The few commas could be colons. As in "Somebody yelled, 'limos!Somebody yelled, 'Him.' ''
No. Not that "Him.'' Howard Hughes, who thought of himself as more powerful than that "Him.''
But seriously.
I've been an Ellroy fan since "Black Dahlia, and the rest of the LA Noir series, which was actually written in prose, not stacatto. But after being originally turned off by his new style in "White Jazz,'' I've gotten used to it. And once you get by it, both this "novel'' and "American Tabloid'' become a brutal and (perhaps) fairly accurate portrayal of the late '50s and '60s. (At least Oliver Stone would think so.
The best of Ellroy's heroes have always been flawed. But this bunch outdoes them. I'm not sure how he generates sympathy for a corrupt ex-FBI man and mob lawyer or a stone anti-Castro killer, but he manages. My feeling: Compared to J. Edgar, the real-life figure around whom the book revolves, they're up front about who and what they are. Hoover never was.
Overall: worth reading if you can get through 672 pages with just 47 commas.
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