alfredlion
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The Crazy Kill
- A Grave Digger & Coffin Ed Novel
- By: Chester Himes
- Narrated by: Dion Graham
- Length: 5 hrs and 43 mins
- Unabridged
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Outside the apartment where a wake is going on, the manager of the A&P across the street is robbed. Reverend Short, a storefront preacher addicted to opium and brandy, is watching from a bedroom window in the flat. He leans out too far and falls, but a huge bread basket, sitting outside the bakery below, saves him. Back inside, he says he sees a vision of a dead man. Outside, in the very basket Short landed in, lies the body of Valentine Haines. Who murdered Val? It is up to Grave Digger Jones and Coffin Ed Johnson to find out.
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This is One Crazy Bunch!
- By Ilana on 07-06-12
- The Crazy Kill
- A Grave Digger & Coffin Ed Novel
- By: Chester Himes
- Narrated by: Dion Graham
Great hard boiled mystery story
Reviewed: 11-20-24
Yet another great entry in Himes’ Gravedigger and Coffin Ed, Harlem detective series. You know they aren’t playing around with names like those. While perfectly willing to use violence, they do so judiciously. They aren’t brute thugs, rather they are nuanced detectives whose reputation for violence is one of their assets. There’s also their intelligence, street smarts and the fact that they have seen it all. They have informants across Himes’ vivid depiction of the Harlem demi-monde. Junkies, dealers, hustlers , gamblers, strippers populate this Harlem alongside doctors, preachers, musicians, bartenders, cabbies and every other walk of life.
The stories aren’t procedurals. They often spend as much time with the suspects as they do with Coffin Ed & Gravedigger. The characters are well-written, elevating them above stereotypes of their professions. This is a benefit of an insiders view. And we the readers and listeners are the beneficiaries.
I highly recommend this book and series to fans of hard boiled fiction. Or to those looking for a new mystery series.
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The Last Yakuza
- Life and Death in the Japanese Underworld
- By: Jake Adelstein
- Narrated by: Brian Nishii
- Length: 12 hrs and 36 mins
- Unabridged
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Makoto Saigo is half-American and half-Japanese in small-town Japan with a set of talents limited to playing guitar and picking fights. With rock stardom off the table, he turns toward the only place where you can start from the bottom and move up through sheer merit, loyalty, and brute force―the yakuza. Saigo, nicknamed “The Tsunami”, quickly realizes that even within the organization, opinions are as varied as they come, and a clash of philosophies can quickly become deadly. One screw-up can cost you your life, or at least a finger.
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absolutely astounding work. you will not put this down.
- By I_am_Guts on 01-31-24
- The Last Yakuza
- Life and Death in the Japanese Underworld
- By: Jake Adelstein
- Narrated by: Brian Nishii
Well written look into a way of life that is quickly fading.
Reviewed: 11-06-24
I just finished listening to it today. The book follows the life of an Inagawa Kai family boss named Saigo. From him, the author goes back to the provide a brief overview of the Yakuza's history. Mainly, it follows Saigo from biker gang leader in the 1970s through his life in the Yakuza. His life is the spine of the story. From there, Adelstein branches out to discuss some of his bosses and associates, even organized crime detectivs. He provides a good overview of a cross-section of Yakuza. The reader gets a good picture of how the Yakuza operated for most of the post-war period. And how they were forced to change as their relationship to the larger Japanese society changed. Finally, he parallels the decline in Saigo's fortune with a decline in the Yakuza's fortunes. I enjoyed it. Adelstein clearly knows his subject.
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Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee (Dee Goong An)
- An Authentic 18th-Century Chinese Detective Novel
- By: Robert van Gulik
- Narrated by: Mark Bramhall, Stefan Rudnicki, Lorna Raver, and others
- Length: 7 hrs and 46 mins
- Unabridged
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Long before Western writers had even conceived the idea of writing detective stories, the Chinese had developed a long tradition of literary works that chronicled the cases of important district magistrates. One of the most celebrated of these was Judge Dee, who lived in the seventh century.
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More Judge Dee Please!
- By Elizabeth on 04-30-12
- Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee (Dee Goong An)
- An Authentic 18th-Century Chinese Detective Novel
- By: Robert van Gulik
- Narrated by: Mark Bramhall, Stefan Rudnicki, Lorna Raver, Yuri Rasovsky
Fans of the Van Gulik books will enjoy
Reviewed: 10-17-24
A well done translation of Judge Dee stories that preserves the uniqueness of the classic Chinese detective novels.
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Holmes on the Range
- By: Steve Hockensmith
- Narrated by: William Dufris
- Length: 9 hrs and 25 mins
- Unabridged
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1893 is a tough year in Montana, and any job is a good job. When Big Red and Old Red Amlingmeyer sign on as ranch hands at the secretive Bar-VR cattle spread, they're not expecting much more than hard work, bad pay, and a comfortable campfire around which they can enjoy their favorite pastime: scouring Harper's Weekly for stories about the famous Sherlock Holmes.
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For Holmes Sake
- By Fred on 04-24-06
- Holmes on the Range
- By: Steve Hockensmith
- Narrated by: William Dufris
Great mystery in a classic Western setting
Reviewed: 09-20-24
I went to Reddit to request suggestions for a mystery story in the classic Western genre. It seems like most are in a modern setting. This one however was described as fitting my request to a tee. Did it ever. Set on a ranch just before the turn of the century, it follows the adventures of 2 brothers, Old Red & Big Red. Illiterate Old Red is obsessed with the Sherlock Holmes stories that Big Red reads to him. So when strange things happen on the ranch Old Red decides to try his hand at deducifying. The mystery was clever and I was left guessing until the end. This is an enjoyable listen that blends Sherlock Holmes, Westerns and a touch of comedy.
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Homicide Is My Business
- Luigi the Zip: A Hitman’s Quest for Honor
- By: Jerry Schmetterer, Michael Vecchione
- Narrated by: Stephen Bel Davies
- Length: 7 hrs and 41 mins
- Unabridged
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The story of Luigi Ronsisvalle is an intimate look at the life of a professional killer. It is, in some ways, the story of all workingmen and women with ambition who never achieve their ultimate goal. But what makes Luigi unique is that, for him to achieve his goal, people had to die. His ambition, from when he was twelve years old, was to be a made man in the Mafia. He once told a presidential commission, "American child falls in love with baseball, I fall in love with Mafia."
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Great insight into the life of a knock-around mobster
- By alfredlion on 09-06-24
- Homicide Is My Business
- Luigi the Zip: A Hitman’s Quest for Honor
- By: Jerry Schmetterer, Michael Vecchione
- Narrated by: Stephen Bel Davies
Great insight into the life of a knock-around mobster
Reviewed: 09-06-24
Ronsisvalle spent the better part of two decades knocking around the lower rungs of the Bonnano Family’s Knickerbocker Ave Sicilian crews. An inveterate gambler and womanizer he was never more than a brokester and would never fulfill his dream of becoming a made man. Still, his story is an interesting one.
There is much to recommend this book to fans of Mafia history. The people he was around are not often discussed in books. I may be wrong but I think Ronsisvalle was the only Zip from that era that flipped. He testified at the Pizza Connection trial along with Tomasso Buscetta. Even though he was at the bottom of the Pizza Connection he was still around a lot of guys. He talks about going around burning pizza places associated with the Gambino’s down. He was told it was for gambling debts, but it fits right into the timeline of Galante’s attacks on Gambino traffickers and their pizza shops.
The book is well written and will appeal to casual readers as well as fans of the genre.
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A Rage in Harlem
- A Grave Digger & Coffin Ed Novel
- By: Chester Himes
- Narrated by: Samuel L. Jackson
- Length: 5 hrs and 26 mins
- Unabridged
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Academy Award nominee Samuel L. Jackson ( Pulp Fiction, Star Wars films), fresh off the success of his uproarious, Audie-nominated performance of the mock children’s book Go the F**k to Sleep, delivers a swaggering, darkly-humored rendering of Chester Himes’ classic first novel.
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Go the f--k to Audible and get this now!
- By Julie W. Capell on 03-22-12
- A Rage in Harlem
- A Grave Digger & Coffin Ed Novel
- By: Chester Himes
- Narrated by: Samuel L. Jackson
Fantastic look at the Harlem underworld of days gone by.
Reviewed: 08-31-24
I absolutely loved this book. As I said it is a fantastic look at the Harlem underworld of days gone by. While it features Coffin Ed and Gravedigger, they are not the main characters. That distinction belongs to Jackson, the squarest, most naive man ever put to paper. The world of “A Rage in Harlem” is populated with cons, hustlers, prostitutes, junkies, killers and cross-dressing nuns that leap off the page as vibrant, though flawed, characters, rather than flat stereotypes. They exist just below the surface in Harlem, but thrive in the deep shadows of the larger world. The writing is colorfully descriptive and the story moves write along. It has a nice balance between the hard-boiled and the humorous. Himes clearly loved Harlem and its demi-monde and after listening to this book you will too.
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Steel City Mafia
- Blood, Betrayal and Pittsburgh's Last Don
- By: Paul N. Hodos
- Narrated by: Justin Price
- Length: 5 hrs and 6 mins
- Unabridged
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Pittsburgh's small but lucrative Cosa Nostra mafia family was on the rise in 1985 with a newly crowned Don . . . The men who came to dominate the rackets in western Pennsylvania, eastern Ohio, and West Virginia opened the family to massive profits from drug trafficking and a street tax on other criminal activities. At the same time, the Youngstown, Ohio, faction of the family launched a brutal mob war against the weakening Cleveland mafia and the Altoona, Pennsylvania, crew violently clamped down on their city.
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Tell the facts. small sketches of their actual lives.
- By jenny on 09-14-24
- Steel City Mafia
- Blood, Betrayal and Pittsburgh's Last Don
- By: Paul N. Hodos
- Narrated by: Justin Price
Good Overview of late years of Pittsburgh Mafia
Reviewed: 08-27-24
This was a good overview of the Pittsburgh Mafia in the late twentieth century. After a brief overview of the early years, he picks up under the reign of John LaRocca. Mike Genovese runs through the entire story like the ghost he was in real life. There are chapters on the players that saw the Pittsburgh Family through its peak and into its dissolution-Chuckie Porter, Lenny Strollo, Sonny Ciancutti, Nick Gesuale, etc. It covers the crews in Youngstown, West Virginia and other satellites, as well as Pittsburgh proper.
I found the book thoroughly engrossing. It was extremely well researched. Fans of LCN content will find this engaging and informative.
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