crime time
Home Latest News Reviews Features Interviews Profiles Web News, Features & Reviews Magazine Links Contact Us
  
Follow Crime Time on Twitter
  



Death
In A Cold Climate
A Guide to Scandinavian
Crime Fiction

by Barry Forshaw

Published Jan 2012
Available
from Amazon

Crime Time is edited
by Barry Forshaw


More Book Reviews

Now, It's... Noir Theatre!
www.crimetime.co.uk

Edge Of Dark Water Joe Lansdale
pre-order from Amazon

Good Bait by John Harvey
Review in The Independent

Raylan By Elmore Leonard
Pre order RAYLAN

Misery Bay Steve Hamilton
Buy this book from amazon

WEB NEWS, FEATURES & REVIEWS

feature: The Blaggers Guide To George Pelecanos
www.independent.co.uk

The man Obama likes to take on holiday

feature: Altar Of Bones: A Literary Sensation But Who Dunnit?
www.amazon.co.uk

The publication of a crime thriller whose plot rests on a global conspiracy is fast inspiring its own, real-life literary conspiracy

news: New George Pelecanos Novel Lands In US Top 50
www.amazon.co.uk

Publisher Little, Brown's limited-time e-book promotion of George Pelecanos' new crime novel, What It Was, is paying off

feature: Why Are Most Crime Novels Bad?
adrianmckinty.blogspot.com

Because they are part of a series. And books in a series eventually run of steam.

news: Denmark's latest TV hit attracts audiences worldwide
www.globalpost.com

'Nordic Noir' builds on Stieg Larsson success, with internationally-popular TV

feature: Thrillers Including Simon Khoury And Simon Kernick
www.amazon.co.uk

Jeremy Jehu gets all het up about the latest batch of thrillers

Hollywood Moon Joseph Wambaugh
Barry Forshaw

Is your image of American cops gleaned from such TV shows as CSI? Despite messy private lives, formidable professionals get the job done. Or do you think a more accurate picture is presented in The Wire? Often corrupt individuals are obliged to play a great deal of office politics. If either of these sets of cops are your yardsticks, then you have clearly never read a novel by Joseph Wambaugh.

The author, who served in the LAPD for 14 years, painted a scabrous picture of the kind of men he worked with in such books as The New Centurions and The Choirboys. Wambaugh's off-the-wall police (and equally eccentric criminals) make just about every other fictional representation look sedate.

Hollywood Moon attains new levels of freakishness. There are the two "surfer" cops, Flotsam and Jetsam, whom we first encounter talking about a detectivewho hires a midget to go bowling with him – as it makes casual sexual encounters easier. Perhaps no odder is colleague "Hollywood" Nate Weiss, whose stillborn acting career has propelled him into the police force. Several fellow cops are locked into destructive sexual relationships with each other.

However, it's the larger-than-life miscreants who really take the biscuit. The usual collection of drag queens and murderous crackheads begins to seem almost quotidian against the cast of villains here. Fraud artist Dewey Gleason and his sharp-tongued wife, Eunice, make their money by stealing credit cards and looting mailboxes. They decide that it's time to move into a bigger league, and initiate an ambitious plan for a kidnapping. But they make the mistake of hiring a fellow criminal, whose secret life as a serial sex attacker is to throw a monkey-wrench into their plans.

Both cops and criminals converse in a no-holds-barred, over-the-top fashion that is just lacerating enough to ring true. Hollywood Moon lacks the bite of Wambaugh's vintage work, but it's still idiosyncratic and highly individual fare.

Hollywood Moon, By Joseph Wambaugh Quercus

Reviewed by Barry Forshaw

More in The Independent

Related Links
www.independent.co.uk

Posted at 3:00PM Monday 01 Feb 2010

Search the News Archive