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Summary
Summary
They never found the killer. All they knew, back in the winter of 1985, was that someone was taking teenagers, killing them and leaving their abused bodies in public parks. Three victims in all, with no link between them except a oddity of their names. They read the same back-to-front - Otto, Ava and lastly Eve. A lot has happened in the twenty years since. Detectives Gus Ramone and Dan Holiday - two of the leads on the case - have pursued very different paths. Gus has climbed to the heights of Detective Sergeant and built himself a reputation as a very good cop, whilst Dan has been drummed out of the force - his sleaze finally getting to his superiors.
Summary
Gus Ramone is "good police," a former Internal Affairs investigator now working homicide for the city's Violent Crime branch. His new case involves the death of a local teenager named Asa whose body has been found in a local community garden. The murder unearths intense memories of a case Ramone worked as a patrol cop twenty years earlier, when he and his partner, Dan "Doc" Holiday, assisted a legendary detective named T. C. Cook.
The series of murders, all involving local teenage victims, was never solved. In the years since, Holiday has left the force under a cloud of morals charges, and now finds work as a bodyguard and driver. Cook has retired, but he has never stopped agonizing about the "Night Gardener" killings.The new case draws the three men together on a grim mission to finish the work that has haunted them for years. All the love, regret, and anger that once burned between them comes rushing back, and old ghosts walk once more as the men try to lay to rest the monster who has stalked their dreams.
Bigger and even more unstoppable than his previous thrillers, George Pelecanos achieves in The Night Gardener what his brilliant career has been building toward: a novel that is a perfect union of suspense, character, and unstoppable fate.
Author Notes
George P. Pelecanos was born in Washington, D.C. on February 18, 1957. Before becoming an author, he worked as a line cook, dishwasher, bartender, and woman's shoe salesman. His first novel, A Firing Offense, was published in 1992. His other books include Nick's Trip, Shoedog, King Suckerman, Right as Rain, Hard Revolution, Drama City, The Night Gardener, and What It Was. He has received numerous awards including the Raymond Chandler award in Italy, the Falcon award in Japan, and the Grand Prix Du Roman Noir in France. Hell to Pay and Soul Circus were awarded the 2003 and 2004 Los Angeles Times Book Prizes.
He has served as producer on the feature films Caught (1996), Whatever (1998) and BlackMale (1999). He was a producer, writer, and story editor for the HBO series, The Wire, which won the Peabody Award and the AFI Award. He was also a writer and co-producer on the HBO World War II miniseries The Pacific and an executive producer and writer on the HBO series Treme.
(Bowker Author Biography)
George P. Pelecanos was born in Washington, D.C. on February 18, 1957. Before becoming an author, he worked as a line cook, dishwasher, bartender, and woman's shoe salesman. His first novel, A Firing Offense, was published in 1992. His other books include Nick's Trip, Shoedog, King Suckerman, Right as Rain, Hard Revolution, Drama City, The Night Gardener, and What It Was. He has received numerous awards including the Raymond Chandler award in Italy, the Falcon award in Japan, and the Grand Prix Du Roman Noir in France. Hell to Pay and Soul Circus were awarded the 2003 and 2004 Los Angeles Times Book Prizes.
He has served as producer on the feature films Caught (1996), Whatever (1998) and BlackMale (1999). He was a producer, writer, and story editor for the HBO series, The Wire, which won the Peabody Award and the AFI Award. He was also a writer and co-producer on the HBO World War II miniseries The Pacific and an executive producer and writer on the HBO series Treme.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (10)
School Library Journal Review
Starred Review. For Washington, DC, cop Gus Malone, the murder of teenager Asa Johnson isn't just another case. For one thing, Asa was a friend of Gus's son, so the death has a personal impact on his family. Secondly, the details of the case are startlingly similar to those of several still-unsolved serial killings that took place 20 years earlier, when Gus was a young officer. Complicating matters is that Asa's body was discovered by Gus's former partner, Dan Holiday, who left the department under a cloud. Soon, Holiday and T.C. Cook, the legendary, now-retired lead detective who investigated the original murders, integrate themselves into Gus's case. Pelecanos (Soul Circus) creates another fascinating, completely believable hero whose supporting cast members all have their own great stories. As in his previous novels, as well as his work on HBO's The Wire, he manages to weave several threads perfectly into the larger story. Another winner from arguably our best contemporary crime writer, this is a necessary purchase for all public libraries. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 4/15/06.]-- Craig Shufelt, Lane P.L., Oxford, OH
Publisher's Weekly Review
With a soft, unemotional delivery worthy of the late Jack Webb, Pelecanos puts a cool, effectively dramatic vocal sheen on a novel that is arguably among his best. The initially straightforward police procedural quickly evolves into an emotionally complex tale of three Washington, D.C., cops who in 1985 were on the trail of a serial killer known as the Night Gardener. The killer stopped before he was caught. Twenty years later, that lack of closure has its effect on the trio. Gus Ramone, now a member of the department's Violent Crime Branch, is assigned a murder case that suggests the Gardener has returned. His former rookie partner, Dan "Doc" Holiday, booted from the force for impropriety, finds key information about the killing and takes it to T.C. Cook, the original detective on the case, who, in spite of retirement and a recent stroke, continues to hope the Gardener can be harvested. Using subtle changes in pitch and pace, Pelecanos suggests Ramone's low-key intensity, Holiday's edgy resentment and Cook's weary but dogged dedication as the three men move toward a conclusion that is strikingly original and far from the predictably neat wrapup of less ambitious works. Simultaneous release with the Little, Brown hardcover (Reviews, June 19). (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Kirkus Review
You can take Pelecanos out of his two DC series starring Nick Stefanos (Shame the Devil, 2000, etc.) and Derek Strange (Hard Revolution, 2004, etc.), but you can't take the impulse to turn District crime into a serial epic out of Pelecanos. Twenty years ago, Officers Gus Ramone and Dan Holiday were brought together by the murder of Eve Drake, 14, whose palindromic first name marked her as the third victim of a sex killer dubbed The Night Gardener, who's already snuffed out Otto Williams and Ava Simmons. Despite the best efforts of Sgt. T.C. Cook, the formidable lead detective, the case was never closed. The passing years turned Ramone from a time-server to a solid cop who forced Holiday off the Metro Police during an Internal Affairs investigation. Now the shooting of Asa Johnson, a friend of Ramone's son Diego, galvanizes both men once more. Ramone wonders if The Night Gardener has returned--and why he might have been inactive for all those years. Holiday, though he's been off the job for years, calls on long-retired Cook, who tells him of a suspect he could never quite bring to book, a suspect who's recently been released from prison after serving 19-plus years. But the real attraction here, as usual with Pelecanos (Drama City, 2005, etc.), is the tangle of untamed subplots: the ex-dealer who's sworn to keep his cousin on the straight and narrow, the man who stabs his estranged wife, the dead housepainter who obviously had a more lucrative sideline, the daily struggles of Diego Ramone to earn respect in the suburban high school his parents have sneaked him into. The setup screams Mystic River, but Pelecanos's olympian yet furiously impassioned take on urban violence remains his own. The best American comparison, in fact, is James Lee Burke, who also keeps writing the same churning book over and over and clearly hates to come to the last page just as much as Pelecanos. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
As he did in Drama City (2005), Pelecanos again rests his series characters but keeps the action firmly grounded on the inner-city streets of Washington, D.C. This time he focuses on three cops--one retired, the legendary detective T. C. Cook; another, Dan (Doc ) Holiday, forced to quit under a morals cloud; and a third, Gus Ramone, soldiering on in the dogged effort to be good police. The three worked together 15 years earlier on a still-unsolved case involving a series of murdered teenagers. Now, with another teenager murdered--his body found, as were those of the previous victims, in one of the city's community gardens--the old case has resurfaced, and the three cops find themselves thrown together, each hoping to excise their very different personal demons. The more Pelecanos writes, the more he extends his range, circling outward from the central crime story to encompass more of the sociopolitical landscape yet simultaneously drawing inward to reflect on how that landscape affects the inner lives of his characters. In the past, though, he has focused mainly on civilians--good, bad, and various shades in between--but here, for the first time since Hard Revolution (2004), he looks closely at police. The result isn't just a procedural--though it is that, and a very good one--but also a form of explorative surgery, in which he lays open the hearts of three cops and observes how those organs beat. One thinks of Michael Connelly, John Harvey, and Ian Rankin--other writers able to look inside their cop heroes with remarkable sensitivity--but Pelecanos' scalpel may cut more precisely than any of them. --Bill Ott Copyright 2006 Booklist
Library Journal Review
A serial killer seems to have returned to the District of Columbia after a 20-year hiatus. Two ex-cops, who worked the case back in the day, still obsess over it and carry on an investigation parallel to the police's. The case hits especially close to home for Detective Gus Ramone, as his adolescent son knew the victim. Gus has his own issues, balancing work and family, keeping his son on the straight and narrow in a society that thwarts him at every opportunity. Pelecanos continues his winning streak in a tough novel that's more a whodunit than he usually attempts, though it features his trademark music references and strong sense of place. If the occasional subplot seems designed solely to ramp up the violence, his listeners are used to that and won't mind. Richard M. Davidson delivers a reading so macho as to border on parody; he absolutely snarls Chapter 28. A stong candidate for any library collection.-John Hiett, Iowa City P.L. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
School Library Journal Review
Starred Review. For Washington, DC, cop Gus Malone, the murder of teenager Asa Johnson isn't just another case. For one thing, Asa was a friend of Gus's son, so the death has a personal impact on his family. Secondly, the details of the case are startlingly similar to those of several still-unsolved serial killings that took place 20 years earlier, when Gus was a young officer. Complicating matters is that Asa's body was discovered by Gus's former partner, Dan Holiday, who left the department under a cloud. Soon, Holiday and T.C. Cook, the legendary, now-retired lead detective who investigated the original murders, integrate themselves into Gus's case. Pelecanos (Soul Circus) creates another fascinating, completely believable hero whose supporting cast members all have their own great stories. As in his previous novels, as well as his work on HBO's The Wire, he manages to weave several threads perfectly into the larger story. Another winner from arguably our best contemporary crime writer, this is a necessary purchase for all public libraries. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 4/15/06.]-- Craig Shufelt, Lane P.L., Oxford, OH
Publisher's Weekly Review
With a soft, unemotional delivery worthy of the late Jack Webb, Pelecanos puts a cool, effectively dramatic vocal sheen on a novel that is arguably among his best. The initially straightforward police procedural quickly evolves into an emotionally complex tale of three Washington, D.C., cops who in 1985 were on the trail of a serial killer known as the Night Gardener. The killer stopped before he was caught. Twenty years later, that lack of closure has its effect on the trio. Gus Ramone, now a member of the department's Violent Crime Branch, is assigned a murder case that suggests the Gardener has returned. His former rookie partner, Dan "Doc" Holiday, booted from the force for impropriety, finds key information about the killing and takes it to T.C. Cook, the original detective on the case, who, in spite of retirement and a recent stroke, continues to hope the Gardener can be harvested. Using subtle changes in pitch and pace, Pelecanos suggests Ramone's low-key intensity, Holiday's edgy resentment and Cook's weary but dogged dedication as the three men move toward a conclusion that is strikingly original and far from the predictably neat wrapup of less ambitious works. Simultaneous release with the Little, Brown hardcover (Reviews, June 19). (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Kirkus Review
You can take Pelecanos out of his two DC series starring Nick Stefanos (Shame the Devil, 2000, etc.) and Derek Strange (Hard Revolution, 2004, etc.), but you can't take the impulse to turn District crime into a serial epic out of Pelecanos. Twenty years ago, Officers Gus Ramone and Dan Holiday were brought together by the murder of Eve Drake, 14, whose palindromic first name marked her as the third victim of a sex killer dubbed The Night Gardener, who's already snuffed out Otto Williams and Ava Simmons. Despite the best efforts of Sgt. T.C. Cook, the formidable lead detective, the case was never closed. The passing years turned Ramone from a time-server to a solid cop who forced Holiday off the Metro Police during an Internal Affairs investigation. Now the shooting of Asa Johnson, a friend of Ramone's son Diego, galvanizes both men once more. Ramone wonders if The Night Gardener has returned--and why he might have been inactive for all those years. Holiday, though he's been off the job for years, calls on long-retired Cook, who tells him of a suspect he could never quite bring to book, a suspect who's recently been released from prison after serving 19-plus years. But the real attraction here, as usual with Pelecanos (Drama City, 2005, etc.), is the tangle of untamed subplots: the ex-dealer who's sworn to keep his cousin on the straight and narrow, the man who stabs his estranged wife, the dead housepainter who obviously had a more lucrative sideline, the daily struggles of Diego Ramone to earn respect in the suburban high school his parents have sneaked him into. The setup screams Mystic River, but Pelecanos's olympian yet furiously impassioned take on urban violence remains his own. The best American comparison, in fact, is James Lee Burke, who also keeps writing the same churning book over and over and clearly hates to come to the last page just as much as Pelecanos. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
As he did in Drama City (2005), Pelecanos again rests his series characters but keeps the action firmly grounded on the inner-city streets of Washington, D.C. This time he focuses on three cops--one retired, the legendary detective T. C. Cook; another, Dan (Doc ) Holiday, forced to quit under a morals cloud; and a third, Gus Ramone, soldiering on in the dogged effort to be good police. The three worked together 15 years earlier on a still-unsolved case involving a series of murdered teenagers. Now, with another teenager murdered--his body found, as were those of the previous victims, in one of the city's community gardens--the old case has resurfaced, and the three cops find themselves thrown together, each hoping to excise their very different personal demons. The more Pelecanos writes, the more he extends his range, circling outward from the central crime story to encompass more of the sociopolitical landscape yet simultaneously drawing inward to reflect on how that landscape affects the inner lives of his characters. In the past, though, he has focused mainly on civilians--good, bad, and various shades in between--but here, for the first time since Hard Revolution (2004), he looks closely at police. The result isn't just a procedural--though it is that, and a very good one--but also a form of explorative surgery, in which he lays open the hearts of three cops and observes how those organs beat. One thinks of Michael Connelly, John Harvey, and Ian Rankin--other writers able to look inside their cop heroes with remarkable sensitivity--but Pelecanos' scalpel may cut more precisely than any of them. --Bill Ott Copyright 2006 Booklist
Library Journal Review
A serial killer seems to have returned to the District of Columbia after a 20-year hiatus. Two ex-cops, who worked the case back in the day, still obsess over it and carry on an investigation parallel to the police's. The case hits especially close to home for Detective Gus Ramone, as his adolescent son knew the victim. Gus has his own issues, balancing work and family, keeping his son on the straight and narrow in a society that thwarts him at every opportunity. Pelecanos continues his winning streak in a tough novel that's more a whodunit than he usually attempts, though it features his trademark music references and strong sense of place. If the occasional subplot seems designed solely to ramp up the violence, his listeners are used to that and won't mind. Richard M. Davidson delivers a reading so macho as to border on parody; he absolutely snarls Chapter 28. A stong candidate for any library collection.-John Hiett, Iowa City P.L. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.