Lefty Wright breaks into Judge Chancellor's empty house easy as pie. He has no clue about why he is being paid such a handsome sum for doing it. But the job description hadn't mentioned the corpse of a prominent criminal court judge lying halfway under the bed. Charged with murder, Lefty's SOS zooms over the phone wires and reaches one Jake Diamond, Private Investigator, whom readers met in Abramo's Private Eye Contest winner, Catching Water in a Net . It's easy to understand why the unprepossessing guy with grease spots on his only two neckties. Jake is a love. His unexpected skills as an investigator and his assortment of multi-talented friends make him one of the luckiest private investigators West of the Rockies, and maybe East too. He's got Joey Russo - an influential mob boss to most people but a substitute father-figure (with a soupcon of Jewish mother) to Jake. His secretary Darlene runs the office, and does everything but tie his shoes. And no one else has as eager a gofer as Vinnie Strings, so-called because his real name, Stradivarius, is too hard for some to say. And then the reconciliation of Jake and his ex-wife Sally is coming along very nicely indeed. Jake takes the case, but it soon leads down a series of side paths that sprawl out from Lefty's prison cell like the tentatcles of an octopus. What's the real story of the kidnap of the prominent lawyer's feckless son? What does the policeman named Katt know that he doesn't want to share with the prisoner's lawyer? What happened to the Rolex? Did Freddie Cash know ex-con Vic Vagoda? Why was Judge Chancellor so set against Ryder's candidacy? Where did Vigoda get the two grand? If it all pertained to Lefty's case, Jake would be justified in looking for the answers. But does it? Although he encounters more than one homicide on the way to untangling these tangled affairs, Jake Diamond in his second appearance manages not only to be a demon detective, but one who is charming, human and delightfully funny as well.
After the disastrous CATCHING WATER IN A NET, Mr. Abramo seems to have learned something. This time the cast of characters isn't so confusing (though it helps that they are listed at the front of the book), there's an interesting plot that not only makes sense this time but is really pretty exciting, and the description and sense of place are strong. Abramo does an admirable job of twisting some of the tried-and-true standards of the genre into something we can enjoy reading, and the characters are more than talking heads. I even started to like some of these guys: the educated burglar who gets framed, the never-do-well kid that Diamond employs just to keep him out of trouble (who turns out to be smarter than Diamond - or I - would have given him credit for), the wayward woman, the ex, the ex-father-in-law. . .Abramo creates an intriguing story line from the first hit-you-in-the-face chapter to the very end. The story doesn't bog down like the first one, the dialogue and action are crisp and true.Skip the first one and go straight to this. You won't be sorry.
Dumb Luck
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
So here I am, it's nearly two in the morning, I leave a Jazz club on Bleecker Street because the cat on xylophone (vibes, man) is giving me a funny look. I grab a Sunday Times, carry it into Café Dante, and work on the crossword over a double espresso. They've got Joe Franklin on the radio, Memory Lane, and Joe is talking with this guy J. L. Abramo who writes Private Eye novels. I write it down in the margin of the magazine section. Following afternoon, I walk to the nearest bookstore, I won't name names, and find "Clutching at Straws", a signed copy if you can believe it. It's raining in New York City, which is all it ever does lately, and I read the thing in one sitting. You want a review, go to Publishers Weekly. You want advice, read this book.
Armed with the Classics
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
In J. L. Abramo's first novel, "Catching Water in A Net", San Francisco private eye Jake Diamond carried a worn-out copy of "A Tale of Two Cities" in place of a .38 Special. Diamond is back in "Clutching at Straws", this time packing "The Count of Monte Cristo" concealed in his jacket pocket. Jake, ex-actor and lover of the classics, operates on the belief that art imitates life and holds clues to human behavior, noble and villainous. Abramo operates on the notion that life often imitates art and he offers, once again, a masterful blend of human tragedy and human comedy that kept this reader holding her breath and holding her sides.
Abramo Scores Again
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
?Clutching at Straws?, J. L. Abramo?s follow up to ?Catching Water in a Net?, takes Jake Diamond into new territories, geographically and emotionally, the returning reader learning more about Diamond as Jake learns more about himself. Jake?s client, Lefty Wright, is a small-time burglar charged with murder. Only an idiot would fail to recognize Lefty?s innocence, so why are the San Francisco police and District Attorney behaving like idiots? The question becomes as important to Jake?s investigation as his attempt to clear his client. Diamond?s search for answers takes him across California and across the Rocky Mountains, running up against a wall of puzzles, dark secrets, cover-ups, blind ambitions, revenge and the gray areas regarding degree of guilt and appropriate punishment. Returning to help in the cause are Joey Russo, Vinnie Strings, Sonny the Chin and Jake?s irrepressible associate, Darlene Roman. Abramo?s blend of pulp, noir and smart humor proves once again that a mystery novel can be a tribute to the classic Private Eye yarn without taking it all too seriously. ?Clutching at Straws? is a fast-moving, entertaining ride, while at the same time a heartfelt examination of the responsibilities of parents and their children. The reader could hardly hope for more, beyond the wish for the speedy arrival of the next Jake Diamond installment.
JAKE IS BACK
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
Lefty Wright loves his work, and Lefty knows a piece of cake when it?s offered. Fifteen grand in cool cash to get into a safe that he could crack with both arms tied behind his back. The house is empty, the wall safe is in an upstairs bedroom, and as Lefty slips in through a kitchen window he figures to be out again in less than twenty minutes. Instead, fifteen minutes later, Lefty finds himself face down on the bedroom floor, his arms handcuffed behind his back, surrounded by police, and nose-to-nose with a prominent San Francisco Criminal Court Justice who?s dead body lies underneath the bed with a large knife in the chest. Lefty tries convincing the SFPD that the Judge was stabbed and stashed before he came on the scene, but no one is listening. The police are too excited about cracking a high profile murder case in record time to pay attention. When Lefty Wright finally gets his one phone call, he calls the one person who he hopes will hear him out. Jake Diamond. In his second outing, the easy going private investigator attempts to prove Lefty?s innocence while investigating a recent kidnapping and a fifteen year old homicide which may or may not be related to Lefty?s dilemma. Traveling from San Francisco to the avocado fields of central California to the sound stages of a film shoot in Denver, Diamond?s suspects seem to have one thing in common; they are in no condition to talk by the time Jake gets to them. J. L. Abramo has provided a fast-moving, humorous escapade which more than meets the expectations promised by his first award-winning Jake Diamond novel, ?Catching Water in a Net.?
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