Home :: Books :: Mystery & Thrillers  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers

Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Hard Revolution: A Novel

Hard Revolution: A Novel

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $16.47
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great crime novel wonderfully set in a historical context
Review: I'm a huge Pelecanos fan and this book further solidifies my admiration for this exceptional writer. I can't imagine that any reader who enjoys crime fiction wouldn't love this book. It brings two major components that make it so outstanding - a well spun crime story and a context of historical significance.

The crime story involves the prequel for one of Pelecanos' main characters in some of his earlier work, Derek Strange, and lets us know how he came to be the private detective he is in those books. In this story, Derek is a pioneering young black police officer in Washington, D.C. in 1968 before and after Martin Luther King's killing and the subsequent civil unrest. He winds up working two big cases with a veteran detective, one involving Derek's brother. He works the other case also with his young white partner.

There are many racial currents in this book and, in my opinion, the author handles these very well and completely without any phoniness. There are good and bad black guys, white guys, Greeks, Jews, etc. The story lines are intriguing and the word pictures the author paints put the reader right in the scene.

I'd rate this book right up with The Big Blowdown as one of Pelecanos' best efforts (A Firing Offense is my favorite). Both of these fine books have an earlier historical setting that he uses to great advantage. So, I'd say if you haven't read any of Pelecanos' work, this book would be a fine place to start. And, I'll bet that if you start, you'll enjoy much more of his work.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A good place to start
Review: If you are new to Pelecanos books, 'Hard Revolution' is a perfect place to start. Series hero Derek Strange gets more depth, and characterization in this 'prequel to the three earlier volumes in this series. Pelecanos transcends the mystery/thriller genre with each succeeding outing. The writing is masterful, as good as the best American writers working today in any genre. This should come with a warning label: 'May cause loss of sleep because it is impossible to put down.'

I also recomend "A Tourist in the Yucatan"

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: deep look at life in the ghetto circa late 1960s
Review: In 1968 Derek Strange joins the DC Metro Police Department even as his two best pals from his childhood, the Dominic and Angelo Martini accuse him of selling out to the man. While his soul brothers make a living with stealing and scoring with easy women, Derek struggles to stay on the legal high road while unrest grows in the black community.

Avoiding being an Uncle Tom yet doing what he feels is right becomes even more difficult for Derek when his older brother Naval Reservist Dennis is addicted to drugs while encouraged by homicidal Alvin Jones and his cousin Kenneth Willis. As the Reverend King leads peaceful civil disobedience rallies that eventually lead to his assassination and rioting in the cities, Derek has doubts that he chose the right path almost a decade ago when as a teen he decided to go straight.

This prequel is an interesting deep looks at life in the ghetto especially on African-Americans before and after the King assassination. The story line is incredible when it showcases the criminal element planning and conducting robberies with the civil rights movement in the backdrop. Though the days before that fatal moment in Memphis seem disassociated with the King murder, the aftermath is brilliantly described as crime becomes the norm and anarchy rules whether it is a killing machine like Alvin or a straight shooter like Derek Strange. This is a fabulous work that brings home a bygone era through a sociology lens in which George Pelecanos is at his best painting the characters living in the traumatic landscape.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: excellent
Review: In HARD REVOLUTION, George Pelecanos takes Derek Strange (hero of his three previous books) back in time to age 13, and then up through his early 20s to 1968. Much of the book involves the choices that Derek and his older brother Dennis make, and by extension, choices that face young economically disadvantaged men in the inner cities. Derek, after being caught shoplifting, vows to stay on the straight and narrow and eventually becomes a cop. Dennis, who does have good intentions, falls in with two friends planning a crime spree.
Pelecanos is often categorized as merely a "crime" writer, but let's give him more credit than that. Who else is writing with such clear-eyed intensity about the difficulty that black and white have understanding each other? This theme is explored further in RIGHT AS RAIN and the other Derek Strange novels. Derek's father works under a white boss at a diner...the two men have a long relationship but are still awkward with each other. Derek finds that his white partner, despite his liberalism, doesn't really understand the experience of being a young black man.
Derek commits a violent act in HARD REVOLUTION, during the climactic riots after the Martin Luther King assassination. This act, which resonates in the earlier Strange novels, prompts him to find a more meaningful way to be a part of his community and really changes his entire life. Pelecanos has come to own DC the way Connelly and Crais owns LA and Parker owns Boston....Highly recommended, but try RIGHT AS RAIN first.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Back to the 60's with Derek Strange
Review: Much as "The Big Blowdown" took us back into the past of another set of Pelecanos' characters, "Hard Revolution" introduces us to the Sixties in the company of Derek Strange. Though not as searing as some of the DC-based crime novels in his body of work so far, "Hard Revolution" is a strong novel you won't want to miss--especially if you've read the other Derek Strange novels.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Back to the 60's with Derek Strange
Review: Much as "The Big Blowdown" took us back into the past of another set of Pelecanos' characters, "Hard Revolution" introduces us to the Sixties in the company of Derek Strange. Though not as searing as some of the DC-based crime novels in his body of work so far, "Hard Revolution" is a strong novel you won't want to miss--especially if you've read the other Derek Strange novels.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Music...
Review: Probably not another novel anywhere that features Link Wray and the Raymen playing bars in Washington, D.C. in 1959...

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: hard times in Black America
Review: Rebeccasreads recommends HARD REVOLUTION as a sobering, atmospheric & engrossing read of life from an African-American family's perspective during a distant time, when life was different. HARD REVOLUTION is exactly that, with a hair-raising ending that'll have you on the edge of your seat!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Pelecanos gets better with each outing
Review: The writing is the best I have read in the crime genre in years, and the characters are drawn perfectly. Each new addition to his resume seems to add something amazing, surprising and interesting. Pelecanos is not only the best writer in the genre, he is probably one of the best American authors working today - period. Everything is fresh, and the story crackles with action on each page. For sheer entertainment value it is unbeatable. The plot is tight, the background realistic and the pace never slows. Not a boring passage in 400 pages.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the most technically perfect writers in the genre
Review: There is a certain sense of realism in the books of George Pelecanos which hits right to the heart of the human emotion. The characters are sparked with the heat of life in situations that reek of reality. Pelecanos novels jump around in time but place seems quite stable with a Washington DC setting. In this case we are in the year 1959 and 1968- a time of great turmoil and change in the civil rights movement.
HARD REVOLUTION is a multifaceted story with several subplots occurring at the same time. Derek Strange is a police officer just getting his feet wet as a rookie in the edgy black section of DC. He worries about his older brother who runs with the wrong crowd, yet, is trying to rehabilitate himself but may not have the moral fortitude to do so. Detective Frank Vaughn looks for the killers of a young black man- the victim of a hit and run. While the three killers plan a robbery they hope will make them enough to ease their financial woes. All this is told with the background of the civil rights movement and the neighborhood which is like a powder keg ready to explode.
Movies and pop songs give the story its timeline, as well as its character. Nobody can argue with the writing skills of George Pelecanos. He is right up there with James Lee Burke in being one of the most technically perfect writers in the genre. It is the characters which give his books such a distinguished aire. The stories move quickly and all characters are humanized- the bad and the good and that is rare indeed. One of the year's best as usual with Mr. Pelecanos.


<< 1 2 3 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates