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Paladin

(28,243 posts)
Mon Oct 20, 2014, 01:51 PM Oct 2014

Recommended: James Ellroy's new novel, "Perfidia."

The setting is Los Angeles, the time is December, 1941, the first month of WWII. Characters include LAPD officers---including several from Ellroy's "L.A. Confidential" and the brilliant movie of said book, notably bad-guy cop Dudley Smith, whose background reveals him to be a bigger monster than how he's depicted in "L.A.C." Other characters include members of the L.A. Japanese community, facing prejudice, gruesome crimes and looming internment camps; as well as notable real-life characters: Bette Davis, Harry Cohn, Jack Webb, Ben "Bugsy" Siegel, and newly-minted Navy Ensign Jack Kennedy (seeing how many Hollywood starlets he can bed before being shipped off for service in the Pacific).

Like all of Ellroy's LAPD novels, I'm having a lot of fun with this one. But like Ellroy's other work, it's not for the easily-offended.

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Recommended: James Ellroy's new novel, "Perfidia." (Original Post) Paladin Oct 2014 OP
I've never read him pscot Oct 2014 #1
Not so much Susannah Elf Apr 2015 #2
I can respect your decision. Paladin Apr 2015 #3
I grabbed a copy just today Tom Ripley Apr 2015 #4

Susannah Elf

(140 posts)
2. Not so much
Mon Apr 13, 2015, 02:33 AM
Apr 2015

I began Perfidia with interest as I'd heard that it was good. I got caught up in the plot very quickly, but I had to jump ship around page 150. I just could not stand the relentless use by 90% of the characters of every racial, homophobic and misogynist term ever invented. I realize that it's meant to provide atmosphere or whatever, but page after page of it was too much. It could have been avoided by the point of view being outside the characters' minds so that every vile thought isn't shared with the reader. I had to quit because it felt like my mind was being beaten up.

 

Tom Ripley

(4,945 posts)
4. I grabbed a copy just today
Fri Apr 17, 2015, 01:10 PM
Apr 2015

and have really been looking forward to it.
I'm a longtime Ellroy fan from the beginning with Brown's Requiem.
I had a look at his papers in the USC Collections Library last year, and I am going back this summer.

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