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Choice of Evil: A Burke Novel (Burke Novels (Hardcover))
 
 
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Choice of Evil: A Burke Novel (Burke Novels (Hardcover)) [Hardcover]

Andrew H. Vachss
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Alfred A Knopf; First Edition edition (6 May 1999)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0375406476
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375406478
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 16.3 x 3.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,293,192 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Andrew Vachss
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Product Description

Product Description

A rally in Central Park, a protest against gaybashing. A murderous drive-by. Five people down, two dead. One of them Crystal Beth, girlfriend of Burke, the most haunted and darkly talented man-for-hire in the city.

First the gay-bashers celebrate . . . then they start dropping. Claiming responsibility is the mysterious "Homo Erectus," whose identity is as unknown as his mission is clear.

Burke is unsurprised when the cops pull him in for questioning--"I was born a suspect." But he is now also homeless and homicidal, a gun without a target, unable to find the shooters who killed his last chance at love, and drifting near the brink of the ultimate despair he calls the Zero.

Most citizens see Homo Erectus as a serial killer with a political agenda. But to some, he's become a hero. Like the police, they desperately want to find him. But unlike the police, they want to help him disappear before the dragnet tightens. They hire Burke for the job. Which is when things really get ugly. For as Burke tracks the killer, he stumbles across the unmistakable footprints of the man who was the city's most feared assassin before his own death--an ice-cold murder machine whose very name still inspires terror in the city's underground. The whisper-stream is divided in its verdict: either Wesley never really died . . . or he's found a way to come back.

In Choice of Evil, Burke strays closer to the edge than he ever has before, and closer to the most twisted workings of the human heart and mind. It is also Andrew Vachss's most haunting and frightening novel to date.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Man oh man, Mr. Vachss!!! You just refuse to allow your protagonist, ultra anti-hero Burke, more than one novel's worth of happiness in a romantic relationship. You keep killing-off his women! At least allow them to live and love together for 2 books' worth! Imagine my chagrin to find, before page 20 in "Choice of Evil," that you had deep-sixed Burke's latest, Crystal Beth (I keep thinking crystal meth...what were you thinking???). She appeared in your previous bestseller "Safe House," a lovely lady, half Inuit, half Irish, kind and gentle activist for abused women, determined to stand by her man...and love him no matter what. Tell me, how am I supposed to believe that in what seems to be a drive-by hate shooting at a gay pride demonstration, with 3 dead, that Crystal Beth coincidentally happens to be one of the victims??? You lost credibility with me on that one. I mean, out of hundreds, Crystal Beth manages to get hit? Otherwise, "Choice of Evil" is a terrific book, as always! For readers of this review...I really didn't spoil anything because, as I previously stated, this horrific event occurs by page 20. And... there is much more non-related action which take place before that. Are you curious? I won't tell. There's a Job-like character in the comic strip Lil Abner, "Joe Btfsplk," who walks around with a cloud over his head who jinxes everyone he comes into contact with. More and more I am reminded of Joe when I read about Burke and his romantic counterparts.

In this, Andrew Vachss 11th Burke novel, our dark hero, who seems to grow more morose with each episode (and can you blame him?), calls vengeance the name of the game. Burke wants to "get" Crystal's killer(s). So does someone else. Enter a shadowy psychopath with Homo Erectus as his/her moniker. He...or she appears determined to wipe all gay bashers and pedophiles from the face of the earth. At first police believe Burke is the "doer." After all, his major hatred is reserved for pedophiles. And gay bashers killed his girlfriend. Gradually, the killer's MO, his signature, is that of Wesley, the ice-man who wouldn't know an emotion if it slammed him in the face. Wesley, a brilliant assassin who never missed, used to be Burke's homeboy. The two met in prison and found they are both past "Children of the Secret." But Wesley is dead. Or is he? As the body count climbs, and it climbs high, Burke is hired to track the serial killer, and of all things, to help him escape.

While not as brilliant as Mr. Vachss earlier novels, "Flood" & "Strega," "Choice of Evil" is well plotted and provides an excellent read. The usual suspects appear here: Max the Silent, a mute Mongolian version of Conan the Barbarian with creative ways of communicating; Pansy, Burke's Neapolitan mastiff, just like the kind that came over the Alps with Hannibal; the Mole, a pasty-faced genius who lives in a bunker beneath a high-tech junkyard; Michelle, a gorgeous former transvestite who recently "took the plunge;" Terry, Mole and Michelle's adopted son; the Prophet, a wise old scam artist who has logged-in too much time behind walls and was Burke's original mentor; Mama Wong, group doyenne and Chinese restaurateur, "keeps her prices high and the ambiance foul to discourage yuppies." She cares for the gang and holds Burke's stash; I should add that our hero drives a souped-up Plymouth, another important character. It usually looks like it's been painted with rust. Strega, a persona from the past, makes a guest appearance here, and former DA Wolfe, for whom Burke has a major jones, returns to tease fans into believing that maybe there's a chance for the two of them to make-it in a relationship...that is if Mr. Vachss doesn't kill Ms. Wolfe off in the next installment.
[...]
JANA
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
In every one of his novels, Andrew Vachss manages to break his readers' hearts; at the end of each story, he makes them whole with the precision of his technique and the depth of his compassion. Vachss' latest book is vivid addition to his works. CHOICE OF EVIL is ambitious and complex, full of sympathetic characters and thrilling twists. I recommend it with great pleasure.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
I've just finished Andrew Vachss' great new suspense novel, CHOICE OF EVIL. The plot is subtle and noirish, and sexually inquisitive in a way that Kubrick motioned towards in "Eyes Wide Shut," but was a little too slick to achieve.

In the rest of his life, Vachss is a lawyer for children, and unlike the bleating hordes who attack adult sexuality by talking about "protecting kids", he has no beef with *any* form of consensual sex between adults. CHOICE OF EVIL displays his magnificent ability to show the bright line between the play of adults and acts done to children. He has always been very aware of and friendly toward the safe/sane/consensual folks. Best of all, he's written novels with sexual scenes so vibrant and exciting that a reader saving Vachss' books for bedtime is guaranteed a sated sleep.

CHOICE OF EVIL is absolutely terrific. It's a book for adults in every sense of the word. Once you get a taste, you'll savor every bite.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
RAZOR SHARP NARRATION
As has been said, "There is no other living American author with prose as razor-clean as Andrew Vachss.....Vachss is a Zen warrior with a pen. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Gail Cooke
Deep dark continuous saga that keeps Burke alive!
Burke, the ever lasting defender of grime. Forever plummeting against the interminable vermin that surrounds his private circle.
Published on 15 July 1999
Awesome
Have read and own every book By Vachss. He has never written a single word I could not get hooked on
Published on 5 July 1999
Dynamite!
I know a lot of people read Vachss books because of the themes, but I admit I read them for the characters. The female characters, I mean. I even named myself after two of them. Read more
Published on 29 Jun 1999
A good book from an evolved author
I enjoyed this book, as I have all of Vachss' novels. Some readers complain about Vachss' novels being less action orientated than Flood, Strega, etc... Read more
Published on 15 Jun 1999
Love-Hate Relationship
Have you ever noticed how people are with Vachss books? They LOVE them or they HATE them. (Me, I LOVE them, this one especially. Read more
Published on 14 Jun 1999
Do the work or be a jerk!
This book was an absolute stunner to read. More complex than the usual linear stuff Vachss specializes in. But my test of a great book is if it's better the second time around. Read more
Published on 10 Jun 1999
disappointing
I eagerly await each new Burke book, and have read them all in sequence over the years.

Ultimately I was unsatisfied by the newest book. Read more

Published on 10 Jun 1999
It's sad when your favorite author dissapoints
This latest, like his last two books, have left me depressed. No, it's not the subject matter. I keep reading and waiting and hoping for something to happen - and it never does. Read more
Published on 8 Jun 1999
Too many moving parts...
This book is a big mess.More akin to Yes and Emerson,Lake and Palmer then to the2:58 blues the author loves so much. Read more
Published on 7 Jun 1999
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