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The Twenty-Year Death [Hardcover]

Ariel S. Winter
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
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Book Description

3 Aug 2012
THERE'S NEVER BEEN A BOOK LIKE THE TWENTY-YEAR DEATH! A breathtaking first novel written in the form of three separate crime novels, each set in a different decade and penned in the style of a different giant of the mystery genre. The body found in the gutter in France led the police inspector to the dead man's beautiful daughter - and to her hot-tempered American husband. A hardboiled private eye hired to keep a movie studio's leading lady happy uncovers the truth behind the brutal slaying of a Hollywood starlet. A desperate man pursuing his last chance at redemption finds himself with blood on his hands and the police on his trail... Three complete novels that, taken together, tell a single epic story, about an author whose life is shattered when violence and tragedy consume the people closest to him. It is an ingenious and emotionally powerful debut performance from literary detective and former bookseller Ariel S. Winter, one that establishes this talented newcomer as a storyteller of the highest caliber.

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 700 pages
  • Publisher: Hard Case Crime; 1 edition (3 Aug 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0857685813
  • ISBN-13: 978-0857685810
  • Product Dimensions: 15.6 x 5.5 x 23.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 82,509 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

'Bold, innovative, and thrilling - The Twenty-Year Death crackles with suspense and will keep you up late' --Stephen King

'It's a virtuoso act of literary recreation that's both astonishingly faithful and wildly, audaciously original. One hell of a debut' --James Frey

'This isn t a first novel so much as a series of three discrete but interrelated first novels, each written (with apologies from the author) in the style of a different iconic thriller writer Georges Simenon, Raymond Chandler, and Jim Thompson, respectively. This is a bold, not to say supremely cheeky, conceit and if Winter hasn t completely channeled the hard hearts and gimlet styles of these dark, departed legends, the good news is that he delivers something even better: a hell of a lot of fun. The noir triptych is nominally linked by the presence of an alcoholic (but of course!) American writer, Shem Rosenkrantz, who remains largely if menacingly in the background for the first two installments before emerging (in first person) center stage in the last, best story. Set in the fictitious Verargent, France, circa 1931, the first book, Malniveau Prison, revolves around the mysterious death of a prisoner the father of one Clothilde-ma-Fleur Meprise, Rosenkrantz s beautiful wife. (Along the way, some children and Clothilde herself go missing.) The search for the killer leads to a mysterious psychopath with a penchant for torturing tots, as well as a coverup at the titular prison. In the second, The Falling Star, set in 1941, Rosenkrantz is a womanizing L.A. screenwriter on a self-destructive slide. His wife, now working under the name Chloë Rose, is a successful but unstable starlet who suspects she s being followed. A suitably laconic Chandlerian PI, Dennis Foster, is enlisted to help the troubled star but is he really being set up for a homicidal fall? In the third, and arguably darkest, tale, Police at the Funeral, it s 1951 in Calvert, Md., and Rose has been institutionalized, leaving Rosenkrantz now a remorseful has-been roiling in the tide of his boozy dissolution. Yeah, I d always gotten a raw deal, and I was too pathetic to do anything about it, and I hated myself for that pretty much sums up the self-inflicted purgatory this antihero wallows in. The stories work wonderfully well individually, but taken together create a tapestry of associations and reflections, sort of like mirrors trained on other mirrors. The whole, as they say, is greater than the sum of its parts. Along the way, Winter manages to deliver more than a few winking nods to genre tropes without ever descending into the arch or the obvious. Though there s clearly something meta (not to say postmodern) about the whole endeavor, Winter never loses touch with his genre heart; the books practically radiate grassroots passion. No, he does not entirely capture Chandler s verbal color or masterful use of metaphor (but who does). Nor does he completely conjure up Thompson s furious fusion of horror and hilarity (but who does). He comes damn close to capturing Simenon s slick, spare procedural vibe. But in the end all these comparisons are, yes, odious because Winter has created something more than a facile feat of literary ventriloquism. He has written a truly affecting and suspenseful triple treat that transcends the formal gimmick at its heart. Agent: Chelsea Lindman, Nicholas Ellison Agency. (Aug.) Reviewed by J.I. Baker, who is the author of The Empty Glass, which Blue Rider Press will publish in July' --Publishers Weekly

"Immersive, exhilarating, and revelatory." --Booklist - Year's Best Crime Novels List

'This isn t a first novel so much as a series of three discrete but interrelated first novels, each written (with apologies from the author) in the style of a different iconic thriller writer Georges Simenon, Raymond Chandler, and Jim Thompson, respectively. This is a bold, not to say supremely cheeky, conceit and if Winter hasn t completely channeled the hard hearts and gimlet styles of these dark, departed legends, the good news is that he delivers something even better: a hell of a lot of fun. The noir triptych is nominally linked by the presence of an alcoholic (but of course!) American writer, Shem Rosenkrantz, who remains largely if menacingly in the background for the first two installments before emerging (in first person) center stage in the last, best story. Set in the fictitious Verargent, France, circa 1931, the first book, Malniveau Prison, revolves around the mysterious death of a prisoner the father of one Clothilde-ma-Fleur Meprise, Rosenkrantz s beautiful wife. (Along the way, some children and Clothilde herself go missing.) The search for the killer leads to a mysterious psychopath with a penchant for torturing tots, as well as a coverup at the titular prison. In the second, The Falling Star, set in 1941, Rosenkrantz is a womanizing L.A. screenwriter on a self-destructive slide. His wife, now working under the name Chloë Rose, is a successful but unstable starlet who suspects she s being followed. A suitably laconic Chandlerian PI, Dennis Foster, is enlisted to help the troubled star but is he really being set up for a homicidal fall? In the third, and arguably darkest, tale, Police at the Funeral, it s 1951 in Calvert, Md., and Rose has been institutionalized, leaving Rosenkrantz now a remorseful has-been roiling in the tide of his boozy dissolution. Yeah, I d always gotten a raw deal, and I was too pathetic to do anything about it, and I hated myself for that pretty much sums up the self-inflicted purgatory this antihero wallows in. The stories work wonderfully well individually, but taken together create a tapestry of associations and reflections, sort of like mirrors trained on other mirrors. The whole, as they say, is greater than the sum of its parts. Along the way, Winter manages to deliver more than a few winking nods to genre tropes without ever descending into the arch or the obvious. Though there s clearly something meta (not to say postmodern) about the whole endeavor, Winter never loses touch with his genre heart; the books practically radiate grassroots passion. No, he does not entirely capture Chandler s verbal color or masterful use of metaphor (but who does). Nor does he completely conjure up Thompson s furious fusion of horror and hilarity (but who does). He comes damn close to capturing Simenon s slick, spare procedural vibe. But in the end all these comparisons are, yes, odious because Winter has created something more than a facile feat of literary ventriloquism. He has written a truly affecting and suspenseful triple treat that transcends the formal gimmick at its heart. Agent: Chelsea Lindman, Nicholas Ellison Agency. (Aug.) Reviewed by J.I. Baker, who is the author of The Empty Glass, which Blue Rider Press will publish in July' --Publishers Weekly

About the Author

A long-time bookseller, Ariel S. Winter is also the author of the forthcoming children's picture book One of a Kind (Aladdin) and of the blog We Too Were Children, Mr. Barrie. His writing has appeared in The Urbanite and on McSweeney's Internet Tendency, and in 2008 he won the Free Press "Who Can Save Us Now?" short story contest. He lives in Baltimore, Maryland.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Intricate and ambitious 2 Sep 2012
Format:Hardcover
The high concept of The Twenty Year Death - that it's three books, in three styles, all interrelating is something that seems slightly intimidating and which might come off better as an intellectual exercise than an actual book, but Arial S Winter pulls it off in style.

I wasn't familiar with the writers being pastiched directly, but can see the influences of the decades in which each separate section was set shine through to make a compelling addition to the narrative than runs through each.

It's slightly difficult to review this book (books?!) without mentioning the general concept and format, but it's entertaining throughout. What is refreshing is that because the plot is driven by murders, instead of the modern police procedural approach, the period style writing of each decade means that the psychological aspects of the detectives and the crimes come to the fore, instead of the boring data cruching of modern thrillers, or just sitting back and watching an impossibly competent detective do his or her thing.

The Twenty Year Death is a big book and can seem a bit daunting, but definitely rewards the effort of diving in and immersing yourself in the different decades and styles and stories being told.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars This book is so good its CRIMINAL....get it? 10 Aug 2012
Format:Hardcover
The first thing to say about this book is that it is not one book, but three! All written in a different style.

The first story, Maliniveau Prison follows a police detective trying to solve a murder in a small town in France.
The second, The Falling Star, follows a private detective who has been hired as protection for a movie star.
The third, Police At The Funeral, is about a man who goes to hear the reading of his ex-wife's will and accidentally kills his son.

Each story has a simple beginning which is interesting enough, but is expertly written up into something much more complex. The dust jacket is covered with quotes from people saying things about how the author manages to summon up the writing style of other great authors. This may be true, unfortunately I don't know who any of the other authors are. HOWEVER, I found while reading each story I was instantly able to conjure an entirely different picture in my mind.

The book is massively entertaining. I had decided by early on in the third story, that the second story was my favourite. The whole thing was really well written and I could all but hear a saxophone soundtrack in my head. Then I got to the later chapters of the third book and I was back to being torn. It's always nice when you read a particularly intense scene in a book and you feel yourself reading faster as the pace picks up!

I would recommend this to anyone! Definitely 5 stars.

(Full disclosure: I received this free from the publisher to review. The opinions expressed in this review are my own and are not altered by this. In this case I would quite happily have paid for it!)
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5.0 out of 5 stars Winter Knows His Crime & Delivers 2 Oct 2012
By Dave
Format:Hardcover
I do love a good crime novel and the chance to have 3 in one book wet my appetite even more.
I'd never heard of the author up to this point and noticed he'd only wrote a children's book before this so not quite sure how he'd handle the crime genre but to say I was more than pleased would be an understatement.

The book is split into three stories all with a connecting element which I won't discuss as it could potentially spoil plots in each story. Each story has its own unique style which I thought was a brilliant achievement by the writer to do this, each story feels like a different writer so you don't get pulled into a repetitive notion of reading.

Murder murder and murder is theme throughout though and I thoroughly enjoyed the change in eras which each story progresses through, it is one of the many ways the writer keeps the stories fresh and original, there is enough crime set in the modern day to read about so I loved going back to 1940's Hollywood and and 1930's France,was a setting I'd never read through before.

I'll be keeping my eyes peeled now for future publications from Winter, really hope he visits the crime genre again because I really enjoyed this book and recommend it anyone.
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