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Hell To Pay
 
 
Hell To Pay (Hardcover)
by George Pelecanos (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars 5 customer reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Product Description
Amazon.co.uk Review
Pelecanos' new book, Hell To Pay, demonstrates that, as a key player in the film production company that creates the quirky movies of the Coen Brothers, he can give that duo a run for their money when it comes to bizarrely fractured narratives and idiosyncratic dialogue. This exhilarating piece marks another appearance for private investigators Derek Strange and Terry Quinn, who tread the meaner streets of Washington in the course of their dangerous work.

An apparently senseless death rocks the capital, and Strange finds himself personally involved in a bitter hunt for the killers. As he closes in, Derek finds the very tenets that guide his existence on the line, and only he can resolve a conflict that involves lacerating self-examination. Strange's wrestling with his personal problems is handled by Pelecanos with all the psychological acuity we expect from him, and the set-pieces are dispatched with the panache that is the author's hallmark:

Potter swung the gun so quickly that it lost its shape in the light. He slashed it across the brow of the man, the blow knocking the cap off his head. The man's hand went to his face, blood seeping through his fingers immediately and he stumbled back against the wall. Potter flipped the gun in the air and caught it on the half turn, so that he held it by the barrel. He moved forward...
--Barry Forshaw

Book Description
In his second Strange & Quinn investigation, one of America’s best young crime novelists takes us down the meanest, most violent streets of downtown Washington.

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Customer Reviews
5 Reviews
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4 star: 40%  (2)
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another gem from the finest of contemporary US crime writers, 30 Nov 2001
By A Customer
The second in the Strange/Quinn series is every bit as good as its predecessor, though this time Pelecanos allows his two storylines to diverge. Here Terry Quinn, the volatile Irish ex-cop, and black P.I. Derek Strange are driven to investigate separate crimes - both of them doing for their own selfish reasons as much as for the victims of the crimes themslves. Quinn's investigation is (as you'd expect)liberally spiced with nerve-racking descriptions of physical violence. To my mind Strange is the more interesting character, a deeply moral man struggling to do right and to set a good example to the inner-city kids on the football team he and Quinn coach. The sense of horror he feel at the climax of his story, as he finds himself unwilling witness to a showdown of his engineering, is a stunning piece of writing.

This series is proving every bit as powerful as Pelecanos' earlier D.C. Quartet and, while I still long for the return of alcoholic P.I. Nick Stefanos, you have to admire the man for knowing when to leave his characters be. Pelecanos' powers show no sign of diminishing and, as the recent republication of the "lost" novel Shoedog proves, he is pretty much incapable of writing a dud book. His one weakness is that his female characters are not as fully realised as his male protagonists, but this is a book about men involved in violent situations and about male friendships. If you have any interest in US crime writing then this is as good a place as any to introduce yourself to the Peckinpah of crime fiction.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Return to the Mean Streets of DC, 19 Oct 2002
By A. Ross (Washington, DC) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
I've lived in DC for 20 years, my family is from here, and Pelecanos is only the second author I’ve come across who writes about the DC that I know and recognize (the other is Edward Jones, check out his story collection “Lost in the City” if you can find it). In his tenth book, middle-aged PI Derek Strange and younger white ex-cop Terry Quinn return for their second tour of DC's mean streets following Right as Rain.

If the theme of that last book was racism, this one's is hopelessness. The two main stories revolve around teenagers who have lost any sense of hope and whose existence has spiraled into ugliness from which they are incapable of breaking free. One of these stories follows three boys as they peddle hydro (pot), boost cars, bet o dogfights, listen to tunes, eat fast food, and eventually commit murder. The trio are emblematic of many kids who grow up in the ghetto, with no fathers, no guidance, and ultimately no hope. All they have is their street rep and a resignation that they will die young. When they murder someone close to Strange, he races to identify and track them down before the police do. The other story revolves around a nasty pimp (as if there's any other kind) who specializes in teenage talent, and what happens when Quinn helps a prostitution support group try and extract one of the girls and take her home.

The antidote to this theme of hopelessness is Strange and Quinn's coaching a neighborhood Pee-Wee football team where they try to teach the boys the right way to live and to see that life holds possibilities for them. Of course, as in all Pelecanos' books, there's a running dark tone that lets the reader know there are few happy endings in this world. Mixed in with the two "cases" are the duo's personal struggles, the main one being Strange's attempt to come to terms with his relationship with his office managed Janine and her son. Quinn, meanwhile, struggles with his own inner rage and embarks on a new relationship. As in the previous book Strange and Quinn make a nice odd couple as they verbally spar with one another about race, although Pelecanos has subtly made them more comfortable with each other.

If you’ve enjoyed Pelecanos' previous books, you’re likely to enjoy this one as well. It’s a definite step up from Right as Rain, and full of all the usual Pelecanos details about music, cars, and sports.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Pelecanos' Powerful Prose Brings DC's Gritty Streets To Life, 5 April 2005
By Jana L. Perskie "ceruleana" (New York, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Hell To Pay (Paperback)
I have long been a fan of George Pelecanos, whose gritty, urban novels, set in areas of Washington, DC, which do not appear on tourists' itineraries, are peopled by some of the most realistic characters in contemporary fiction - the honest working poor, the disenfranchised, as well as the career criminal. The author consistently sets a high standard of authenticity, especially in terms of what life is about growing up in the projects and on the mean streets, where the sub-culture and economy of illegal substances are always good for a lift. Without making apologies or excuses, Pelecanos is the rare writer who enables readers to empathize, at times, with even the most hardcore criminal - although there is an unusually nasty human predator here.

Derek Strange, is a black, middle class, middle-aged man, a former cop and a successful private investigator. Although tough, his heart is in the right place. Derek has worked before with Irish ex-cop, turned PI, Terry Quinn, in "Right As Rain." The two detectives hook up again in "Hell to Pay," to find a fourteen year-old girl who has run away from her home in middle class suburbia, and is determined to be the star hooker for one of DC's most vicious "handlers." The two are interrupted, mid-investigation, by the merciless drive-by shooting of one of the neighborhood kids. The boy, ten-year Joe Wilder, was a most promising member of the peewee football team that Strange and Quinn coach. He was also a good candidate for life outside the projects. Devastated by the death, and the feelings the loss triggers, Strange becomes a man on a mission to personally take down the killers.

Pelecanos delves into the private lives of both Strange and Quinn, which makes for a richer narrative, and gives the reader more insight into these two protagonists. Derek has a long-term relationship with Janine, his office manager. Although the two love each other, Strange, who has a settled life, and is committed to help his community's young black men make good futures for themselves, is unable to commit to a monogamous relationship. Janine's teenage son, Lionel, to whom Derek feels very close, points out that he doesn't want to get too tight with a man who might be gone tomorrow. The volatile Quinn, a loner who has never had a successful relationship with a woman, meets Sue Tracy, of Bagley and Tracy Investigative Services, "Specializing in Locating and Retrieving Minors." Quinn feels strongly enough for Sue that he is willing to try breaking his track record. The new couple could make it, with lots of work. Quinn also needs to deal with his hair-trigger temper and not so latent racism.

The clear, straightforward writing is outstanding, but the pace does not pick-up speed until near the conclusion. The tension is there from the beginning, however, and builds in intensity. This is as much a character-driven novel as plot-driven, thus the slower momentum. I find it a plus. The author has an ear for street talk that just brings conversations to life. His dialogues are unlike any other. Sometimes when the characters are back-and-forthing, especially about music, there is almost a rap-like rhythm to the prose. The narrative is imbued with a certain nostalgia. Someone is always remembering the old neighborhoods and the way things used to be, (for better or worse), going back to the Vietnam War and the riots in the 1960s. This is real icing on the cake, which few can deliver like George Pelecanos. A terrific noir novel.
JANA

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars A methodical but savvy tale of the mean streets of D.C.
Derek Strange is a P.I. who knows D.C. As a football coach, he teaches young kids lessons that will keep them alive on the drug-infested streets. Read more
Published on 27 Feb 2006 by Clarence T. Henry