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| Dynamite Road | 
enlarge | Author: Andrew Klavan Publisher: Forge Books Category: Book
List Price: $7.99 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $7.98 (100%)
Used (48) Collectible (2) from $0.01
Avg. Customer Rating: 15 reviews Sales Rank: 150785
Media: Mass Market Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 336 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 4.2 x 1
ISBN: 076534694X Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780765346940 ASIN: 076534694X
Publication Date: August 1, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: A readable copy. All pages are intact showing heavy wear and creasing. Cover has creases and wear. This copy may be an ex-library copy.
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Product Description
Jim Bishop is a hard man, as cold as the wind off the water and tough to the point of brutality. Scott Weiss is Bishop's boss, a world-weary ex-cop who runs a private detective agency out of a concrete tower in the heart of San Francisco. In this powerfully original series debut by award-winning and bestselling author Andrew Klavan, Weiss sends Bishop to investigate corruption at a Northern California airport-and so sets events in motion that will lead both men on a desperate hunt for a master assassin.Bishop's assignment is to investigate the airport and report back to Weiss. But Bishop prefers to make up the rules as he goes along. He's willing to beat any man into the ground and draw any woman into his bed in order to get the answers he's after. A pilot himself, he takes to the air to check out the illegal flights of a thug names Chris Wannamaker. Then he coolly seduces Wannamaker's lonely wife in order to find out more.Back in the city, as Weiss struggles to rein Bishop in, he begins a connected investigation of his own. A death in a mansion in Presidio Heights, a seemingly random murder South of Market, an apparent suicide off the Golden Gate Bridge, all seem to bear the mark of Weiss' old nemesis, an expert gun-for-hire who goes by the name of the Shadowman. It's a trail of blood, and each step of it seems to bring Weiss closer to Julie Wyant, a mysterious beauty who captures the imagination of every man she meets.Soon Bishop has found his way into the center of a massive criminal conspiracy, a plan set to climax with an act of audacious violence and a murder that would be impossible for any killer but one. And with his operative's wife in danger, Weiss begins a race against time to outsmart the murderer who stalks his nightmares and to rescue the woman who haunts his dream. If you like your tough guys really tough, your femme fatale and your action explosive-welcome to Dynamite Road.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 10 more reviews...
Highly Overrated November 26, 2003 4 out of 9 found this review helpful
I really wanted to like this book. I have read Klavan's other books and very much enjoyed them. However, this book is a major disappointment. Every character is a cliche. The plot is at best stupid, and that's being kind. And any comparison to Chandler or Jim Thompson is way off the mark. This novel is not of the "hard-boiled detective" genre. It's more like a 15 year old's idea of what a tough-guy detective book would read like. The main villain is called "The Shadowman". Give me a break. My son could have come up with a better name than that. To think that this is the beginning of a proposed series is really depressing. Don't be taken in by all the blurbs on the back of the book by other authors. This incestous habit of praising each other's books does not give these writers much credibility. It seems too much a case of "Say something nice about my book, and I'll say something nice about yours". If you really need to read this book, get it from your public library. You won't have to kick yourself for having wasted money on this.
Beautiful in its Simplicity December 19, 2003 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
This is the first novel I've read by Andrew and I have read 130 thrillers in the past year. 10 occupy my "hall of fame" shelf. Dynamite Road makes it 11. In the context of a tough guy mystery, Klavan spins out original gut punching turns of phrase in which I delight. My copy bleeds with yellow highlighter. Ignore, the name Shadowman and read the book for its brilliant simplicity.
the birth of a new series is a success! November 5, 2003 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
This is ellen in Atlanta - When I learned that Klavan would be starting a series featuring a private investigating firm, I started to worry - I stopped worrying when at the 1st sitting of reading Dynamite Road, I was over 125 pages in! It is wonderful and is gritty, exciting, and the characters are of the old school of PI's and a great start to a wonderful series - long live the Weiss Investigative Firm!
Don't Miss Dynamite Road December 3, 2003 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
Andrew Klavan, one of this country's most creative writers, wrote Dynamite Road as the first in a much anticipated series following heralded stand-alones including The Scarred Man (as Keith Peterson), Hunting Down Amanda, The Uncanny, True Crime, Corruption, The Animal Hour, Don't Say A Word and Man and Wife. True Crime (by Clint Eastwood) and Don't Say A Word (starring Michael Douglas) were hit movies. If Dynamite Road isn't already on some prominent director's priority list, Hollywood isn't paying attention. I'm always impressed with Klavan's ability to write fresh material without sounding repetitious or trite so I'm looking forward to the next edition of the Scott Weiss and Jim Bishop show. Weiss is a successful PI and former cop with an active intuitive sense and a fondness for good scotch. Bishop rides big bikes, flies multi-engine aircraft (Klavan is also a pilot so he knows the technology) and handles his women just about anytime he wants to. Julie Wyant, every man's fantasy, doesn't even make a corporeal appearance in Dynamite Road but she'll blow the pages off the first book to introduce her. Meanwhile, ultimate bad-guy, the Shadowman, provides an element of horror that is beautifully crafted without being over-stated. This is a sexy, fast-paced thriller that should draw you inexorably from beginning to end...
Entertaining March 25, 2004 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Scott Weiss, ex-cop, now owner of a private investigation agency, sends Jim Bishop, one of his operatives, to a small airport in northern California. Ray Grambling, part owner of the FBO, has concerns that one of his pilots, Chris Wannamaker, may be involved in some kind of very shady deal with Bernie Hirschorn, the other FBO partner. Bishop, operating undercover as Frank Kennedy, enjoys living on the edge He pushes Chris to the limit by seducing his wife and spreading rumors about his drinking in hopes that he (Bishop) will be hired to replace Chris as the pilot for the big job that Hirschorn has planned. In the meantime, Ben Fry, whom we later realize is also know as the Shadowman, has gone to great lengths (even to implanting a device under his skin that won't show up in strip searches) to get himself imprisoned in the most secure prison in California, one reserved for incorrigibles and extremely violent offenders. Weiss, during the course of another investigation, realizes that several people have been killed or have disappeared in seemingly unrelated events, and he finds a startling connection. They are all related to Whip, a man who specialized in creating new identities for criminals, identities so secure that once created, no law enforcement agency has been able to penetrate them. Whip, having knowledge of who became whom, is terrified that he may also have become a target, so he is placed in deep protective custody in a maximum security prison (guess what's coming?). The book is a little unusual in that we see the story evolve from three points of view: Bishop's, Weiss's, and the first-person narrative of another Weiss employee. He stands in awe of Weiss's understanding of human nature. The narrator, whose name we never learn, inadvertently solves the Case of the Spanish Virgin and discovers some key elements of the case against the Shadowman. If this all sounds a little hokey, I suppose that's because it is. Still, a very entertaining read.
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