American Tabloid
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Average customer review:Product Description
Set in America in 1958, this is a story of three men beneath the glossy surface of power, allied to the makers and shakers of the era. As the festering discontent of the age burns in these men's hearts, the Bay of Pigs ends in calamity, the Mob clamours for payback, and Kennedy is assassinated.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #734 in Books
- Published on: 1995-09-07
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 352 pages
Editorial Reviews
Savkar Altinel, Sunday Telegraph
'Intense and flamboyant . . . excellent. . . one emerges breathless, shaken and ready to change one's view of recent American history'
Marcel Berlins, Times
'Brilliant and appalling. It is deeply repelling portraiture, yet mesmerising'
Sunday Times
'A frenetic and explosive thriller . . . '
Customer Reviews
A True Modern Classic
If ytou have any interest at all in crime writing or the America of the 1950's and 60's you have to read this book. I read the Black Dahlia several years ago and enjoyed it, but it was, in my opinion, nothing compared to this. I truly believe this to be amnong the very best (if not THE best)fiction I have read. And I have read a couple of books a month for many years. A superbly dark, shocking, intriguing novel. The manner in which the author binds together real historical characters with fictional ones, real documented events with invented, and real relationships and conversations with new is truly stunning
They'll be talking about this book 500 years from now
Let's get one thing straight. This book is bigger than your house. Taller, wider, deeper and more powerful than anything you have beheld up to now, it takes the myth that was once 'nice' John F Kennedy, fleeces it, rips the guts out of it and blasts the remains into the gutter from where it started.
This is a 600 page novel with a world-famous ending, the assassination of JFK. So you think, why should I read it? Well, it will change your knowledge (or what you had been taught) about one of the most significant periods in American History, and it will tell you things you definitely didn't know about a whole string of household names : Jack Kennedy, kid brother Robert, their seriously bad-news father 'Irish Joe' Kennedy, J.Edgar Hoover, Howard Hughes, Jimmy Hoffa, Fidel Castro, Richard Nixon, Lyndon B Johnson, Frank Sinatra, Marilyn Monroe, Ava Gardner and a colourful list of 'made-guy' underworld gangsters such as Santo Trafficante, Carlos Marcello, Johnny Rosselli and Sam Giancana. One of the low-life gangsters featured is a certain Jack Ruby, and I think we all know what he is best known for. In fact this novel is so daringly matter-of-fact about the lives (and loves) of most of the above-named that it makes me wonder how it ever came to be published at all. And it's no over-statement to suggest that you could write a book about this book.
It is, at the end of the day, a novel, which is to say a work of fiction, but I for one wanted to believe that every element of it was true because it helped me to understand so much more than I had been 'educated' to believe in the newspapers and other media down the years. But essentially American Tabloid surrounds the inter-twining lives of three men : hit-man Pete Bondurant, and two federal agents Kemper Boyd and his once protégé Ward Littell. Boyd devotes his career and in turn his life to the Kennedy cause and is nearly ruined when they ultimately turn against him. Littell dedicates his life, and takes life-threatening risks in doing so, to help expose the corruption behind the Kennedy family and the Jimmy Hoffa union rackets - and again gets trodden on by those he thinks he is working for. These two men end up in very different positions and with inverted political attitudes as a result. Meanwhile Bondurant flits between hits for Hughes, Hoffa, the FBI and the CIA and at times rightly regards himself as a CIA agent. Drugs abound, indeed heroin seems to be the leading if not traditional currency for the CIA in its financing of plans to invade Cuba and oust the new leader Fidel Castro.
The time period covered is 22nd November 1958 to the same date in 1963 - the two-year run-up to the 1960 US Election and the 1000-day tenure of JFK as President until his assassination in Dallas. But if like me you've always wanted to know who shot him, why he was shot, and many other questions surrounding his brief presidency, then American Tabloid must surely be the most eye-opening source of information even if it must presumably have its inaccuracies. The writing style may not be to everyone's taste (although I quickly became accustomed to it), but if you're only half interested in What Really Happened to JFK (and the Bay of Pigs disaster), you really must read American Tabloid. It truly is a revelation.
And if you love this, the great news is that you can then read The Cold Six Thousand, which is as instant a sequel as you could ask for, as it begins on the day of the John F Kennedy assassination and leads up to the killing of baby brother Bobby. Be in no doubt - James Ellroy stands tall among all peers and is, in my considered view, one of the very best writers alive today.
Uncompromising, but moves beyond just being a crime novel
Sacriligeous I know, but is this actually a better novel than LA Confidential? The characters aren't perhaps as engaging - none have Bud White's gentleness and rage mixture, but boy does Ellroy put them through the wringer.
The key word in the book belongs to Kemper Boyd 'compartmentalisation' - the lead character Kemper ends up working for the FBI, the CIA, Jack Kennedy, the mob, the Cuban resistance force and most of all himself- constantly juggling competing interests.
Big Peter Bondurant, wrists so thick he can snap handcuffs starts out as a deeply unpleasant character, the rough to Kemper's smooth, but is the character who undergoes most transition. Littell Ward, attorney who hero worships Kemper and Bobby Kennedy begins as a wet, idealistic man who becomes something altogether more dark and powerful.
The book is basically a rewrite of American history, compelling and believable. Ellroy says to himself, what if three men were responsible for some of the biggest drama in American history ? And what's more, that they didn't do it out of any grand design, but just as solutions to holes they had dug themselves into.
It definitely needs a second reading, whereupon the book comes alive. It would be tough to call between this and LA Confidential - but nobody with an interest in fiction need choose between, read both and decide for yourself...




