Half the Blood of Brooklyn: A Novel | 
| Author: Charlie Huston Publisher: Del Rey Category: Book
List Price: $13.95 Buy Used: $6.25 You Save: $7.70 (55%)
New (35) Used (13) from $6.25
Rating: 21 reviews Sales Rank: 53615
Media: Paperback Pages: 240 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 8.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
ISBN: 034549587X Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6 EAN: 9780345495877 ASIN: 034549587X
Publication Date: December 26, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: * Item in good condition- Typical Used Book and at a great price! * We carefully inspected this * Great customer service * Satisfaction Guaranteed!
| |
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description “One of the most remarkable prose stylists to emerge from the noir tradition in this century.” –Stephen King
“Hard-boiled horror, pulp noir vampires, decaying urban souls– you’re gonna need a shower after this one. . . . [Huston] kicks down the door of horror.” –Fangoria, on Already Dead
There’s only so much room on the Island, only so much blood, and Manhattan’s Vampyre Clans aren’t interested in sharing. So when the Vyrus-infected dregs of New York’s outer boroughs start creeping across the bridges and through the tunnels, the Clans want to know why.
Bad luck for PI and general hard case Joe Pitt.
See, Joe used to be a Rogue, used to work off his own dime, picked his own gigs, but tight times and a terminally ill girlfriend pushed him into the arms of the renegade Society Clan. Now he has all the cash and blood he needs, but at a steep price. The price tonight is crossing the bridge, rolling to Coney Island, finding the Freak Clan, and figuring out what’s driving that bunch of savages to scratch at the Society’s door. No need to look far. The answer lies around the corner in Gravesend. Convenient, all those graves.
From uptown to the boardwalk, war drums are beating. Murderous family feuds and personal grudges are being drawn and brandished, along with the long knives. Blood will spill and, big surprise, Joe’s in the middle. But hey, why should this night be different from any other?
Sunset to sunrise: put off a war, keep your head attached to your neck, and save your girl. Check. Joe’s on the case.
Praise for Charlie Huston and his Joe Pitt novels
“In conceiving his world (a New York City divided by vampire clans, each with different reasons to hate Pitt), Huston gives a fading genre a fresh afterlife. [Grade:] A.” –Entertainment Weekly
“[Huston] creates a world that is at once supernatural and totally familiar, imaginative, and utterly convincing.” –The Philadelphia Inquirer
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 16 more reviews...
not like the rest September 4, 2008 Dystopian Refuge (new orleans' hell) Just finished it.... not so good. The writing really gets jumbled at times, and the plot is a bit shaky. Overall, the finished product was decent, but it just did not live up to the standards set by the first 2 books. I found myself saying "what the f'k" and "who the hell's talking" way too many times. Hopefully the next one improves on an interesting set up at the end of this one.
awful May 29, 2008 Janet Mckenzie (ohio) 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
did not like the style of writing. plot was hard to follow. not worth the money
Hardboiled vampires--violent and edgy May 20, 2008 booksforabuck (Dallas) Joe Pitt is going through a rough time. His girlfriend is dying of AIDS, he's lost his independence and is working as enforcer for the Society, and then there's the little matter of being a vampire--with the attendant need for blood. Fortunately, Joe doesn't have much by way of morals, which helps take care of the blood issue. Less fortunately, there's something going on in New York--something dangerous. When his boss asks him to look into possible alliances with a group of vampires living in Brooklyn, Joe wants nothing more than to walk away. Unfortunately, it isn't that easy and Joe ends up walking into a bloodbath.
Between the Docks, the Freaks, and the Chosen, Brooklyn is a mess, but it's a mess that seems doomed to impact the vampire communities on Manhattan. Of course, once Joe finishes with them, there are a lot fewer to impact.
Author Charlie Huston continues his Joe Pitt hardboiled vampire fantasy with another fast-paced and violent adventure. Joe is something of an anti-hero. He's practically an equal opportunity hater, and manages to create a lot of negative feelings back at him. Using broken phrases, obscenity-laden speech, dialect tags reflecting the ethnic origins of his characters, and the continual threat of violence, Huston kept me involved in the story, reading just one more page, even when I had a hard time finding anyone to cheer for.
Pitt chooses to use a dash (--) rather than quotation marks to mark out dialogue and, I have to say, I found this distracting and slowing down my reading. The casual murder of a pan-handler and the less casual but still amoral murder of the 'Docks' gang, coupled with more justified but still gruesome violence against other characters will put off some readers, especially as Pitt seems going through the motions, not driving toward any goal, not even seeing a possible way out of the cycle of death he's caught in. Even the Enclave, which once held a bit of (unlikely) hope now is closed to Pitt.
HALF THE BLOOD OF BROOKLYN serves as a sort of ending for Pitt's relationship with Manhattan. He's burned his bridges with just about every organization on the island and will now need to create a new world for himself. When he does, it's certain to be violent, amoral, and dangerous.
Still good, but just seems to be setting up as a lead in for the next book. March 19, 2008 Joeli (Dallas, Texas) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
While I also enjoyed this book, it was harder for me stay interested in than the other Huston books I have read. There was a whole new clan of vampires introduced and I felt like a lot of time was spent on this new group without much to show for it (they were basically all killed off!). It was also hard to keep track of who was speaking as there were a lot of characters contributing dialog in a short span of text. I am intersted in seeing where the new leader of The Enclave will take his group as well as to see how the story line of Lydia, Evie and Joe will play out.
Certainly not the best of Mr. Huston's novels but one I guess you should read so as to be prepared when the next one (hopefully back on track) is available.
out of the frying pan into the fire March 17, 2008 mlle. x (Boston) Well, kids, the gloves are off. Sure, ALREADY DEAD and NO DOMINION were pretty tough books - lots of heartless jockeying for power, lots of bones breaking, a few corpses at the end of it all - but by the end of HALF THE BLOOD IN BROOKLYN those were the good old days.
First of all, Joe's taken a job with the Society. It's the safe way to go, but Joe just isn't cut out for that kind of teamwork. His pride has suffered - and so have his morals. He's back to being a hired gun, and for the first time we see him killing indiscriminately. The bodies pile up fast.
Second of all, Evie is dying. She's physically a wreck, and she's not all there mentally, either. The crisis we've seen coming for the past couple of books has arrived: Joe has to let her die, or try to save her by making her a vampire. Naturally, things don't go as planned.
Meanwhile, Joe's sent across the river to Brooklyn. The Society is reaching out to the boroughs for allies and they've found a rag-tag band of carnival freaks who need support. They find out why soon enough: a clan of conservative Jewish vampires is well on its way to owning Brooklyn, and the circus freaks are getting in the way. Sounds simple enough - but when the Coalition and the Society are both involved, everything is complicated. Wheels within wheels.
I read with my heart in my throat for most of the book - too anxious about what would happen next to put it down for even a minute. The ending is definitely a cliffhanger - and I look forward to finding out what happens next.
|
|
|