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Wednesday, 15 January 2014

035. London Boulevard (2001).



London Boulevard by Ken Bruen (2001).

Cars, women, criminals and an impossibly cool main guy.


The pure definition of pulp fiction.

  

P
layers. Mitchell.   A mid-forty con who just gets out of prison. After a few years in jail, he wants to put everything behind and to be a regular guy, like that’s ever going to happen. Fat chance. 

Like all the cool characters in Tarantino movies, he spits out tons of cool phrases. Unfortunately, like all the Tarantino dialogues, I only understand maybe quarter of what he says. In fact, I am wondering if there are any meaning at all behind them other than off course sounding impressively cool. 

He is a man of few words and at the same time a sole narrator of this book. 

Naturally, all the sentences are staccato short and the pace is brisk creating a perfect pulp fiction.

 He has a mentally unstable but super gorgeous sister named Briony who has a serious shoplifting problems.

Norton.   A low intelligent low life. Mitchell’s buddy (?). 

Grant.   A typical British low life gang boss. A big and mean bastard who tries really hard to get meaner and crueler with every opportunity lies in front of him.

Lillian.   An old, out of spot light but still beautiful, semi-retired actress who hires Mitchell as a handyman. 

She seduces him and rides him like a stallion as often as possible.

Jordan.   A mysterious butler who can expertly handle everything from garden tools to heavy artilleries. Alfred with no emotion and no empathy.

Probably the most powerful man in this book and a dependable ally to Mitchell when it comes down to handle the criminals because he DOES know how to deal with them properly if you know what I mean. How and Why is for you to find out.

He is completely devoted to his employee, Lillian and will do anything to keep her happy.

                                     
P
lace. –London, Britain. Well, it could be anywhere really because the place doesn’t matter at all, as long as there are bars to drink away, banks to rob of, clubs to dance with..etc...


P
lot. – It has a common theme that fires every action packed thriller: REVENGE!

Very simple but effective if it is handled properly and that’s what you get with this hugely entertaining book: a masterfully crafted dark-revenge-drama with just enough humor, action, love, betray and everything else.

Like all the classic pulp fictions, this book is true to its formula.

Here is the golden structure.

1.    Man gets out of jail.

2.    Trouble or unfinished business is waiting for him.

3.    Man finds a way around.

4.    Trouble/s**t stars piling up.

5.    BOOM!!

6.    And off course, one final twist.

7.    Is he standing on the right side of grass?


V
erdict. –This book is consisted of 30% of short dialogue, 40% of sporadic monologue and 30% of empty space to fill up the pages. So literary, you can finish the book in 4 to 5 hours if you put your mind into it which is not hard at all because the chances are that you won’t be able to put it down until you reach the final and mother-of-all-twists ending. 

At the end, when it seems everything is just wounding up, true ending comes out of nowhere and puts entire storyline into a new perspective. It’s truly fantastic!! 

There is absolutely no extra stuffs in this book. The stories (there are multiple storylines) is told fast and straight and every other elements that makes books thicker like detail and emotion is kept to absolute minimum. 

If you are looking for 4 hrs of pure entertainment (adrenalin rush, black humor, sweet revenge, killer twist, Etc.), London Boulevard is your dream come true.

One more thing. Ken Bruen throws in lots of names in conversation. All of them are not just real writers but also masters of mysteries. So if you are looking for your next book after this….