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  1 The Ways of the Dead: A Sully Carter Novel
Author: Tucker, Neely
    Series: Sully Carter series, #1
 
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Class: Fiction
Age: Adult
Language: English
LC: PS3620.U
Print Run: 50000
ISBN-13: 9780670016587
LCCN: 2013047847
Imprint: Viking
Pub Date: 06/12/2014
Availability: Out of Print Confirmed
List: $27.95
  Hardcover
Physical Description: 274 pages ; 24 cm H 9.3", W 6.25", D 1", 1.05 lbs.
LC Series:
Brodart Sources: Brodart's Insight Catalog: Adult
Brodart's TOP Adult Titles
Bibliographies: Booklist's Mystery Showcase
Fiction Core Collection, 18th ed.
Fiction Core Collection, 19th ed.
Awards: Booklist Starred Reviews
Kirkus Starred Reviews
Library Journal Starred Reviews
Starred Reviews: Booklist
Kirkus Reviews
Library Journal
TIPS Subjects: Suspense/Thriller
Mystery/Detective Fiction
BISAC Subjects: FICTION / Crime
FICTION / Mystery & Detective / General
FICTION / Thrillers / Suspense
LC Subjects: African American youth, Washington (D.C.), Fiction
FICTION / Crime
FICTION / Mystery & Detective / General
FICTION / Suspense
Journalists, Washington (D.C.), Fiction
Journalists, Washington (DC), Fiction
Murder, Investigation, Fiction
Suspense fiction
Teenagers, Crimes against, Fiction
Washington (D.C.), Fiction
Washington (DC), Fiction
SEARS Subjects: Adventure fiction
African American youth, Fiction
Criminal investigation, Fiction
Homicide, Fiction
Journalists, Fiction
Teenagers, Fiction
Washington (DC), Fiction
Reading Programs:
 
Annotations
Brodart's TOP Adult Titles | 02/01/2014
When the daughter of a Washington, D.C. judge turns up dead in a slum near the Capitol and three black kids are arrested, rebellious and bitter war-torn journalist Sully Carter takes to his old motorcycle in pursuit of answers. Debut Novel, 288pp., 50K, Auth res: Bethesda, MD
Starred Reviews:
Booklist | 05/01/2014
Sarah Reese was murdered in a bad neighborhood in Washington, D.C., while waiting for her mother to pick her up from dance class. She was not the first girl to die in the area, but she was the first white girl, setting off a storm of media attention. Three young African American men had been taunting her before she ran off, and they were easy arrests for the police anxious to solve the case. Reporter Sully Carter, however, pieces together--based on the number of young women missing and dead in the area--a more likely scenario involving a serial killer. The police and Carter's bosses at the paper don't agree, but he sticks to his guns and does his own investigation, fighting authority all the way. If this story sounds familiar, it should--it's based on the Princeton Place murders that occurred in Washington in the late 1990s. By placing the novel in that same era, when newspapers, rather than the Internet, were still the primary source for news, journalist Tucker is free to use the newsroom as the focus for his story. He has a great protagonist, too, in Carter, a hard-bitten reporter carrying plenty of baggage--just right for a series lead. With the emphasis on gritty urban life in a city rife with racism and blight, the novel evokes the Washington, D.C., of George Pelecanos. This riveting debut novel should spawn a terrific series. Alesi, Stacy. 288p. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2014.
Kirkus Reviews | 05/01/2014
Clinton-era Washington, D.C., provides the squalid, menacing backdrop for this crisp, crafty and sharply observed debut by a seasoned reporter.As the curtain's about to fall on the 20th century, Sully Carter, a one-time war correspondent weighed down with physical and psychological scars, finds himself working the crime beat in Washington, D.C., at a time when criminal behavior is all but taken for granted at opposite ends of the sociopolitical spectrum. For all of Sully's battle-hardened professionalism, his bosses don't think he's quite stable--or sober--enough to cover the murder of a teenage girl near a convenience store, especially since the victim is the daughter of a high-profile federal judge with whom Sully's had (let's say) negative history. Nevertheless, Sully works as if he's in a war zone and eventually connects this murder with a series of cold cases involving dead and missing young women in the same at-risk neighborhood. Tucker, a 25-year newspaper veteran who's spent most of his career at the Washington Post, writes with rueful authority and caustic familiarity about the District's criminal and working classes as well as the dreary anxiety of working for a fin-de-siecle big-city newspaper. Along with an ear for inner-city argot almost as finely tuned as those of Elmore Leonard and fellow D.C. crime writer George Pelacanos, Tucker has a knack for ingenious plotting that jolts his narrative into unexpected directions. The shocks resound with acrid, illuminating insights into the District's nettlesome intersections of race and class at the hinge of the millennium.Rich yet taut description, edgy storytelling, rock-and-rolling dialogue, and a deeply flawed but compelling hero add up to a luminous first novel. 288pg. KIRKUS MEDIA LLC, c2014.
Library Journal | 06/01/2014
Sarah Reese, the white teenage daughter of a prominent judge, is found murdered behind a convenience store in Washington, DC. Three young black guys are fingered for the murder simply because they had pestered her earlier. Thus begins a late 1990s-set, headlines-grabbing story that Sully Carter, a Mississippi-born veteran reporter, is covering. Although former Bosnian war correspondent Sully suffers from PTSD and alcoholism, he still knows how to go behind enemy lines. By using a local "warlord," Sully worms his way deeper into the truth of this girl's death and how it connects with a disturbing pattern of unsolved murders or disappearances of neighborhood women. Trouble is Sully may have set himself up for a fall in the process. VERDICT Journalist-turned-novelist Tucker has crafted an addictive, twisty debut, proving that crimes involving politics and sex can still surprise and thrill us. The slightly detached and cynical air will resonate with George Pelecanos readers and yet there's a whiff of Elmore Leonard, too. Teresa L. Jacobsen. 276p. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2014.
Journal Reviews
BookPage | 06/01/2014
By page nine of Neely Tucker's debut novel, The Ways of the Dead, I felt an affinity with war-weary reporter Sully Carter, beginning when he launched into a diatribe about his employer-provided mobile phone: "It's supposed to be like a perk. What it is? It's like one of those electronic tether anklets they put on parolees." He further cemented our budding relationship on the following page with his wry observation about filing a news story: "Anybody who can't file drunk . . . oughta turn in their expletive deleted press card." (Note: I deleted the expletive, not Sully, whose "expletive-delete" function seems to be permanently on the fritz.) And what a story this is: Someone has just killed the daughter of the chief judge of the federal court, leaving the body to be found in a D.C. Dumpster. Three suspects present themselves, neighborhood black kids who hassled the girl in a bodega earlier on, but Sully suspects that the three are guilty of little more than testosterone swagger, not of brutal murder. And so he begins to dig. The Ways of the Dead is a tense and gripping crime novel of race and power, but its true magic lies in the dialogue, which is textured and nuanced in the manner of Elmore Leonard, James Crumley or George Pelecanos. This is a very fine debut indeed, and one that begs for sequel after sequel. 288p. BOOKPAGE, c2014.
Publishers Weekly | 04/14/2014
Foreign correspondent Tucker (Love in the Driest Season: A Family Memoir) uses the real-life Princeton Place murders in Washington, D.C., during the 1990s as background for his exciting fiction debut. The murder of Sarah Reese, the 15-year-old daughter of a politically connected Washington judge, turns unwanted attention to the predominately black neighborhood where she was killed. But newspaper reporter Sully Carter sees a larger story about several missing area women and a murdered prostitute. Sully turns to neighborhood crime boss Sly Hastings for help when politicians, the police, and his own editors don't care about these cold cases, which he believes are linked to the teenager's death. The quick arrest of three young black men for Sarah's murder makes Sully suspicious. The brisk plot is punctuated by an insightful view of journalism and manipulative editors, shady politicians, and apathetic cops, while also showing residents working to create a better neighborhood. Readers will be pleased that Tucker leaves room for a sequel. Agent: Elyse Cheney, Elyse Cheney Literary Associates. (June). 288p. PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2014.
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