Available Formats
The Mobster's Lament
By (Author) Ray Celestin
Pan Macmillan
Mantle
26th March 2019
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Crime and mystery: hard-boiled crime, noir fiction
Crime and mystery: women sleuths
823.92
Paperback
576
Width 155mm, Height 233mm, Spine 44mm
732g
Ray Celestin heads to New York City, for the third book in his award-winning City Blues quartet, The Mobster's Lament. Fall, 1947. New York City. Private Investigator Ida Davis has been called to New York by her old partner, Michael Talbot, to investigate a brutal killing spree in a Harlem flophouse that has left four people dead. But as they delve deeper into the case, Ida and Michael realize the murders are part of a larger conspiracy that stretches further than they ever could have imagined. Meanwhile, Ida's childhood friend, Louis Armstrong, is at his lowest ebb. His big band is bankrupt, he's playing to empty venues, and he's in danger of becoming a has-been, until a promoter approaches him with a strange offer to reignite his career . . . And across the city, nightclub manager and mob fixer Gabriel Leveson's plans to flee New York are upset when he's called in for a meeting with the 'boss of all bosses', Frank Costello. Tasked with tracking down stolen mob money, Gabriel must embark on a journey through New York's seedy underbelly, forcing him to confront demons from his own past, all while the clock is ticking on his evermore precarious escape plans. Ray Celestin's third instalment in his multi-award winning City Blues Quartet is both a gripping neo-noir crime novel and a vivid, panoramic portrait of New York - from its tenements to its luxury hotels, from its bebop clubs to the bustling wharves of the Brooklyn waterfront - all set as the mob is rising to the height of its powers . . .
A vividly written crime thriller which is a contender for book of the year. -- Jon Coates * Daily Mirror *
This is the third volume in Ray Celestins City Blues Quartet, which has already established itself as one of the most ambitious and riveting works of crime fiction in years . . . This is a compendious, gripping book that captures the fizzing energy of New York at one of the most exciting points in its history. * Sunday Express *
A satisfying and multi-layered mystery, and a well researched and dynamic portrait of a teeming city, rife with corruption * Guardian *
An edge-of-the-seat crime epic that surpasses the remarkable standards set by its predecessors The Axemans Jazz and Dead Mans Blues . . . A contender for book of the year and should not be missed * Daily Express *
Celestin is hugely knowledgeable in portraying the atmosphere of New York. The series is a delight. * The Times *
Ray Celestin is a novelist and screenwriter based in London. His debut novel, The Axeman's Jazz, won the CWA New Blood Dagger for best debut crime novel of the year, and was featured on numerous 'Books of the Year' lists. His follow-up, Dead Man's Blues, won the Historia Historical Thriller of the Year Award, and was shortlisted for a number of other awards, including the CWA Gold Dagger for best crime novel of the year. The novels are part of a series - the City Blues Quartet - which charts the twin histories of jazz and the Mob through the middle fifty years of the twentieth century. The Mobster's Lament is the third instalment in this series.