While doing extended time for killing a fellow prisoner, Wesley meets Carmine Trentoni in a New York state prison. Carmine's life sentence hasn't cut him off from his outside sources, and he sees great potential in Wesley to carry out his revenge, and carry on his lucrative business. Wesley emerges from prison prepared to be the perfect hitman: calculating, deadly, and driven by money. On his release from prison, Wesley follows Carmine's directions to locate a Mr. Petraglia—the Q to his working-class James Bond. Pet and Wesley set up shop in Brooklyn, and execute their assignments, from a rising Chinatown mobster to a visiting Haitian dignitary, with finesse—and, occasionally, more explosives than are strictly called for. But Wesley isn't satisfied with his low-profile lot, and sets out to make a mark on the city that everyone will notice—which he does, in a shocking, dynamite conclusion.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
November 13, 2012 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780307950864
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780307950864
- File size: 2177 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Booklist
November 15, 2012
Wesley, who appeared in a number of Vachss' legendarily dark Burke novels, is the protagonist of this hard-bitten tale written in 1972, more than a decade before the first Burke novel appeared. It's the story of an orphan who, by the mid-1950s, had spent much of his life in New York's juvenile-detention system before graduating to maximum security. There he meets Carmine, a tough old murderer who educates him to be a better criminal. Wesley comes to see himself as Carmine's son and ultimately as the instrument of Carmine's vengeance. Wesley does his time and, as per Carmine's instructions, becomes a professional hit man. A Bomb Built in Hell presages motifs Vachss employed in the Burke novels, but even crime fans unfamiliar with Burke can relish it. Wesley is utterly remorseless, and the story is told in the coldest and sparest of prose. It also features telling period detailse.g., the tawdry and seamy Times Square area of the time, and the homeless who rushed to clean the windshields of cars stopped at Bowery traffic lights.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)
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