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Kind of Blue

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

When a legendary ex-cop is murdered in L.A, the pressure's on to find the killer. Lt. Frank Duffy needs his best detective on the case, but his best detective, Ash Levine, quit a year ago. A tenacious, obsessive detective, Ash resigned after Latisha Patton, the witness in a homicide case he was working, was murdered. Without his job, Ash is left unanchored — and consumed with guilt that he somehow caused Latisha's murder. When he's asked to rejoin the force, Ash reluctantly agrees. Getting his badge back could give him the chance to find Latisha's killer. Ash dives headfirst into the shadowlands of Southern California to investigate the ex-cop's murder. But even when he has a suspect in custody, something about this case doesn't sit right with Ash, and he continues working the increasingly dangerous investigation while quietly chasing leads in Latisha's murder. Unable to let either case go, Ash finds that his obsessive nature might prove fatal.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 13, 2010
      Former L.A. Times crime reporter Corwin (Homicide Special: A Year with the LAPD's Elite Detective Unit) introduces an engaging Jewish police detective in his first novel, a grittily realistic story of murder, stupidity, and redemption. Ash Levine, the LAPD's top detective, resigns after his suspension for failing to prevent the death of a key witness he was supposed to protect. A year later, Ash's former boss invites him to lead the investigation into an ex-cop's murder. Levine returns to the force, hoping to reopen the case that cost him his job, though not everyone in the department is thrilled to see him back. A jazz lover (hence the Miles Davis–inspired title), the son of a concentration camp survivor, and a veteran of the Israeli Defense Forces, Ash battles through departmental interference, corruption, and misdirection. Given his strong debut, Ash should be back on the job for further assignments.

    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2010

      Ash Levine is brought out of a self-induced retirement to solve the murder of an LAPD detective who was friends with several high-level police administrators. Following a trail of clues and hints, Levine discovers that he can still solve the most convoluted cases and control his personal traumas. Hard-boiled Jewish cops are few and far between, and Corwin's Levine is a scrappy pit bull of a detective who doesn't let go until the guilty are found. VERDICT Years of experience as a Los Angeles Times reporter give Corwin the inside track on the seamy side of the city, and his depiction of the life of a police detective is as real as it gets. Readers of Michael Connelly will rejoice.

      Copyright 2010 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from September 1, 2010
      Eleven months after he leaves the LAPD, Ash Levine, formerly the top detective in the elite Felony Squad, is lured back to solve the murder of ex-cop Pete Relovich, which interests department brass because the victim also was the son of a cop. But Levine is motivated by the opportunity to return to another case, the one that led to his suspension and ultimate resignation and that still haunts him: the murder of his witness, Latisha Patton, whom he was unable to protect. Levine is a dogged, intuitive detective who doesnt rest when details dont make sense, but theres more to him than his work. Hes a man with a stereotypical Jewish mother whos susceptible to women he meets in his investigations; he has flashbacks to his combat with the Israeli Defense Force in Lebanon; and he is soothed by Miles Davis jazz (hence the allusion in the novels title). Former LA Times crime reporter Corwin, whose unfettered access to LAPD units provided the material for such nonfiction work as Homicide Special (2003), clearly knows the technical stuff. His procedural details are spot-on, but he also knows how to generate adrenaline-producing action, and he gets into the very heart and soul of his multifaceted protagonist. This fine first novel marks the arrival of a strong new voice in hard-boiled crime fiction.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2010, American Library Association.)

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