Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Hector Lassiter #4

The Great Pretender: A Hector Lassiter novel

Rate this book
Nazis, black magic and secret history collide in Craig McDonald's "The Great Pretender." In 2007, McDonald launched the Hector Lassiter series with the Edgar Award-nominated debut, "Head Games," pairing the globetrotting, larger-than-life crime novelist with equally legendary filmmaker and amateur magician Orson Welles. "The Great Pretender" fits the capstone on the Lassiter/Welles legend, spanning their decades-long, uneasy association from the run-up to Welles' infamous "War of the Worlds Panic Broadcast of 1938" to the set of the noir classic "The Third Man" and the ruins of post-war Vienna. The novel finds the actor and author in a race for a lost holy relic promising its possessor infinite power but a ghastly death if lost. Hector and Orson's competitors in their quest for the 'Spear of Destiny' or 'Holy Lance' include German occultists, members of the Third Reich, a sensuous Creole Voodoo priestess and a strangely obsessed J. Edgar Hoover.

PRAISE FOR THE HECTOR LASSITER NOVELS:
"With each of his Hector Lassiter novels, Craig McDonald has stretched his canvas wider and unfurled tales of increasingly greater resonance." --Megan Abbott

"Reading a Hector Lassiter novel is like having a great uncle pull you aside, pour you a tumbler of rye, and tell you a story about how the 20th century 'really' went down." --Duane Swierczynski

"James Ellroy + Kerouac + Coen brothers + Tarantino = Craig McDonald." --Amazon.fr

285 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 19, 2014

1 person is currently reading
8 people want to read

About the author

Craig McDonald

68 books46 followers
Edgar/Anthony-nominee Craig McDonald is an award-winning novelist, editor and journalist. His internationally acclaimed Hector Lassiter series includes "One True Sentence," "Forever's Just Pretend," "Toros & Torsos," "The Great Pretender," "Roll the Credits," "The Running Kind," "Print the Legend," "Three Chords & the Truth," "Write From Wrong," and "Head Games," which was a finalist for the Edgar, Anthony, Gumshoe and Crimespree Magazine awards for best first novel. It is being adapted as a graphic novel by First Second for release in 2015.

A standalone thriller about illegal immigration, "El Gavilan," was published in autumn 2011 to starred reviews and was also selected for several year's best lists.

A new series of direct-to-eBook thrillers featuring crime novelist Chris Lyon was launched in 2012; the series features crossovers by characters from the Hector Lassiter series; Hector himself appears in "Angels of Darkness."

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
2 (13%)
4 stars
8 (53%)
3 stars
3 (20%)
2 stars
2 (13%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Chris Eirschele.
Author 4 books12 followers
June 28, 2017
The Great Pretender by Craig McDonald is part of the Hector Lassiter series, called a historical thriller. This story covers 1938 through 1948, and finds the journalist-storyteller still in Europe looking for a doppelganger causing him headaches with his readers.
Lassiter meets up with Orson Wells just as he is about to broadcast the "War of the Worlds." Though WWII ends, the Niazis are still looking for a relic rumored to be in the possession of the long time artist-friends.
Lassiter novels are a bit raw; this one leans more than others. The Great Pretender story connects with other Lassiter stories which include Orson Wells., the character.
Profile Image for Andrew.
642 reviews27 followers
November 28, 2016
Hector and Orson Welles

I love the Hector Lassiter series by Crag McDonald( I've read all but three of the ten in the series). They are a literary cinematic history of the 20th century seen through the eyes of a pulp novelist who crosses paths with some of the great figures in art and literature ( and politics) of that time. They are sexy, violent, well written , pulply literature. This one involves nazis , lost relics, Orson Welles , the movie The Third Man, and Welles' 1938 radio broadcast that panicked the Eastern United States. I agree with the other reviewer that this isn't the best of the bunch but it is a cut above most other crime fiction. Start with Head Games and read this one thereafter.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.