This epic crime novel tells a story of Los Angeles power brokers and those at the edge—and a single shattering incident that threatens to bring it all crashing down.
Los Angeles, right now. America with its back up against the wall. This Frankenstein's monster of crimes and lurid dreams sewn together into something like a city.
A city ready to A Hollywood pedophile is arrested, and is ready to tear down the city to get his freedom. A young woman goes missing—and men in black rubber gloves who look like cops clean out her apartment in the middle of the night. And the serial killer known as the LA Ripper is on the loose, leaving tragic/graphic/brutal crime scenes in his wake. Three people trying to keep their heads above the dirty water will find themselves coming together to unite these strands into one enormous, unspeakable crime ...
Jake Deal is a gonzo live-streaming nightcrawler, beaming the city's chaos straight to his audience of blood-hungry subscribers, giving them the view from the top of the mushroom cloud—until a job he can't refuse drags him back into his old life of Hollywood glamour, drugs, sex and sleaze. Armed with cameras and hidden mics, he'll infiltrate private clubs, gather high-class dirt—and stumble onto a conspiracy woven into the center of LA's most powerful men, who call themselves “The Kids in the Candy Store.”
Doug Gibson is a street lawyer, who fights for his clients against the army of cops, prosecutors and judges—he is the knife they bring to the gunfight. But when he's hired by a Hollywood pedophile ready to sell out his friends for a chance for freedom, he'll take on a fight bigger than he could have imagined. And when his client “commits suicide” in prison, Gibson will have to stop being a weapon—and become a warrior.
Kara Delgado works for an underground private concierge company—a make-a-wish foundation for the terminally rich. She scores drugs, makes connections, and plans multi-million dollar sex parties.She has learned the secret truth of this there are no rules, only prices. Her best friend Phoebe has gone missing, and Kara's the only person who knows that Phoebe's place was wiped clean of evidence by men in black rubber gloves. But when she begins to unravel the mystery of what happened to Phoebe, and its connection to the killer known as the LA Ripper, it will drag her into the dark heart of the city.
As Jake, Doug and Kara all investigate these crimes, they'll encounter ketamine-addled sitcom stars, bloody riots, homeless gangsters, a killer cop on death row, secret vaults in Beverly Hills, tech-bro orgies, medical cannibals, true crime junkies, private security wet-work teams, reality shows, street takeovers, car chases, coyotes, a sadistic Tarzan, and a three day, fifty million dollar wedding, before everything is revealed and they must each make their choice about how to fight back in this violent world before the bloody, blazing conclusion.
Jordan Harper is the Edgar-Award winning author of SHE RIDES SHOTGUN, THE LAST KING OF CALIFORNIA, EVERYBODY KNOWS and the short story collection LOVE AND OTHER WOUNDS. He lives in Los Angeles, where he works as a writer and producer for television.
Wow! A contemporary noir masterpiece. Adrenaline-filled pacing that cranks up and up and up and never stops. Almost every sentence is a gut punch. It’s brutal, disgusting, violent, and filled with nasty people. Put it all in a blender and mix in some Epstein-like characters with Armie Hammer’s scandal , TMZ and a bit of Silicon Valley sociopaths and you’ll get the plot. If you’ve ever needed a content warning on a piece of writing, this book is not for you.
Harper is an immediate buy author for me. He gets better and better with each book. I was lucky to get an early look at this one from NetGalley and Mulholland Books.
Note: This review was originally published at FanFiAddict.
Jordan Harper’s aptly titled follow-up to 2023’s Everybody Knows is a timely and hard-hitting reflection on the current sociopolitical state of America as viewed through Los Angeles noir. In another era and another genre, A Violent Masterpiece could be mistaken for a straight-up dystopian horror, but here in the USA circa 2026 it’s a fractious crime story ripped straight from the headlines, tweets, skeets, and viral videos of the here and now. As Harper notes at the end of his story, and which Jake says in the book’s opening chapter, Los Angeles is America. One might almost make the mistake of saying Harper’s Los Angeles is a dark mirror of America, but no, sadly, it is not. It’s a straight-up reflection, tackling the lie that is the American myth in a fashion similar to Gabino Iglesias’s Coyote Songs. All of the griminess, seediness, and pure corruption at the heart of Harper’s latest is a stark and unflinching look at American dysfunction and a potent reminder that, oftentimes, fiction tells us the uncomfortable truths our mainstream media shies away from and which history has whitewashed.
In Los Angeles, ultra-wealthy, drug-addled perverts run the city, just as they run the country. They’ve got a private paramilitary outfit, Blackguard Security, that kills on their behalf, making people disappear and covering up crime scenes that would otherwise implicate the rich fucks that have gotten themselves in trouble. But hey, what’s a dead woman when an elite pedophile risks jail-time or, more likely, minor humiliation online. Doug Gibson has been tapped to defend a jailed Hollywood executive, Eric Algar, with a penchant for underage girls and a blackmail list a mile long. If Algar and the ensuing conspiracy Gibson finds himself enshrouded in reads a lot like the Epstein Files, congratulations on paying attention. There’s Jake, too, a too-handsome for his own good ex-journalist turned nightcrawler, roving the midnight streets chasing down one crime scene after another for his livestream subscribers and showing them exclusive, behind-the-scenes murder scenes from the LA Ripper, who’s left behind three violently mutilated, dismembered, cannibalized women. Kara fears her best friend, Phoebe, has fallen victim to the Ripper, but having witnessed Phoebe’s apartment getting cleaned out by Blackguard promises there’s an even deeper and more sinister layer to these serial murders.
A Violent Masterpiece plays out like a mosaic novel for the bulk of its page count. Harper takes his time layering in information while forcing readers to connect the dots of his elaborate and evolving conspiracy. Our three central leads don’t even all intersect with one another until three-fourths of the way in, and by then it’s anybody’s guess how all this is going to shake out or how these three nobodies can stack up against and stick it to the city’s elite vanguard, their army of killers, and the grossly unequal levying of laws. Each ends up having their own small pieces of the puzzle, and once everything’s assembled it could cost them everything — like, buried in an unmarked grave where they’ll never be found everything.
In between is the proud LA tradition of Death Tours. Harper takes us to ultra-nasty crime scenes, overdoses at exclusive nightclubs, and rich people party spots where there are “no rules, only prices” for any vice imaginable, from drugs to porn stars to little kids. Police clad in masks and black strips of tape covering their badge numbers run riot, and attend training seminars where they’re reminded that the sex they’ll have after killing somebody is the best they’ll ever have, echoing Dave Grossman’s gross man’s killology seminars. Courthouses spare a young white man credibly accused of rape because he comes from a rich family and a criminal conviction could destroy him, while a homeless black woman has the full force of the LAPD hunting her, all the while denying the existence of the LA Ripper. Cops in riot gear and with an army of dump trucks and bulldozers tear up parks to rid it of squatters and shoot protestors in the face with rubber bullets and tear gas canisters, but turn tail and beat feet fast as fast can be when a rich man’s name is dropped following an OD at a party. LA is America, indeed. Or, as Jake tells his Creepy Crawl subscribers, “LA is America with no place left to run. LA is America with its back against the wall.”
Harper’s staccato writing style confronts you like the wrong end of a Tommy gun as he pushes you through the dark, corrupt underbelly of Los Angeles, giving you an angry and unvarnished look at the true and truly repulsive underbelly of Hollywood‘s fictitious glitz and glamour, like a modern-day James Ellroy. Cops, crooks, stars and starlets — and everyone in between — collide in the intersection of fame, drugs, death, and violence. A murdered rapper in a diner, the prowling citizen journalist, pedophiliac Hollywood studio execs, people too powerful to be held culpable for their crimes against humanity and too rich to fail or jail — A Violent Masterpiece is LA Confidential for the 21st Century, with fact and fiction drawn into a gnarly, headlong collision that spares no survivors. Like Jake tells his online audience, we’re here “in the strange, confronting the real.” That’s what Jake promises; it’s what Harper delivers. And Harper. Well. Jordan Harper is the real deal, man. This one’s not just a violent masterpiece, it’s a searing fucking indictment.
I am a fan of Jordan Harper because his books are gritty, emotional, and intense. I did not read the synopsis of the book going into it. This book started out as a real chore for me with getting introduced to the characters and the story. Each evolving chapter is titled by character who tells their part of the story. Early into it, my progress % was creeping as usually one or two chapters was enough for me. The cover and title were very intriguing to me and the book takes place in one of my favorite places to visit: southern California. I will say that it then started to click for me whereby I really savored each intense chapter. By the end, I wanted to know how this wild ride was going to end and wrap up. I definitely feel some readers won’t like it nearly as much as me but I now can’t wait for whatever comes next from him.
Note: This book does have graphic scenes.
Thank you to NetGalley, the publisher, and the author for providing this book for review consideration. All opinions are my own.
If it were any other author, I'd say a book titled "A Violent Masterpiece" is a sign of hubris. But this is Jordan Harper, who writes on a level that most authors simply cannot touch on their best days.
Think about this: An Edgar Award for Best First Novel for She Rides Shotgun. He followed that with The Last King of California, which up until now was his finest work. Then there was Everybody Knows, a more accessible novel detailing the seamier side of a black-bag Hollywood PR agency. In A Violent Masterpiece, the styles of Last King and Everybody Knows meld together in what may be a perfect book.
The setting? Los Angeles in all its lurid glory, put on the page in a way we've rarely seen. This isn't your sanitized LA that Michael Connelly writes about — no disrespect to him — but instead it is a guided gutter tour behind the scenes of Hollywood elite. No one wants to see "where the sausage is made," but you can't look away when Harper takes you by the hand and says, essentially, "Hey, wanna see some fucked up shit?"
The answer is yes, of course you do.
The crimes? Outlandish serial killer shit. Cannibalism. Abductions and assaults. A dead woman no one can find. Drugs and dregs and the rotten bloated underbelly of the entertainment industry ripped open for you to observe. A true garden of earthly delights.
The characters? A streamer who makes his living driving the surface streets of LA after dark, giving hungry looky-loos a taste of the grime after the crime, picking up photos of bodies before the police can move them, selling the pics on his website or to a slick celeb-centric website tabloid (think TMZ but even shadier). There's a crusading defense attorney who's fighting spirit has been neutered by his need to save his own life, and a young woman who works as a 'concierge' of sorts, getting the rich and powerful everything the need or want.
And the language? It defies description. The reader is boiled in oil and lightning-struck, all at the same time. You fall into the setting, breathe in the smog-soaked air. You hear the wails of the sirens and you wonder how Los Angeles survives through the night. On the very first page there is a beautiful description of a dead-but-rising-again zombie LA, and it sets the mood for the rest of the book.
I've never read anything like it.
I normally read very fast. But Harper's violent masterpiece — and it IS a masterpiece on so many levels — is so good that I could only read it in chunks. Very rarely do I feel like I've gone ten rounds in a boxing ring after reading a book. But A Violent Masterpiece is so good and so intense that I had to close the book every few pages simply to absorb and heal from the hits I took.
In A Violent Masterpiece, Jordan Harper shows us the far side of the possible. He's like Voyager 1 ... on the far side of the galaxy now, sending back a steady signal, telling us "this is the way."
A Violent Masterpiece does what the best LA noir does: it takes the city's rot and makes it mythic without ever prettying it up. Harper's working with the same raw materials as the headlines: Epstein's apparatus, the Hammer family's generational sickness, all that blood money and complicity. But he's not just doing a roman à clef. He's synthesizing it, finding the through-lines, showing how power and depravity aren't aberrations in Hollywood but features of the architecture.
The prose is what elevates this beyond crime fiction into something else entirely. People throw Ellroy's name around with any LA crime book, and sure, there's that percussive energy here, but Harper actually lets his sentences breathe. The rhythm's there but it serves the story instead of overwhelming it. Every line does work: descriptive, propulsive, thematic. He can make violence lyrical without romanticizing it, which is a hell of a trick.
What impressed me most was how he braids real-world horror into fiction without it feeling exploitative or cheap. The scaffolding is recognizable if you've been paying attention to the news, but he's built something new on top of it. Something that asks real questions about art, complicity, and what we're willing to ignore when genius is involved.
Dark as hell. Not for everyone. But if you want crime fiction that's actually literature, that takes risks and lands them, this is essential. Harper's the real thing.
A Violent Masterpiece is a brutal, propulsive thriller that never lets up. Jordan Harper packs the pages with violence, moral ambiguity, and enough plotting to keep readers turning pages. If you enjoy adrenaline-driven crime fiction, this delivers.
That said, the novel juggles a large cast and many moving parts; occasionally the number of characters and subplots made the narrative feel crowded and, at times, slightly confusing. A leaner focus in places would have sharpened the impact.
Overall I found it an engaging, if imperfect, read—gritty and entertaining but not without flaws. I’m giving it three stars and will watch for Harper’s next release. Thanks to NetGalley for the ARC so I could give an honest review
A Violent Masterpiece pulls the curtain back on LA's gritty underworld. Superb writing & visceral scenes that won't be leaving my brain anytime soon. To the very end, Harper shows us that humans are truly the most brutal and vicious of monsters.
PURE EXCELLENCE. the author is truly firing on all cylinders- this book is angry, incisive, and unrelenting as its characters uncover the seedy underbelly of LA and the entertainment industry. it feels gossipy and salacious - our characters go to private sex parties hosted by billionaires and eat endangered fish cut into sashimi, but harper's writing transforms these stories into commentary about how the wealthy exploit and maintain their power. i love how these books (everybody knows is one of my fave books ever) are firmly set in the Now- you have wannabe actresses on ozempic with buccal fat removal, the police raiding homeless camps at parks with tear gas and rubber bullets, etc. in the book these descriptions and events feel terrifying and dystopian, but they're even more terrifying because it's true. in particular, i enjoyed the elements about the corrupt nature of the police force and the news cycle, it reminded me of copaganda by alec karakatsanis.
there's also all these stories told about evil people and all that they get away with- there was one about illegally hired child actors being killed by a stunt on set and yes, the director/producers got away without any charges. and imagine my horror when i found out the story (all of it) is true- i love that the author does this, it really shows how these horrifying acts of violence committed by the wealthy and privileged are obscured from the public eye. these stories are forgotten, glazed over, and called a tragedy, not a murder.
the writing and tone of this book will not be for everyone, but it was absolutely for me. i loved how it had me in a spell, i was angry and scared about the world and also dying to know what would happen next. compared to everybody knows (which i highly recommend reading before this but it's not necessary), a violent masterpiece is darker and more focused on the plot. the characters are less developed and the book is less about the characters' relationships to each other than it is about the corruption they're exposing. HIGHLY RECOMMEND (if you think you would like it).
Jordan Harper takes you on another wild ride. Lives up to its name and then some. Perfect crime novel for whatever the hell you wanna call this timeline. Can’t wait to see what comes next from Harper.
This book features 3 POV’s. Kara, Doug and Jake. Kara works for a company that gets rich people whatever they want, Doug is a lawyer, and Jake is a nightcrawler (someone who chases crime to be the first to report it). They all live in LA. The city of the Angels. Or is it the city of Devils?
There is a serial killer on the loose in LA, the media doesn’t want it put out that it’s an actual serial killer. Jake wants everyone to know about the LA Ripper and does his best to begin investigating the murders by taking his subscribers on said journey.
Doug is a lawyer for people who need help. He wants to make a difference and suddenly a situation falls in his lap when a man convicted of some horrific crimes against children wants him to represent him in court. This is against everything Doug believes in. But after the man tells him things, will Doug even be able to say no?
Kara works for an exclusive membership only company that helps rich people get whatever they want. When I say whatever I mean whatever. She numbs herself daily with drugs and alcohol. After her friend went missing she felt no spark in her life anymore. She is just moving through the motions because her job requires it of her.
These three people’s worlds collide in a very abrupt manner. Whether they want it to or not. Everything that is supposed to be under the crust of LA starts digging its way out and these three people will have a hand in whatever is coming to the surface. Will their world implode? Or will they keep the firs put out before they start?
This is my first book from Jordan Harper and it will NOT be my last. His writing style drew me in from the jump and I was hooked. If I had 4 hours that first night to slam through this book I would have. I’m so excited for everyone to read this book. It will be in my top 10 of 2026 100%. Thank you Jordan Harper and Mulholland Books for the ARC copy of this book!
"If you get powerful enough, you don’t even have to tell lies anymore—everybody will lie to themselves for you."
I have read every Jordan Harper novel and loved them all, I did not love this one. I love crime/noir and I am most definitely not the squeamish type, but at some point this story takes a really hard turn from dark and gritty into what practically amounts to really gross torture porn, yuck! Totally over the top violence that an otherwise good story did not need.
Harper writes a good story, there are some interesting characters here and he keeps you turning pages but nobody looks good in this one, least of all the city of Los Angeles, the Chamber of Commerce will not approve!
Ultimately, if you're a Jordan Harper fan like me you'll probably be ok, everyone else proceed with caution, not for the faint of heart.
I’m giving this an extra half star because Jordan Harper is a master of the LA noir and there’s a bit of a halo effect coming from Everybody Knows, which was a near perfect book for me. This picks up in the aftermath of that book with three new characters who revolve around the same seedy LA scene. Big props to Jordan for the character of Jake Deal who does in fact reference the movie Nightcrawlers and the Jake Gyllenhaal character in that movie so at least he pays homage to its origins. Jake’s character was really well done here. Kara comes in second in my character rankings. She starts out strong, but then gets weaker as the story goes on, becoming more stereotypical and less uniquely Jordan Harper. Same with Gibson, who started strong for me even with his cheesy lines like “all fight, no flight”, but then veered into discount Mickey Haller territory. Certainly Everybody Knows had drugs and violence and abuse, so I was absolutely expecting more of that here but “A Violent Masterpiece” really goes all in on the violent part of the title. There is so much mutilation and bacchanalia and drug cornucopias that it starts to skew gratuitous. I still flew through it in a day but I’ll be hoping for less cheese, less over the top on the next one.
A Violent Masterpiece delivers as both an exceptional story and living up to its own title. A work so beautiful yet brutal. The prose is another step up for Crime fiction’s best author who still seems inconceivably like a secret to the masses.
Through the eyes of three cynical characters doing their level best to simply stay alive, Harper shows us the true underbelly of the rich-controlled world we’re living in and the sickness it produces. There are so many standout moments in this novel but know that one scene and its consequences will live on in my head for the foreseeable future.
Highly, highly recommend. Thank you to the publisher for an advance copy to read and review.
A Violent Masterpiece is a sequel to Everybody Knows, with enough backstory along the way for it to be enjoyably read standalone.
The book follows three main characters, Gibson the defence lawyer acting for the paedophile exposed in Everybody Knows, Kara a consigliere for the ‘experiences’ firm Sub Rosa that organises whatever its rich clients demand, whatever side of the law it happens to be on, and Jake, a you tube streamer one step removed from the society and crime he documents for his bloodthirsty subscribers.
All three are used and threatened by the elites that trample across LA as a cannibal serial killer and blackmail plot eventually bring them together, worn out and jaded, to try and do something that feels decent and real.
The plot isn’t the point though. It’s the decadence, the conspiracy of silence and impudent selfishness that are on show. The staccato prose moves quickly with no filler. The noir mood is bleak and the prose incendiary and ominous. There are also enough loose ends for another instalment. Ellroy wrote an LA Quartet. Harper is two down and they are both home runs.
What happens when the worst man in Hollywood dies and takes half the city’s secrets to the grave?
I’m usually first in line for a Jordan Harper thriller. His books tend to move at the speed of light. They’re usually impossible to put down. So I went into A Violent Masterpiece with high expectations, especially after loving Everybody Knows. This one picks up shortly after that novel, though it stands firmly on its own. You don’t need to have read the previous book to follow along.
This story opens with the death of a notorious Hollywood predator. When he dies, he leaves behind something dangerous: a cache of blackmail implicating some of the richest and most powerful people in Los Angeles. At the same time, a serial killer is stalking women across the city, each murder more brutal than the last.
At the center of the chaos is Kara, who works for an ultra-private concierge company that exists to serve the elite and quickly clean up their disasters. There’s Jake, a late-night live-streamer who thrives on exposing L.A.’s underbelly to his followers. And Doug Gibson, a defense attorney who talks a big game about justice but falters when he comes face to face with real, untouchable power. The three form an uneasy alliance, pulling at threads that the city’s most dangerous players would prefer stay buried.
Harper’s vision of L. A. is pitch-black. This is a city rotting from the inside out. It’s where wealth shields predators and influence rewrites truth. The novel digs into corruption, moral compromise, exploitation, and the machinery that protects powerful men. It’s not subtle, and it’s not comfortable. In many ways, that’s the point.
For me, though, the story didn’t hit with the same propulsive force I’ve come to expect from Harper. The ideas are sharp and timely. The themes are undeniably relevant, but the pacing felt more uneven than his previous work. The darkness is relentless, and at times it overwhelmed the narrative momentum that usually makes his books so compulsively readable.
That said, if you���re drawn to hard-edged noir and morally gray characters, this one will absolutely hold your attention.
I have a lot to say about this novel, both good and bad, but I lack the motivation to write it all down. I'd be happy to discuss it over coffee sometime.
The book is good, especially if you're an Ellroy or Harper fan. You’ll enjoy it. The narrative is brilliant, and the writing is so mechanically rhythmic that the pages fly by. Harper set out to do exactly what he wanted, and this novel very much feels like it was written by a master.
My few minor qualms are for this type of crime fiction, or anything in the LA noir Ellroy vein. Many of my complaints are similar to those I have with Ellroy as well.
The character voices, although more distinct than in "Everyone Knows," still sound quite similar. Maybe that’s the point. And perhaps that’s what you like. Who’s to say what’s right or wrong?
I felt more empathy for these characters than I did in the previous work, especially the lawyer.
My biggest issue is the narrator’s voice, which seeps into everything. Toward the end of the NetGalley copy I have, the same nonsensical phrase is repeated over and over—and honestly, I don’t get the nihilistic metaphor, other than it being dark, nihilistic, and graphic. That’s the overall feel of the book, mainly because of the voice.
Finally, and this may be a small gripe, but the narrator’s disdain for the rest of the country—anyone who doesn’t live in LA—was a bit of a turnoff. It borders on unnecessary to the narrative, as if it only could have come from the author’s deep recesses. Maybe. Who knows?
This is a crazy novel involving many people--including victims and suspects! Jake has a police scanner and livestreams on his Creepy Crawl station as viewers will pay to hear these gruesome stories. And then we have Gibson, a public defender who takes on clients as he finds them. The book is replete with violence, torture, and entitled people who think money can buy anything. It's fascinating but pretty gruesome so beware if you tend to be sqeamish! Thanks to NetGalley for this ARC!
There’s so much to be said about this book. The relevance, for one, is daunting. As a preface, I’m glad there’s someone brave enough to talk about things people know but choose to stay ignorant to. Now to the book…
At the book signing, Jordan said himself that his writing has become more “dense” over the years—more concise with his sentences. The interviewer was S.A. Cosby; another brilliant author and one of my favorite crime fiction writers out there. Anyway, he pointed out the lyricism of Jordan’s style growth—how Jordan’s got this way about not only putting you inside the fictional dream, but painting it with poetics shrouded in simplicity. I e also noticed his stylistic growth and writing-wise (and story-wise), I think it’s his strongest novel yet.
The plot focuses on a spiderweb of rich, famous, and powerful figures, all corrupt, all evil souls—all connected to the information our Catalyst character sets in motion. This character is based on Epstein. Fill in the blanks about the rest of the plot and who is involved. It’s set in Los Angeles. So there’s another hint. I live in LA right now. I’ve never read a book that makes this city feel as alive as Jordan does. The city in this book is a living organism, rather than a setting. It’s incredibly accurate and enlightening to those who don’t know much about LA other than how they aim to portray it in the movies (it is not that…one bit).
I loved our three characters. I really did. Usually, when there’s multiple POVs, I’m always looking forward to the chapters from my favorite and tend to care less about the others as I go, but not here. Every single chapter just pulled me deeper into these people and I devoured this book in three days. It’s a story about good people who do bad things because the bad things are easier to come by and get paid for. But like all bad things, no matter how little—if you’re a good at heart, it’ll eat away at your soul little by little. Until…you’re pulled into something that forces you to pull out every ounce of good inside of you, even if it means you might die by the time this is over with—but not trying? That’s a fate worse than death in each of our characters cases. Their stories overlap and interlock as the plot thickens.
For what this book is, I think this is Jordan’s masterpiece. It’s violent, tragic, philosophical, twisted, brave, heartfelt, and honest. He couldn’t have written this any better. Awesome book.
I loved She Rides Shotgun so I had some idea of the type of story I would find here.
There is a grimy, slightly sickening feel to the story. What do you expect when you are thrown into underbelly of LA.
We have Jake, the digital age version of a shock jock. Chasing down ambulances, and live footage of blood and guts. All to satisfy his YouTube followers need to experience a taste of violence from the comfort of their own homes.
Then there is Kara, who works for Sub Rosa, a specialty concierge service to the ultra-rich. Where everything is for sale at the right price, and all your desires can be fulfilled with is just a whisper in the right ear.
And finally Doug, the lawyer who fights for the underdogs. Till he becomes one himself.
I really liked both Doug and Kara’s characters but I had a slight issue with Jake’s dialogue. It had a phony feel to it every time he quoted some quasi-philosophical catch phrase.
The violence also felt a bit forced in a few places. With She Rides Shotgun it felt more organic as part of the story.
I still enjoyed my reading experience but it was just not quite 4 stars for me
Full disclosure, I am not a huge fan of multi-POV works where we know the characters will eventually get together, but man, it takes forever. And there's always at least one POV that makes the reader roll their eyes and say, not this guy again. Let's get back to the predicament we left so-and-so in. I'm thrilled to say Jordan Harper has a template for how it can be done. Step one, don't be boring. This book doesn't know the meaning of the word. Step two, don't give me filler chapters just so you can revisit character B before we get back to character C. If A still has things to say, let's stay there. All alphabetical confusion can be attributed to me. Step three, the whole conceit of a multi-POV book like this is to gather evidence of story from different angles. Utilize it. *steps off soapbox* This a thrill-a-minute book that has a lot of timely, relevant things to say yet never lets them bog down the narrative. All the characters are terrifically flawed and sometimes make bad decisions. As long as you strap yourself in for the ride, Harper lets you feel the weight and impact, even if you don't fully agree, of each choice. And though the collision is inevitable, it never feels forced. Five stars and right up there with She Rides Shotgun as Harper's best.
I'm an outlier here... I enjoyed Harper's "She Rides Shotgun" a lot (the movie more than the book) but I guess I just don't understand why an author would choose to live in this world with these people long enough to write a book about them. It's depressing enough being there long enough to read the book.
Lurid, gripping, and brilliant. It's like James Ellroy dropped the right-wing leaning prose, delved into the Epstein Files, perhaps a bit of Armie Hammer, and then drenched it in an aura of Nicholas Winding Refn and David Fincher trying to make a music video for Hotel California. Loved every page.
"Helping criminals walk free. Helping scum" He waves his arms around at everyone in this windowless room inside this big red building. "You don't think this is a crime? You don't think you're scum?"
Generational talent
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.