Fury was my introduction to Robert Tanenbaum's work. Concept wise Fury is a decent multithreaded creation. The work uses simple words and a simple plot where the reader is always in the know with no surprises. The plot threads cross here and there but not with the skill of what one would expect of an accomplished matured writer with multiple works in his portfolio.
I hope his other works are better imagined and rendered, but this one is unapologetically flagrantly racist and misogynistic. The reader's mind shrinks more than it grows in reward for the efforts of reading through this work. The Black characters in this work should have been too embarrassingly one dimensional & unbelievable even for an author with a willful social defamation agenda, whether or not that was Tanenbaum's ulterior motive. Blacks in Fury's world are undeserving academic frauds, liars, cheats, murderers, ruthless, mindless criminals, haters of whites, endlessly fulminating anti-white unrighteous indignation that earns them good Liberal press, and are grossly physically unattractive. Women in the world of Fury, are cast as liars, gold diggers, frauds with fake rape cases and as condemnable zealots who knowingly legally defend fake rape cases.
White males in this book are heroic, flawless, wise cracking, street justice gun-slinging vigilantes, and engage with women primarily as sex objects when the women in the book are not lying about being raped (except when raped by Blacks & Hispanics in which case they are paragons of virtue brutally beaten literally to blindness with rebar to within an inch of life) or defending a client known to be falsely accusing an innocent White Russian poet of rape after drugging him & staging it for extortion.
With the exception of two Black youth characters wrongfully accused of rape (the book’s recurring theme) by a spiteful scorned young Black woman character, the author is unable to imagine & portray a singular adult Black character as worthy or noble even as a "spear holder" or a "tree prop" in this work that is in many ways comparable (complexity wise) to an elementary school staging. All formally educated Blacks are deeply flawed social dangers too - an Angie Davis styled lawyer is a conspirator on the take in a cabal of corrupt Black attorneys & a former HS valedictorian defendant is a lying conniving criminally convicted rapist.
There are crooked white cops on the take and a grandfather who murders his wife in her sleep because he can't cope with her Alzheimer's & refuses to seek help for her. Yet there is plenty of empathy and redemption extended to these characters despite their flaws.
If you want a good challenging read that transports you or elevates your world view or changes your life, this isn't it, however it serves well as a fascinating view into the insights of the extreme unlearned mindset that cannot (or will not) see another perspective or conceive of virtue and vice as more evenly intrinsically distributed across the entire human species. Through all this awful context, he seems to convey (sole reason for my 2 stars instead of 1) a strangled message at least, that there is hope for a better society to come through Black & white youth color blind alliances in America. Surprisingly, Native American & Vietnamese minor characters also receive an affirming nod & an anachronistic cowboy character offers an enjoyable comic relief.
Otherwise, fittingly, 1/3 of the story unfolds predictably with a toxicity as dangerous to American society as the antagonists it depicts mindlessly conspiring in blind allegiance to insane ideology to harm as many as they can, ironically enough, literally in the dark sewers of New York.