book cover of Bangers
 

Bangers

(2003)
A novel by

 
 
Publisher's Weekly
Rafael "Saint" Santi n and his elite team of cops take on gangstas and an ambitious female district attorney running for mayor in Phillips's gritty and violent tour of the underbelly of Los Angeles. The TRASH unit Tactical Resources Against Street Hoodlums really is a gang itself, as deadly as anyone else on the street. "When they bent the rules it was because the rules were hamstringing them from achieving the greater goal. Yeah, they copped some extras for themselves, but who didn't? It was drug money, whore money, laundered money." The main plot is standard B-movie material, merely a neat frame for a series of engaging set pieces, but the subplots allow Phillips to show that he knows his turf and its wars. Pulling a large cast from all layers of society, from bangers with the Crazy Nines to bikers wearing the Viking colors and hip-hop execs at Def Ritmo Records, he smoothly follows one character or another, whether Saint or the biker Red Dog or the Korean-American assistant D.A. shacking with Red Dog's mama. Saint even cruises down to Tijuana for some additional fun-and-gun action. As in his Las Vegas-based Martha Chainey mysteries (High Hand, etc.), Phillips doesn't worry much about loose ends, but keeps all the clips loaded. A trademark cliffhanger of an ending suggests that Saint and his crew may be series bound. (Oct. 7) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal
An elite, five-member police team in Los Angeles concentrates on containing gang activity. The cops take their jobs seriously, but a "choirboy" mentality seems to rule: there's sex on the side, a secret assignation apartment, leaned-on sources, violent confrontations, etc. Unfortunately, a politically ambitious female assistant district attorney hopes to ride to victory by discrediting team members-legally or not: how could a gang leader get murdered while in custody, for example? Anyway, more sex and more violence erupt as team members expose more corruption. Phillips's (The Jook) down-in-the-dirt descriptions, complicated plotting, and frequent bursts of graphic violence will appeal to readers of hard-core police and crime novels la Joseph Wambaugh. For larger mystery and African American fiction collections. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.


Genre: Mystery

Praise for this book

"Gary Phillips writes with raw power... You're about to take a wild ride." - Jan Burke


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