Added by 83 members
2000 Dilys Award for Best Book (nominee)
2000 Shamus Award for Best PI Novel
The Barnes & Noble Review
Don Winslow's unusual résumé includes six previous novels (five of which comprise his excellent Neal Carey series, which began in 1991 with A Cool Breeze on the Underground) and 15 years as an insurance investigator specializing in cases of arson. The twin strands of Winslow's career come together with spectacular results in his latest novel, California Fire and Life, an ambitious, compulsively readable account of arson, murder, and organized crime in the corrupt, increasingly decadent society of southern California.
Winslow's hero is Jack Wade, a former Orange County deputy sheriff who was fired after perjuring himself to save the life of a witness in a controversial arson/murder case. Jack's conviction cost him both his job and his relationship with fellow detective Letty Del Rio, and he has spent the intervening 12 years living a radically circumscribed life that revolves around surfing - an almost sacred activity to Jack - and his current job as claims adjuster for the California Fire and Life Insurance Company.
Jack, in his own words, "speaks fluent fire." His ability to read the evidence left behind by even the most devastating fire - to chart its history; to evaluate its nature, point of origin, and probable cause - verges on the mystical. So, when a fire breaks out in a heavily insured Orange County mansion, destroying an entire wing of the building, killing the owner's estranged wife, and incinerating a valuable collection of antique furniture, California Fire and Life sends in its best adjuster, Jack Wade, to determinethefire's cause.
The first thing Jack learns is that, after a perfunctory investigation, the official representative of the Sheriff's Department has turned in a verdict of "accidental fire, accidental death," a ruling that puts California Fire and Life on the hook for a two-million-dollar payment. Jack's own subsequent investigation contradicts that finding. First, he finds traces of accelerant in the charred remnants of the structure. Second, his investigation into the personal life of the beneficiary - a slick, shady Russian émigré named Nicky Vale - reveals a man who is desperately overextended, who is about to lose his home and business, and who, at the time of the "accident," was facing an ugly, potentially ruinous divorce. Third, an eyewitness places Nicky Vale at the scene of the fire, completely contradicting Vale's own version of events. Jack, who believes he has uncovered incontrovertible evidence of arson, denies the claim and sets out to prove that the newly widowed Nicky Vale is a murderer.
This scenario would provide more than enough plot to sustain most suspense novels. In California Fire and Life, however, it is only the beginning, the visible edge of an incredibly complex insurance scam whose roots reach back to the end of Jack's career with the Orange County Sheriff's Department and to the grim realities of a Russian prison where Nicky Vale once spent a harrowing 18 months. Before it reaches its dramatic - and fiery - conclusion, the novel has become a case study in endemic corruption, one that encompasses a diverse cast of ruthless characters from a variety of venues: the FBI, the KGB, the California Bar Association, the Sheriff's Department, the upper echelons of California Fire and Life, the insular world of Vietnamese youth gangs, and the equally insular - and even more violent - world of Russian organized crime.
In addition to its skillful deployment of a complex, constantly shifting story line, California Fire and Life offers something extra: an expert view of the inner workings of an arcane profession. Winslow's years of experience as an insurance investigator lend his novel an enormous degree of authenticity. The result is a painlessly didactic work that educates as it entertains, telling us things that few of us would ever otherwise learn about the real world of insurance companies, about the prevalence - and variety - of insurance fraud, and about the endlessly fascinating subject of fire. Winslow writes with great clarity about fire - its etiology, its physical and chemical causes - without ever really demystifying the subject or minimizing our sense of its primal, Promethean power.
Winslow has come into his own with this book, which no one else could have written, or written as well. California Fire and Life is one of the high points of the summer season: an intelligent page-turner and a perfect example of that rare sort of fiction in which author and subject come together in complete alignment.
-Bill Sheehan
Genre: Mystery
Don Winslow's unusual résumé includes six previous novels (five of which comprise his excellent Neal Carey series, which began in 1991 with A Cool Breeze on the Underground) and 15 years as an insurance investigator specializing in cases of arson. The twin strands of Winslow's career come together with spectacular results in his latest novel, California Fire and Life, an ambitious, compulsively readable account of arson, murder, and organized crime in the corrupt, increasingly decadent society of southern California.
Winslow's hero is Jack Wade, a former Orange County deputy sheriff who was fired after perjuring himself to save the life of a witness in a controversial arson/murder case. Jack's conviction cost him both his job and his relationship with fellow detective Letty Del Rio, and he has spent the intervening 12 years living a radically circumscribed life that revolves around surfing - an almost sacred activity to Jack - and his current job as claims adjuster for the California Fire and Life Insurance Company.
Jack, in his own words, "speaks fluent fire." His ability to read the evidence left behind by even the most devastating fire - to chart its history; to evaluate its nature, point of origin, and probable cause - verges on the mystical. So, when a fire breaks out in a heavily insured Orange County mansion, destroying an entire wing of the building, killing the owner's estranged wife, and incinerating a valuable collection of antique furniture, California Fire and Life sends in its best adjuster, Jack Wade, to determinethefire's cause.
The first thing Jack learns is that, after a perfunctory investigation, the official representative of the Sheriff's Department has turned in a verdict of "accidental fire, accidental death," a ruling that puts California Fire and Life on the hook for a two-million-dollar payment. Jack's own subsequent investigation contradicts that finding. First, he finds traces of accelerant in the charred remnants of the structure. Second, his investigation into the personal life of the beneficiary - a slick, shady Russian émigré named Nicky Vale - reveals a man who is desperately overextended, who is about to lose his home and business, and who, at the time of the "accident," was facing an ugly, potentially ruinous divorce. Third, an eyewitness places Nicky Vale at the scene of the fire, completely contradicting Vale's own version of events. Jack, who believes he has uncovered incontrovertible evidence of arson, denies the claim and sets out to prove that the newly widowed Nicky Vale is a murderer.
This scenario would provide more than enough plot to sustain most suspense novels. In California Fire and Life, however, it is only the beginning, the visible edge of an incredibly complex insurance scam whose roots reach back to the end of Jack's career with the Orange County Sheriff's Department and to the grim realities of a Russian prison where Nicky Vale once spent a harrowing 18 months. Before it reaches its dramatic - and fiery - conclusion, the novel has become a case study in endemic corruption, one that encompasses a diverse cast of ruthless characters from a variety of venues: the FBI, the KGB, the California Bar Association, the Sheriff's Department, the upper echelons of California Fire and Life, the insular world of Vietnamese youth gangs, and the equally insular - and even more violent - world of Russian organized crime.
In addition to its skillful deployment of a complex, constantly shifting story line, California Fire and Life offers something extra: an expert view of the inner workings of an arcane profession. Winslow's years of experience as an insurance investigator lend his novel an enormous degree of authenticity. The result is a painlessly didactic work that educates as it entertains, telling us things that few of us would ever otherwise learn about the real world of insurance companies, about the prevalence - and variety - of insurance fraud, and about the endlessly fascinating subject of fire. Winslow writes with great clarity about fire - its etiology, its physical and chemical causes - without ever really demystifying the subject or minimizing our sense of its primal, Promethean power.
Winslow has come into his own with this book, which no one else could have written, or written as well. California Fire and Life is one of the high points of the summer season: an intelligent page-turner and a perfect example of that rare sort of fiction in which author and subject come together in complete alignment.
-Bill Sheehan
Genre: Mystery
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