Good Cop, Bad Cop
-
- 11,99 €
-
- 11,99 €
Descrição da editora
Winner of the Carl Sandburg Award for Excellence in Fiction
"An authoritative, engrossing mix of politics, police work and family jealousy. ... [D’Amato’s] standards are high, as this gripping, streetwise novel clearly proves." - Publishers Weekly
Chicago Police Superintendant Nick Bertolucci is a tough top cop. But he has a dangerous enemy on the force: his brother Aldo. Aldo is a beat cop who is eaten up by jealousy and resentment of Nick's success. He gets his chance to sabotage his brother's career when records turn up concerning an illegal raid on a Black Panther household back in 1969. When Aldo tries to connect Nick to the scandal, his scheme threatens to collapse the Chicago Police Department, and his own family, from the inside out.
At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
An authoritative, engrossing mix of politics, police work and family jealousy, D'Amato's second Chicago-based novel (after the well-received Killer.app) takes an intriguing spin on the notorious 1969 Chicago police raid on the Black Panthers, which killed Fred Hampton. Nick Bertolucci, who was part of the assault team, is now Chicago's superintendent of police; his brother Aldo (the bad cop of the title) is a troubled patrolman who hates Nick with a passion. After the death of their father, a superintendent who was implicated in the cover-up that followed the Hampton killing, Aldo finds evidence that links Nick to one of the deaths in that assault--evidence that could taint the police department and end Nick's career. As Aldo quickly sets about doing his brother in, D'Amato spices this blackmail plot with a gritty portrayal of day-to-day police activity, complete with vividly realized supporting characters and realistic moral dilemmas. The rivalry between noble Nick and detestable Aldo seems a little schematic at times, and the rushed ending falls well below D'Amato's previous performance. But her standards are high, as this gripping, streetwise novel clearly proves.