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| Works by
James Ellroy (Writer)
[March 4, 1948 - ] |
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Profile created July 23, 2009
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My Dark Places
(1996)
In 1958 Jean Ellroy was murdered, her body dumped on
a roadway in a seedy L.A. suburb. Her killer was never found, and the
police dismissed her as a casualty of a cheap Saturday night. James Ellroy
was ten when his mother died, and he spent the next thirty-six years
running from her ghost and attempting to exorcize it through crime
fiction. In 1994, Ellroy quit running. He went back to L.A., to find out
the truth about his mother--and himself.
In My Dark Places, our most uncompromising crime writer tells what
happened when he teamed up with a brilliant homicide cop to investigate a
murder that everyone else had forgotten--and reclaim the mother he had
despised, desired, but never dared to love. What ensues is a epic of loss,
fixation, and redemption, a memoir that is also a history of the American
way of violence.
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Killer on the Road
(1986)
Martin Michael Plunkett is a product of his times -- the possessor of a
genius intellect, a pitiless soul of brushed steel, and a heart of
blackest evil. With criminal tendencies forged in the fires of L.A.'s
Charles Manson hysteria, he comes to the bay city of San Francisco -- and
submits to savage and terrible impulses that reveal to him his true
vocation as a pure and perfect murderer. And so begins his decade of
discovery and terror, as he cuts a bloody swath across the full length of
a land, ingeniously exploiting and feeding upon a society's obsessions. As
he maneuvers deftly through a seamy world of drugs, flesh, and
perversions, the media will call him many things -- but Martin Plunkett's
real name is Death. His brilliant, twisted mind is a horriying place to
explore. His madness reflects a nation's own. The killer is on the road.
And there's nowhere in America to hide. Originally published as Silent Terror.
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Clandestine
(1982)
Fred Underhill is a young cop on the rise in Los
Angeles in the early 1950's -- a town blinded to its own grime by
Hollywood glitter; a society nourished by newspaper lies that wants its
heroes all-American and squeaky clean.A chance to lead on a possible
serial killing is all it takes to fuel Underhill's reckless ambition - and
it propels him into a dangerous alliance with certain mad and unstable
elements of the law enforcement hierarchy. When the case implodes with
disastrous consequences, it is Fred Underhill who takes the fall. His life
is in ruins, his promising future suddenly a dream of the past. And his
good and pure love for a crusading woman lawyer has been corrupted and may
not survive. But even without the authority of a badge, Fred Underhill
knows that his only hope for redemption lies in following the
investigation to its grim conclusion. And the Hell to which he has been
consigned for his sins is the perfect place to hunt for a killer who
hungers but has no soul.
-
Brown's Requiem
(1981)
Fritz Brown's L.A.--and his life--are masses of
contradictions, like stirring chorales sung for the dead. A
less-than-spotless former cop with a drinking problem--a private
eye-cum-repo man with a taste for great music--he has been known to wallow
in the grime beneath the Hollywood glitter. But Fritz Brown's life is
about to change, thanks to the appearance of a racist psycho who flashes
too much cash for a golf caddie and who walked away clean from a multiple
murder rap. Reopening this cas could be Fritz's redemption; his welcome
back to a moral world and his path to a pure and perfect love. But to get
there, he must make it through a grim, lightless place where evil has no
national borders; where lies beget lies and death begets death; where
there's little tolerance for Bach or Beethoven and deadly arson is a
lesser mortal sin; and where a p.i.'s unhealthy interest in the past can
turn beautiful music into funeral dirge.
American Underworld
Trilogy
-
American Tabloid
(1995)
We are behind, and below, the scenes of JFK's presidential election, the
Bay of Pigs, the assassination--in the underworld that connects Miami, Los
Angeles, Chicago, D.C. . . .
Where the CIA, the Mob, J. Edgar Hoover, Howard Hughes, Jimmy Hoffa, Cuban
political exiles, and various loose cannons conspire in a covert anarchy .
. .
Where the right drugs, the right amount of cash, the right murder, buys a
moment of a man's loyalty . . .
Where three renegade law-enforcement officers--a former L.A. cop and two
FBI agents--are shaping events with the virulence of their greed and
hatred, riding full-blast shotgun into history. . . .
James Ellroy's trademark nothing-spared rendering of reality, blistering
language, and relentless narrative pace are here in electrifying
abundance, put to work in a novel as shocking and daring as anything he's
written: a secret history that zeroes in on a time still shrouded in
secrets and blows it wide open.
The Cold Six Thousand
(2001)
In this savagely audacious novel, James Ellroy plants a pipe bomb
under the America in the 1960s, lights the fuse, and watches the shrapnel
fly. On November 22, 1963 three men converge in Dallas. Their job: to
clean up the JFK hit’s loose ends and inconvenient witnesses. They are
Wayne Tedrow, Jr., a Las Vegas cop with family ties to the lunatic right;
Ward J. Littell, a defrocked FBI man turned underworld mouthpiece; and
Pete Bondurant, a dope-runner and hit-man who serves as the mob’s emissary
to the anti-Castro underground.
It goes bad from there. For the next five years these night-riders run a
whirlwind of plots and counter-plots: Howard Hughes’s takeover of Vegas,
J. Edgar Hoover’s war against the civil rights movement, the heroin trade
in Vietnam, and the murders of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Bobby Kennedy.
Wilder than L. A. Confidential, more devastating than American
Tabloid, The Cold Six Thousand establishes Ellroy as one of our
most fearless novelists.
Blood's a Rover
(September 22, 2009 release)
Summer, 1968. Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy are dead. The
assassination conspiracies have begun to unravel. A dirty-tricks squad is
getting ready to deploy at the Democratic Convention in Chicago. Black
militants are warring in southside L.A. The Feds are concocting draconian
countermeasures. And fate has placed three men at the vortex of History.
Dwight Holly is J. Edgar Hoover’s pet strong-arm goon, implementing
Hoover’s racist designs and obsessed with a leftist shadow figure named
Joan Rosen Klein. Wayne Tedrow—ex-cop and heroin runner—is building a mob
gambling mecca in the Dominican Republic and quickly becoming radicalized.
Don Crutchfield is a window-peeping kid private-eye within tantalizing
reach of right-wing assassins, left-wing revolutionaries and the
powermongers of an incendiary era. Their lives collide in pursuit of the
Red Goddess Joan—and each of them will pay “a dear and savage price to
live History.”
Political noir as only James Ellroy can write it—our recent past razed and
fully reconstructed—Blood’s A Rover is a novel of astonishing depth
and scope, a massive tale of corruption and retribution, of ideals at war
and the extremity of love. It is the largest and greatest work of fiction
from an American master.
-
The Black Dahlia
(1987)
On January 15, 1947, the tortured body of a beautiful young woman was
found in a vacant lot in Hollywood. Elizabeth Short, the Black Dahlia, a
young Hollywood hopeful, had been brutally murdered. Her murder sparked
one of the greatest manhunts in California history.In this fictionalized
treatment of a real case, Bucky Bleichert and Lee Blanchard, both LA cops
obsessed with the Black Dahlia, journey through the seamy underside of
Hollywood to the core of the dead girl's twisted life.
The Big Nowhere
(1988)
Los Angeles, 1950. Red crosscurrents: the Commie Scare
and a string of brutal mutilation killings. Gangland intrigue and
Hollywood sleeze. Three cops caught in a hellish web of ambition,
perversion and deceit.
Danny Upshaw is a sheriff's deputy stuck with a bunch of snuffs that
nobody cares about; they're his chance to make his name as a cop...and to
sate his darkest curiosities. Mal Considine is DA's bureau brass. He's
climbing on the Red scare bandwagon to advance his career and to gain
custody of his adopted son, a child he saved from the horror of postwar
Europe. Buzz Meeks--bagman, ex-goon and pimp for Howard Hughes--is
fighting communism for the money.
All three men have purchased tickets to a nightmare.
L.A. Confidential (1990)
James Ellroy's L.A. Confidential is film-noir crime fiction akin to
Chinatown, Hollywood Babylon, Raymond
Chandler, Dashiell Hammett,
and Jim Thompson. It's about three tortured
souls in the 1950s L.A.P.D.: Ed Exley, the clean-cut cop who lives
shivering in the shadow of his dad, a legendary cop in the same
department; Jack Vincennes, a cop who advises a Police Squad- like TV show
and busts movie stars for payoffs from sleazy Hush-Hush magazine; and Bud
White, a detective haunted by the sight of his dad murdering his mom.
Ellroy himself was traumatized as a boy by his party-animal mother's
murder. (See his memoir My Dark Places for the whole sordid story.) So it
is clear that Bud is partly autobiographical. But Exley, whose shiny
reputation conceals a dark secret, and Vincennes, who goes showbiz with a
vengeance, reflect parts of Ellroy, too. L.A. Confidential holds enough
plots for two or three books: the cops chase stolen gangland heroin
through a landscape littered with not-always-innocent corpses while
succumbing to sexy sirens who have been surgically resculpted to resemble
movie stars; a vile developer--based (unfairly) on Walt Disney-- schemes
to make big bucks off Moochie Mouse; and the cops compete with the crooks
to see who can be more corrupt and violent. Ellroy's hardboiled prose is
so compressed that some of his rat-a-tat paragraphs are hard to follow.
You have to read with attention as intense as his—and that is very intense
indeed. But he richly rewards the effort. He may not be as deep and
literary as Chandler, but he belongs on the same top-level shelf.
White Jazz
(1992)
Los Angeles, 1958. Killings, beatings, bribes, shakedowns--it's standard
procedure for Lieutenant Dave Klein, LAPD. He's a slumlord, a bagman, an
enforcer--a power in his own small corner of hell. Then the Feds announce
a full-out investigation into local police corruption, and everything goes
haywire.
Klein's been hung out as bait, "a bad cop to draw the heat," and the
heat's coming from all sides: from local politicians, from LAPD brass,
from racketeers and drug kingpins--all of them hell-bent on keeping their
own secrets hidden. For Klein, "forty-two and going on dead," it's dues
time.
Klein tells his own story--his voice clipped, sharp, often as brutal as
the events he's describing--taking us with him on a journey through a
world shaped by monstrous ambition, avarice, and perversion. It's a world
he created, but now he'll do anything to get out of it alive.
Fierce, riveting, and honed to a razor edge, White Jazz is crime
fiction at its most shattering.
-
Blood on the Moon
(1984)
Detective Sergeant Lloyd Hopkins can’t stand music, or any loud sounds.
He’s got a beautiful wife, but he can’t get enough of other women. And
instead of bedtime stories, he regales his daughters with bloody crime
stories. He’s a thinking man’s cop with a dark past and an obsessive drive
to hunt down monsters who prey on the innocent.
Now, there’s something haunting him. He sees a connection in a series of
increasingly gruesome murders of women committed over a period of twenty
years. To solve the case, Hopkins will dump all the rules and risk his
career to make the final link and get the killer.
Because the Night
(1984)
A botched liquor store heist leaves three grisly dead. A hero cop is
missing. Nobody could see a pattern in these two stray bits of
information–no one except Detective Sergeant Lloyd Hopkins, a brilliant
and disturbed L.A. cop with an obsessive desire to protect the innocent.
To him they lead to one horrifying conclusion--a killer is on the loose
and preying on his city. From the master of L.A. noir comes this beautiful
and brutal tale of a cop and a criminal squared off in a life and death
struggle.
Suicide Hill
(1985)
Detective Sergeant Lloyd Hopkins is the most brilliant homicide detective
in the Los Angeles Police Department and one of its most troubled. In his
obsessive mission to protect the innocent, there is no line he won’t
cross. Estranged from his wife and daughters and on the verge of being
drummed out of the department for his transgressions, Hopkins is assigned
to investigate a series of bloody bank robberies. As the violence
escalates and the case becomes ever more vicious, Hopkins will be forced
to cross the line once again to stop a maniac on a murder binge.
A single-volume edition of three of the novels featuring
Detective Sergeant Lloyd Hopkins of Los Angeles. The first involves the
apparently random killings of 20 women, the second a multiple murder
committed with a pre-Civil-War revolver, and the third a conspiracy of
police corruption.
-
Destination: Morgue!:
L.A. Tales
(2004)
Dig. The Demon Dog gets down with a new book of scenes
from America’s capital of kink: Los Angeles. Fourteen pieces, some
fiction, some nonfiction, all true enough to be admissible as state’s
evidence, and half of it in print for the first time. And every one of
them bearing the James Ellroy brand of mayhem, machismo, and hollow-nose
prose.
Here are Mexican featherweights and unsolved-murder vics, crooked cops and
a very clean D.A. Here is a profile of Hollywood’s latest celebrity perp-walker,
Robert Blake, and three new novellas featuring a demented detective with
an obsession with a Hollywood actress. And, oh yes, just maybe the last
appearance of Hush-Hush sleaze-monger Danny Getchell. Here’s Ellroy
himself, shining a 500-watt Mag light into all the dark places of his life
and imagination. Destination: Morgue! puts the reader’s attention
in a hammerlock and refuses to let go.
-
Crime Wave: Reportage and Fiction from the Underside of L.A.
(1999)
Los Angeles. In no other city do sex, celebrity,
money, and crime exert such an irresistible magnetic field. And no writer
has mapped that field with greater savagery and savvy than James
Ellroy. With this fever-hot collection of reportage and short fiction, he
returns to his native habitat and portrays it as a smog-shrouded netherworld
where"every third person is a peeper, prowler, pederast, or pimp."
From the scandal sheets of the 1950s to this morning's police blotter,
Ellroy reopens true crimes and restores human dimensions to their
victims. Sublimely, he resurrects the rag Hush-Hush magazine. And
in a baroquely plotted novella of slaughter and corruption he enlists the
forgotten luminaries of a lost Hollywood. Shocking, mesmerizing, and
written in prose as wounding as an ice pick, Crime Wave is Ellroy at
his best.
-
Hollywood Nocturnes
(1994)
Set in Los Angeles from 1947 to 1959, Hollywood Nocturnes gives us an
afterword and six stories set in the same crime-ridden, sex-crazed period of
history of James Ellroy's L.A. Quartet novels (which include L.A.
Confidential and The Big Nowhere).
Dig this: the swinging sax man's doing repos and plotting a kidnapping-of
himself; a tommy gun is ripping apart windows, curtains, and bodies in High
Darktown; a carhop at Scrivner's is keeping two extremely sweet sugar
daddies, Howard Hughes and mobster Mickey Cohen, happy-until the scene turns
murderous.
This is the hip-hop hard-edged world of L.A. 1950s style: cars with fins,
Commies in closets, starmakers with come-ons, ex-cons with guns, and cops
with mean streaks as wide as Sunset Strip.
James Ellroy's bizarre, stark tales dazzle us with their unexpected humor,
raw brutality, and slightly lighter-than-usual noir realism. Hollywood
Nocturnes is quintessential Ellroy: bluesy, black, and very, very hot.
Also known as
Dick Contino's Blues and Other Stories
in the United Kingdom.
White Jazz (2009)
-
Land of the Living (2008)
-
Street Kings (2008)
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The Black Dahlia (2006)
Brian De Palma, director with Josh Hartnett and Scarlett
Johansson
DVD
-
Dark Blue
(2002)
Ron Shelton, director with Kurt Russell and Ving
Rhames DVD
VHS
-
Brown's Requiem (1998)
Jason Freeland, director with Big Daddy Wayne and Michael Rooker DVD
VHS
-
L.A. Confidential (1997)
Curtis Hanson, director with Kevin Spacey and Russell Crowe
DVD
VHS
-
Cop (1988)
James B. Harris, director with James Woods and Lesley Ann Warren
DVD
VHS
Like Hot Knives to the Brain: James Ellroy's Search for Himself
by Peter Wolfe (2006)
James Ellroy's prose, in many ways as complex as any
in the Western literary canon, strung together sensational stories of
crime and catastrophe. The significance of his writing to Western culture
has yet to be fully explored. Author Peter Wolfe offers us the first
book-length study of Ellroy in English.
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| Related Topics Click any of the following links for more information on similar topics of interest in relation to this page.
James Ellroy Is Listed As A Favorite Of (Alphabetical Order By First Name)
Austin S.
Camacho
Elliott
Mackle
Kim
Powers
Randall Peffer
James's Favorite Authors/Books (Alphabetical Order By First Name)
[As of x] TO BE DETERMINED |