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Chasers

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the bestselling author of Sleepers and former writer/producer of Law & Order comes another high-octane New York City crime drama pulsing with energy. In Lorenzo Carcaterra’s Chasers, the street-smart and highly specialized cadre of renegade NYPD cops last depicted in his acclaimed novel Apaches returns in a new tale of action and suspense.
It’s 1985, and the city that never sleeps is about to wish it had stayed in bed. The heinous machine-gun murder of innocent bystanders in a Manhattan restaurant shocks all five boroughs. The brutal slaying propels the surviving members of the Apaches–controversial, take-’em-down, outside-the-law ex-cops–into investigating a Colombian drug cartel responsible for distributing millions of kilos of cocaine on American shores.
Along for the harrowing ride with Boomer, Dead-Eye, and Reverend Jim are three new Apaches: Ash, a wounded female Hispanic cop who specializes in arson investigations; Quincy, an HIV-positive recruit who’s a forensics expert; and a retired police dog named Buttercup, a Neapolitan bullmastiff who is no ordinary animal but a gold-shield detective, highly decorated for his skills at sniffing out illegal drugs. Now this dedicated team will become Chasers, working multiple cases that will converge into one explosive, all-out street war.
They will face a gallery of formidable enemies: Quinones, a mysterious and deadly assassin; the Boiler Man, a killer as ruthless as he is cunning; Angel, a former priest turned cartel boss, determined to end his career as the richest drug baron in the world; and the G-Men, a band of dealers and doers determined to maintain their iron grip on the cocaine trade–no matter how much blood is spilled.
Fueled by Lorenzo Carcaterra’s adrenaline-rush prose and peopled with uncommon heroes and merciless crime lords tearing through city streets, Chasers proves to be this acclaimed author’s most intense novel to date.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 2, 2007
      In the 1997 action thriller Apaches, Caraterra introduced ex-NYPD detective, Giovanni "Boomer" Frontieri, who brought together a band of cops, each forcibly retired due to a disability acquired on the job, to take down an insidious drug dealer. Now, three years later, Boomer has reassembled the two surviving members of his original crew in order to avenge the death of his niece, gunned downed during a drug-related hit. Joining the old guard are three newly damaged ex-officers (including a 125-pound Neapolitan bullmastiff named Buttercup), each looking for a bit of vigilante justice. When Boomer traces his niece's shooting to Angel, an ex-priest turned South American drug lord, he realizes the odds are stacked astronomically high against them, and reluctantly turns to some unexpected allies in organized crime. Apaches was a slam-bang ride gone full tilt on blood, bullets and bodies. Unfortunately, this bloated, overwritten sequel never captures the excitement of its predecessor, spinning its wheels with cardboard characters, testosterone-soaked dialogue and movie-style action sequences that defy physics and believability both.

    • Library Journal

      April 1, 2007
      Some exciting action sequences aren't enough to overcome the plodding start and constant melodrama in best-selling author Carcaterra's (Sleepers) latest effort. While this is not truly a sequel to his earlier Apaches, several characters do return from that novel to play prominent roles here. The chasers of the title refer to a group of ex-cops who miss the thrill of the chase. When one of the lead characters loses a niece to a gangland incident, he enlists several of his former officers to take down a leading drug kingpin. The story could have been interesting without too much dressing, but Carcaterra's writing at times is so earnest that it becomes unintentionally funny. The heartfelt speeches by some of the characters are often corny, and the drug-dealing baddies have backstories that we've read about a hundred times before. While this one might find readers owing to the author's popularity, it's not among his better efforts. For larger collections where Carcaterra's novels circulate.Craig Shufelt, Fort McMurray P.L., Alta.

      Copyright 2007 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2007
      A man, holding a cup of coffee, stares down at the body of a young girl at a crime scene. The man has absolutely no business there: he's wandered into the restaurant where the murder occurred--the scene has already been roped off--and starts chatting with one of the investigators. Anyone with even a scrap of knowledge about crime scenes will know instantly how utterly inexcusable this procedural lapse is, but it's the opening premise of Carcaterra's latest vigilante mystery. The little girl is the man's niece, giving a very tortured entry point for his involvement in the case, which leads to a Colombian drug cartel. The man is a former NYPD detective, now one of a renegade group of vigilant crime fighters introduced in Carcaterra's " Apaches" (1997). Like Burke in Andrew Vachss' series about another no-holds-barred vigilante, the Apaches, all former cops, fight a neverending war against crime, unburdened by the strictures of the legal system. This time, unfortunately, the improbability of the plot detracts significantly from the emotional impact of the story. Still, Carcaterra has amassed a significant following, stretching back to his critically celebrated debut, " Sleepers "(1995), and his latest will be eagerly awaited.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2007, American Library Association.)

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