The internationally acclaimed author of the L.A. Quartet and The
Underworld USA Trilogy, James Ellroy, presents another literary noir
masterpiece of historical paranoia.
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.