America was never innocent.
Thus begins the Underworld U.S.A. Trilogy. It's James Ellroy's pop
history of the 1960s, his window-peeper's view of government misconduct,
his dirty trickster's take on the great events of an incendiary era.
It's a tour de force of the American idiom, and an acknowledged
masterpiece. **
**
American Tabloid gives us Jack Kennedy's ride, seen from an insider's
perspective. We're there for the rigged 1960 election. We're there for
the Bay of Pigs fiasco. We're the eyes and ears and souls of three rogue
cops who've signed on for the ride and come to see Jack as their
betrayer. We're Jack's pimps and hatchet men, and we're there for that
baroque slaying in Dallas.
The Cold Six Thousand takes us from Dallas to Vietnam to Memphis to
the kitchen of the Ambassador Hotel in L.A. We're rubbing shoulders with
RFK and MLK, calamitous klansmen, noted mafiosi. We're forced to relive
the American sixties--and we come away breathless.
The first two books of the Underworld U.S.A. Trilogy revisit the most
anarchic decade in our history. They are defined by their brutal
linguistic flair and reckless panache.