by sunny » Fri Mar 03, 2006 1:12 pm 
			
			Steve, thanks for reminding me of Vachss! I googled him and  I think I'll revisit his work, now that I'm older and a little more "hard-boiled" myself.<br><br>Read this review of his book <!--EZCODE ITALIC START--><em>Two Trains Running</em><!--EZCODE ITALIC END-->.(Not a Burke book) It has a lot of info on the man himself. (pronounced "Vax" btw)<br><br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.newyorkmetro.com/nymetro/arts/books/12000/">www.newyorkmetro.com/nyme...oks/12000/</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br>Author-investigator Andrew Vachss’s crusades on behalf of abused children—both in life and in fiction—have earned the native New Yorker a reputation that’s equal parts Curtis Sliwa and James Ellroy (with a little Charles Bronson thrown in). For decades, he’s been a triple threat against child exploitation: a lawyer-prosecutor representing victims, a controversial investigator of abuse, and a writer of potboilers in which a P.I. named Burke avenges said atrocities. But his new thriller, Two Trains Running (Pantheon; $25), is no Burke book. A sweeping fifties gangster novel with shadings of Dashiell Hammett, it’s not just a departure from Vachss’s lifelong fixation, it’s also his first real foray into serious literature.<br><br><br><br>Vachss has called the early potboilers his “Trojan horse,” a hollow vessel for a single social issue. But Two Trains Running is more ambitious—although it also includes plenty of Da Vinci Code–style paranoiac apocrypha, like the notion that the FBI gave Al Capone syphilis. “This is my Sunday punch,” Vachss explains. “I worked years and years on this sucker. Everything else was laser shots, very hyperfocused. Here, I wanted to write a book that’s not just a real fast river but has a very strong undercurrent. If you don’t understand that, you’re just a passenger on a raft.”<br><br><br><br>Vachss’s career has been a bit of a Sunday punch itself. Starting out as a federal investigator into venereal disease, Vachss soon set his sights on fighting child abuse and went solo, working cases out of a Chinese restaurant. Ten years later, he began writing about Burke—partly to finance his unusual job as a freelance prosecutor. Vachss’s vigilante anti-heroes take a rather visceral approach to the outrages they witness (one character made a meal of pedophiles’ blood), but the lawyer himself has been considerably more restrained—and more effective. His work led to Clinton’s landmark National Child Protection Act.<br><br>edited to add another excerpt from:<br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.rambles.net/vachss_2trains05.html">www.rambles.net/vachss_2trains05.html</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br>Andrew Vachss has always been an important novelist, and with Two Trains Running he becomes a major one. The advance word on this new stand-alone novel was that it was Vachss' take on Red Harvest, reimagining Hammett's concept of a small American city torn between several corrupt forces, with the protagonist acting as the fuse that sets the events in violent motion. The comparison is valid, but only a small part of the story. <br><br>While Hammett's novel was a brilliant miniature of corruption in 1920s America, Vachss uses a far larger canvas and a wider palette of colors. His true subject is nothing less than how America came to be what it is today as a result of what happened in the pivotal year of 1959, when his story takes place. As rival gangland factions gather and clash over the future of Locke City, so do other larger, more entrenched and no less corrupt forces clash over the future of the country itself. In the center stands the protagonist, Walker Dett ("a debt walking," as Vachss calls him in recent interviews). Dett functions as a passenger on both "trains," the express running on the Locke City plotline, and the slower but more powerful engine bearing the country itself to a future formed as we watch. <br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> <p></p><i>Edited by: <A HREF=http://p216.ezboard.com/brigorousintuition.showUserPublicProfile?gid=sunny@rigorousintuition>sunny</A> at: 3/3/06 10:15 am<br></i>