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Only Child (Burke Series #14) by Andrew Vachss — book cover

Only Child (Burke Series #14)

by Andrew Vachss
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Overview

It’s been years since Burke has been home, years since he’s seen his “family” and worked in the underbelly of New York City. Although his appearance has changed, his reputation grown dusty and his wallet thin, his skills and his crew remain razor sharp. So when he is contacted by a mob boss to investigate the murder of his illegitimate daughter, Vonni, Burke takes the job and begins searching for an unspeakably brutal killer.

Posing as a casting director looking for tomorrow’s stars, Burke reaches out to the high school students who knew Vonni, and may know the identity of the killer. Before long he unearths a perverse enterprise—a young director pursuing a brutal new type of cinema verité.

Synopsis

After years on the run, Burke is desperate to return to his native New York, the only way he can reconnect with his outlaw family. But to survive in their part of the City, where reputation is everything, Burke must take major risks to reestablish his presence.

Publishers Weekly

"Sherlock Holmes is dead," intones Giovanni, a New York Mafia boss who hires street criminal Burke-who's made a career of killing child murderers and molesters-to solve the murder of his illegitimate teenage daughter, Vonni. Indeed, the whole Vachss oeuvre (this is the 14th novel to feature the avenging angel Burke) is a reminder that Conan Doyle's fictional sleuth would be clueless in the violent, sordid world of today's hard-boiled mystery. Burke doesn't search for clues so much as extort them by combining street smarts, his formidable intelligence and a deeply rooted outrage at the victimization of the young. Burke's fans will be delighted that he's returned to his home turf-the gritty back streets of New York City-where he's welcomed into the bosom of his ragtag band of delinquent colleagues. The novel has a compelling plot line (like a police procedural without the police), but the narrative is far from seamless. There are a couple of false starts as Burke searches for something to occupy his time, and the references to earlier novels will probably baffle newcomers. More seriously, the elaborate ruse Burke executes to identify and trap the killer is barely credible. But the noirish prose (a man's eyes are "the color of old dimes") is a pleasure, and Burke is an antihero of the old school. Though it doesn't break new artistic ground for Vachss, the book is another harrowing glimpse of the urban underworld from an author who clearly knows his terrain and whose sympathy for the truly innocent-the children-is unstinting. (Oct. 14) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

About the Author, Andrew Vachss

Andrew Vachss is a lawyer who represents children and youths exclusively. His many novels and two collections of short stories have been translated into twenty languages, and his work has appeared in Parade, Esquire, Playboy, and The New York Times, among other publications. A native New Yorker, he divides his time between the city of his birth and the Pacific Northwest.

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Editorials

From Barnes & Noble

"Starting a Vachss novel," says the Rocky Mountain News, "is like putting a vial of nitroglycerine into your pocket and going for a jog." In this jagged escapade, Burke returns to New York to suck out the truth about the slaying of a mobster's 16-year-old daughter. To extract answers, he must first descend into a sordid world where filmmaking is twisted into pain.

Publishers Weekly

"Sherlock Holmes is dead," intones Giovanni, a New York Mafia boss who hires street criminal Burke-who's made a career of killing child murderers and molesters-to solve the murder of his illegitimate teenage daughter, Vonni. Indeed, the whole Vachss oeuvre (this is the 14th novel to feature the avenging angel Burke) is a reminder that Conan Doyle's fictional sleuth would be clueless in the violent, sordid world of today's hard-boiled mystery. Burke doesn't search for clues so much as extort them by combining street smarts, his formidable intelligence and a deeply rooted outrage at the victimization of the young. Burke's fans will be delighted that he's returned to his home turf-the gritty back streets of New York City-where he's welcomed into the bosom of his ragtag band of delinquent colleagues. The novel has a compelling plot line (like a police procedural without the police), but the narrative is far from seamless. There are a couple of false starts as Burke searches for something to occupy his time, and the references to earlier novels will probably baffle newcomers. More seriously, the elaborate ruse Burke executes to identify and trap the killer is barely credible. But the noirish prose (a man's eyes are "the color of old dimes") is a pleasure, and Burke is an antihero of the old school. Though it doesn't break new artistic ground for Vachss, the book is another harrowing glimpse of the urban underworld from an author who clearly knows his terrain and whose sympathy for the truly innocent-the children-is unstinting. (Oct. 14) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Burke, that sworn enemy of child-abusers, is back for the 13th time (Pain Management, 2001, etc.) doing business as the same old scourge. Well, not quite, inasmuch as Giovanni Antrelli, though a family man in his own way, represents something of a departure among Burke's clients. Giovanni is a rising star in the Mafia firmament, with all the hard-guy credentials that title implies. But he's hurting, furious, and just a little worried. Sixteen years ago, he had a daughter with a beautiful black woman, an indiscretion that was such an obvious Mafia career-breaker that he separated from paramour and progeny and kept their existence a deeply buried secret. It's been disinterred, he tells Burke, by someone presumably as ruthless as himself, for now the child is suddenly dead. In his own distorted way, Giovanni loved the girl he never set eyes on, but that's not really the issue. He has to know if some implacable enemy has chosen this grotesque way of getting his attention. Why does he think Burke can supply the answer he needs? Everyone who operates in the dark underbelly that's Burke's New York has heard about him, says Giovanni, adding rather enigmatically that Burke "knows the value of things." Burke certainly knows the monetary value of this particular thing. Stone-broke, he assembles the usual cast of Burke irregulars and grabs the assignment. Vintage Vachss, with hell-for-leather pacing propelling the story over gaping plot holes.

Book Details

Published
October 1, 2003
Publisher
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Pages
304
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781400030989

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