Fresh Kills
Synopsis
With his wife Maxine out of town, Artie Cohen is
alone in Manhattan when his nephew Billy Farone is released for a
couple of weeks from the young offenders' institution where he has
been since he stabbed Heshey Shank to death. Artie is the one Billy
wants to come home to, the only person Billy cares about, the man
Billy wants to be.
Now a handsome, intelligent and funny boy of fourteen, Billy seems to be cured,
to be free of whatever it was – sickness, evil – that made him kill
Shank. Artie believes, wants desperately to believe, that Billy is OK. But from
the moment a small plane crashes on to the beach at Coney Island, bombs go off
in London, and New York is shaken out of the sense that the bad times are over,
Artie begins to wonder. There are signs that Heshey Shank's family want Billy
locked up for good. And Billy's mother doesn't want him coming home.
Then bodies begin to appear and Artie, up against a brick wall of his own hope
and despair, doesn't know what or whom to believe …
Praise for Fresh Kills:
“this is much more than a murder mystery and is satisfying on many levels. like a journey to a distant land, it is an account of family rivalries and messy affairs in the violent and russified part of New York that few outsiders understand—except Artie.”
Paul Theroux
“Artie Cohen is the detective New York deserves: smart, wounded, emotional, haunted, and not as tough as he thinks. Reggie Nadelson’s Cohen books get better and better.”
Salman Rushdie




