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Paperback Ambrose Bierce and the One-Eyed Jacks Book

ISBN: 0142000140

ISBN13: 9780142000144

Ambrose Bierce and the One-Eyed Jacks

(Book #3 in the Ambrose Bierce Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Ambrose ?Bitter? Bierce, San Francisco's infamous and legendary newspaperman and sometime sleuth is hardly surprised to be hired by William Randolph Hearst when his mistress receives threats. In steamy Sausalito, the playground of the rich and famous across the bay, Hearst's isn't the only case on the boil. While Ambrose and his sidekick, Tom Redmond, hunt the killer of a hard-partying yachtsman, Tom becomes entangled with the queen of the Portuguese...

Customer Reviews

1 rating

Historical Detective Mystery & Good Entertainment

Oakley Hall is better known for more literary works like Warlock (New York Review Books Classics), but his series of historical mysteries featuring Ambrose Bierce should not be missed. If you do not know about Ambrose Bierce, then stop reading this and get a copy of The Unabridged Devil's Dictionary and then get a copy of Tales of Soldiers and Civilians (Classic Reprint). To say that he had a "sardonic view of human nature" as Wikipedia does is probably a bit too sunny. Think Mark Twain in his later days, but with the humor still intact. Anyway, it's 1891 and Bierce and our narrator Tom Redmond are working for Willie Hearst's San Francisco Examiner. When some naughty photographic plates of Hearst's girl go missing, they are dispatched to find and retrieve them. Two murders in Sausalito seem connected with the missing photo plates and the general debauchery rampant in town across the bay from the City. Hall also takes a poke at one of the darkest dark sides in American history. Redmond is covering Chinatown and its child slavery and prostitution and falling in love with the religious activist Eliza Lindley. The tong, of course, hate Lindley and take steps to stop her - when they aren't too busy fighting one another. Lindley's ally and successful lawyer "falls" down a staircase and breaks his neck. Redmond is on the spot when "highbinders" from the Feng yups tong assassinate the leader of the Sam yups in a scene that rings true. I disagree with other reviewers here, in particular that the plot is predictable - if anything, I would give demerits for the improbability of the way the story lines are tied together. And while Redmond is the main protagonist, Bierce is certainly more than a "very minor" character. Ambrose Bierce and the One-Eyed Jacks is an entertainment worthy of attention even if it does not rise above the level of its genre.
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