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Hardcover Everybody Kills Somebody Sometime Book

ISBN: 0312338627

ISBN13: 9780312338626

Everybody Kills Somebody Sometime

(Book #1 in the Rat Pack Mysteries Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

"FRANK SINATRA and DEAN MARTIN never knew how much trouble they were in until Robert J. Randisi stepped onto the scene. A gem of a read "-SUE GRAFTON, author of S Is for Silence Frank Sinatra, Dean... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Frank, Mo Mo, and JFK.

The long and the short of it is that some Clyde is sending threatening notes to Dean Martin. Dean is in town (the town being Las Vegas, 1960) with Frank, Sammy, Joey, and Peter to film the original OCEAN'S 11. Concerned for his friend's safety, Ol' Blue Eyes approaches Jack Entratter, the operator of the Sands, for help. Jack puts Frank onto Eddie Gianelli, a former Brooklyn street kid-turned CPA-now-turned pit boss, who knows everybody on The Strip. As soon as Eddie G. starts asking questions, the bodies start piling up. After he's roughed up by a couple of torpedoes, Eddie starts taking it all very personally, and delves into his investigation with the passion (if not the professionalism) of Hercule Poirot. Prolific thriller writer Robert J. Randisi has written a humorous and affectionate homage to the Era of the Rat Pack and to the vanished Sin City of the Fifties, where goombahs, celebrities, and everyday people lost fortunes, made fortunes and rubbed shoulders. Bright and breezy though he is, Randisi is still writing Genre Noir and doesn't shy away from the drugs, hookers and shady deals that made (or make) up the seedy side of Las Vegas, but he doesn't obsess on them either. He is unsparing of the racism of the time: the outrage of some toward Sammy Davis Jr.'s impending marriage to Swedish actress May Britt, the mockery of Davis' Judaism, the disdain shown by white cops to a black detective, and the institutionalized segregation of Vegas are all mentioned in brief and summarily dismissed as ignorant by the diamond-in-the-rough Eddie, who blends with Casino owners, hitmen, showgirls, and The Boys quite comfortably, no matter what. The Rat Pack and Friends (with cameo appearances by George Raft and then-Senator Jack Kennedy) move sparklingly across these pages. EVERYBODY KILLS SOMEBODY SOMETIME is a great poolside read. Brief, snappy chapters move the story right along. Just about as light and fluffy as a murder mystery can be, EVERYBODY KILLS SOMEBODY SOMETIME drips with ambience and that ring-a-ding-ding good feeling of the time. The first in a new series, this little novel is a time capsule. Climb in and be transported.

You can almost hear ole Dean singing

Hey pallies! It's time to take a trip down memory lane to the glory days of the 1960's Sin City and go on a caper with the coolest cats who ever dunked their toes in the Sands Hotel and Casino swimming pool. Yep, mystery writer Robert J. Randisi has started a new series featuring Las Vegas' beloved Rat Pack with Everybody Kills Somebody Sometime. The boys (Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis, Jr., Peter Lawford, and Joey Bishop) are in town to film their first movie together, Ocean's 11. But before filming starts, the guys are having a blast taking the Sands by storm with their on and offstage hijinks. As the title indicates, Dean Martin is the cat with the problem. Frank Sinatra asks Sands boss Jack Entratter for some helping trying to figure out who is sending death threats to Dino. Jack calls in pit boss Eddie Gianelli, better known everyone in Vegas as Eddie G. Although the guys know Eddie G., Eddie is just another clyde ("clyde was Rat Pack-ese for anyone who wasn't part of their group.") but he's wired into everything that happens in Vegas. Eddie gets a leave of absence to play gumshoe--and that's when the fists begin to fly. Before all is said and done Eddie takes a savage beating and the bodies start to pile up. Everybody Kills Somebody Sometime is a homage to the Rat Pack, an illustration of how star-struck our society is, including a social commentary on the racial period of the time, with a mystery thrown in for good measure. It's a wonderful take-me-to-the-pool read that sure to bring smiles to those old enough to remember the Pack's antics and a history of those hard partying days and nights. Robert J. Randisi is the author of the Nick Delvecchio and Miles Jacoby series. He is the founder and executive director of the Private Eye Writers of America, the creator of the Shamus Award, and the cofounder of Mystery Scene magazine. Armchair Interviews says: In case you didn't get the play on words for the title, one of Dean Martin's biggest hits was "Everybody Loves Somebody Sometime"--and you'll love this book!

This was one swingin' tale of mystery

I don't understand how this got by me when it was first published.... but I'm glad I found it here. Its a terrific tale of the Rat Pack at the apex of their fame in Vegas -- and the mystery ain't bad either.

The "Rat Pack" needs some help?

Eddie G. is a pit boss at the Sands Casino back in the 60's, when the Rat Pack was filming the original Ocean's 11. He isn't connected, although he works for people who are. Eddie is dumfounded when Frank Sinatra wants to see him; he goes, as anybody would. Frank wants Eddie to find out who has been sending threatening letters to Dean Martin. Frank thinks Eddie has his pulse on the wrist of Las Vegas. That's truer than not. In the course of trying to do Frank a favor, Eddie stumbles across two dead showgirls, a dead man, and his car gets blown up. Somewhere along the line Eddie decides that this is not all coincidence, no matter what he thought at first. EVERYBODY KILLS SOMEBODY SOMETIME is a fairly light-hearted romp through the semi-innocent Las Vegas of almost fifty years ago. Yes, the Mob was there. It seems, at least in retrospect, far less interested in hard drugs and sex than in gambling and recreational drugs. Eddie G. is a likeable guy, doing a favor for an idol, who gets in a little over his head. He's a stubborn guy from Brooklyn, and he's made a commitment. He sees it through, and has some interesting times in the process. Randisi does a commendable job of keeping the "real" people believable without having them overwhelm the story. This would have been a perfectly good novel had he used fictional characters instead, but the flavor would have been probably grimmer. The plot works, which is no surprise given Randisi's previous books. All in all, EVERYBODY KILLS SOMEBODY SOMETIME is an enjoyable trip into the past, with characters familiar to us and a detective we can admire.

lighthearted homage to a bygone era

In 1960 Vegas at the Sands Hotel and Casino, Joey "Mascot" Bishop tells pit boss Eddie Gianelli that the Chairman of the Board Frank needs a favor from him. Eddie G, being from Brooklyn, fears Frank's reported connections back in Jersey so he declines. However, Eddie G's boss Jack Entratter suggests quite strongly he takes care of whatever Frank Sinatra wants. Eddie G meets Frank in the special Rat Pack steam room at the Sands. Frank says that who ever he talked to on the street, in any casino, or during the filming of Ocean's 11, everyone agrees if you need something in Vegas see Eddie G. Franks is concerned that his pal Dino is receiving death threats. With waitress Beverly as his date, Eddie G goes back stage after a Rat Pack performance where he meets Dean Martin and learns about the death threat messages. Eddie G asks his friend from New York private investigator Danny Bardini to help him uncover who is threatening Dino. A beating, several adulations, and a homicide has Eddie G reeling as someone wants to harm him for interfering with the Dean Martin affair. Targeting the baby boomers who will recognize the original Rat Pack, Robert J. Randisi pays homage to Frank, Dino, Sammy, and Joey; other card carrying members like Peter Lawford are treated as minor hanger-ons. The mystery takes a back seat to the celebrities as Mr. Randisi and Eddie G don't hide their fan reverence especially towards Frank and Dino. Fans will enjoy seeing a different perspective on Frank and Dino in this lighthearted homage to a bygone era (Sands was torn down in 1996). Harriet Klausner
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