467 reviews for:

City on Fire

Don Winslow

4.01 AVERAGE


eh. i guess. this just never really sucked me in. if you are deep into the mob fiction scene, maybe this is your bag, but it was just so basic for me. a small slight leads to a gang war, sure, but its hit after predictable hit. not very engaging dialogue, and the blatant homophobia might be accurate for the character profile, it just didn’t sit well with me, like the storyteller was letting us in on the homophobia with a smirk and a shrug. it was also a little stereotype heavy for me.

Any new novel from Don Winslow - to my mind the greatest living crime writer - is always a major event. City on Fire, the first in a new trilogy, is right up there with his best.

A drunken grope at a beach party sparks off a bloody war between the Irish and Italian mobs in 1980s Providence, Rhode Island. We follow several characters, but largely Danny Ryan, a longshoreman and Irish mob debt collector whose father used to head up the business until the booze got hold of him. As the bodies start to pile up, Danny starts to rise in the organisation and has to dig deep into the darker parts of his soul to survive.

Winslow manages with this novel to both show us what makes him so great - his staccato style, his dialogue, his action - but also widens his repertoire with this move into writing about gang warfare. It's a seamless transition from his seminal Cartel trilogy and his earlier PI and beach noir novels.

Bloody, brutal, brilliant. This is the crime novel of the year. It would be the crime novel of any damn year. It's so, so good and I can't wait for part two.
dark mysterious sad tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

Hat mich die HBO-Erfolgsserie Sopranos im Bezug auf meine Vorstellungen von Mafia geprägt? Ja, und gerade nach der Leseprobe hatte ich das Gefühl, dieses Mal eine auf ihre Art eigene irische Variante der familiären und mafiösen Strukturen zu bekommen. Leider entpuppte sich das leider etwas als falsche Fährte.

In dem Auftakt seiner Dogtown-Trilogie - gleichzeitig der Abschluss seines Wirkens als Schriftstellers - führt uns Don Winslow in die Mafiastrukturen von Providence, Rhode Island. Alles ist irgendwie friedlich, die einzelnen Gangs gehen ihrem Alltagsgeschäft nach, bis aus einem fast schon banalen Fauxpax ein blutiger Krieg zwischen Iren und Italienern entfacht, der Danny vor ganz neue Herausforderungen stellt.

Im Grunde gefiel mir, was Winslow hier macht.
Gerade bei der Entwicklung seiner Charaktere nimmt er sich Zeit, liefert Hintergrundinformationen, fast schon kleine Biografien, die den entsprechenden Personen eine gewisse Tiefe verleihen. Da er sich nicht allein auf Dannys Perspektive konzentriert, hat der Roman etwas sehr episodenhaftes. Was sich an einigen Stellen als guter Coup herausstellt, lässt an anderen Stellen etwas zu sehr Kontext und Hintergrund vermissen.
Natürlich, als Leser:in sollte man sich sowohl auf die sehr vulgäre Sprache als auch auf die Vielzahl an brutaler Szenen einrichten. Allerdings verfällt Winslow hier nicht in den Gewaltporno, den andere Autor:innen dieses Milieus gerne erzeugen. Es bleibt auf seine Art kühl, fast schon distanziert, so ist das eben im Mafia-Milieu der 1980er Jahre, für mich passte es.

Auf inhaltlicher Ebene hat mich das Buch allerdings enttäuscht.
Natürlich ist es der Auftakt einer (bereits beendeten) Trilogie, hier darf und muss viel Zeit in den Aufbau und die Einführung gesteckt werden und das gelingt Winslow auch gut. Aber sollte selbst ein Auftaktband nicht trotzdem noch als alleinstehender Roman funktionieren? Sollte er nicht auch genug guten Stoff bieten, in dem selbst ich als Leser:in genug Potential für die Ausweitung in eine Trilogie sehe? Genau das fehlte mir hier leider über weite Strecken und tatsächlich interessiert mich, ob und vor allem wie es Winslow in seinen Folgebänden gelingt, hier noch die Kurve zu bekommen und den furiosen Abgang zu liefern, der die Trilogie ja sein soll.

Don, mate. Fucking hell, what a book.

Winslow has done it again - could not put it done - a great epic story - he gets it - and of course reading this Just as I have learned about a podcast about Providence and the mob. I just don’t know what it is about Winslow but you can hear every character speaking their dialect you can see them he’s an amazing rider – when will the movie come out? Consumed this book in 24 hours

I have always wanted to read a Don Winslow book, so when the Tandem Global Readalong for City on Fire was announced I jumped at the chance. My husband is a big fan of this author and assured me that I would be too. Happy to say that he was right and I am wondering why it took me so long to read him. Thankfully we have his others books on the bookshelves at home and I will be reading them soon.

Now, I am a terrible buddy reader, I make no secret of that. I really did try to keep pace on this one but I ended up finishing it in 3 nights. Once I started I couldn't stop reading. I was drawn into 1980's Rhode Island and the world of Danny Ryan. This is a character that I got emotionally attached to quite early on. He becomes the unofficial leader and the pressure of this as well as his family makes him a really interesting character.

The war began over a woman. Pam came into their lives and the work is turned upside down. The Italian's wage war on the Irish and it is violent! Some scenes won't be for everyone, but as a reader of dark and gritty crime books, I was there for it all.

This is a the start of a new trilogy by Don Winslow and I am already wanting more. It was great to chat about the story with my fellow Aussie read a long members. How we all had different takes on characters and situations.

This is a compelling and dark read, right up my alley. A big thanks to Harper Collins Australia and Tandem Global for having me along. Bring on Book 2

adventurous challenging dark emotional mysterious tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: No
dark emotional sad tense