Do what you gonna do. I ain't. You ain't gotta shoot nobody. All I'm saying is I like. I understand that,. Richard Price 23 February — 19 April was a British moral philosopher, nonconformist preacher and mathematician. He was also a political pamphleteer, active in radical, republican, and liberal causes such as the American Revolution.
He was well-connected and fostered communication between a large number of people, including several of the Founding Fathers of the United States. Price spent most of his adult life as minister of Newington Green Unitarian Church, on the outskirts of London. He also wrote on issues of demography and finance, and was a Fellow of the Royal Society. We're doing our best to make sure our content is useful, accurate and safe.
If by any chance you spot an inappropriate comment while navigating through our website please use this form to let us know, and we'll take care of it shortly. Forgot your password? Retrieve it. Sell your Screenplay ». Start writing now ». By Title. In Scripts. By Writer. Clockers Synopsis: Strike is a young city drug pusher under the tutelage of drug-lord Rodney Little, who, when not playing with model trains or drinking Moo for his ulcer, just likes to chill with his brothers near the benches outside the project houses.
When a night man at a fast-food restaurant is found with four bullets in his body, Strike's older brother turns himself in as the killer.
Genre: Crime , Drama , Mystery. I seem to be reading about cities, cops, thieves, black culture, crime and humans trapped in circumstances they cannot control. This book was not heroic in any sense, and far less stereotyped than others of its ilk LeHane, e. But it is the dialogue that really stands out as exceptional, building the characters into the true complex beings they are.
Book Clubbed. Stop being lonely and listen to the full review here. I tell my students in my worldbuilding class that once the rules are established, you have to play by them, and can only break them for a damn good reason. Price knows the rules of the game well both for drug dealers and corrupt cops and we explore them with characters representing each side of that coin, whose daily existence relies on navigating rules and hierarches more complicated than the British Royal Monarchy.
Loyalty is real and constantly checked, not just a word to throw on an Instagram caption. Although we all familiar with this genre, it really is worldbuilding with Price, every crackhead lovingly rendered, every abandoned lot containing its own person history, and every interaction between law enforcement and a drug dealer an exercise in gamesmanship. What Price captures here is what every good book in this genre captures, only at a higher frequency: the cops and criminals need each other.
Professionally, of course, but personally also. The familiarity breeds a begrudging respect and, at times, a fondness for one another, like two basketball players dapping up after a competitive series.
The familiarity also, at times, spills into gross abuses of violence and power. This is not a perfect book. The mystery is really just an excuse to explore the town and its cast of characters, as others have pointed out.
We are blitzed with a wide net of characters, which makes it hard to track every little subplot or grudge. And, occasionally, the details get tiresome, Price showing off his research a little too much, and not always in the service of the story.
The drugs change, the slang changes, the clothes change, but the story remains the same—this time evocatively rendered. This was one of my favorite books of the s.
Price had a lot of great insights in this work that could only have been the result of going out and being a witness to the world he was describing. As the great novelist once said, "You can't make this shit up.
Once a writer writes about writing, I stop reading. Price went out and found a great story. The human imagination is way over-rated in literature these days. They say that you have to write about what you know.
The problem is that a lot of novelists don't know anything and aren't willing to go out and learn something new. Clockers - the term refers to the low-level, hour drug slingers staked outside the projects - was written in , and takes place before then. Which is why it took me so long to figure out why the characters referred to the cops as "Furies. My disorientation has a point: this is a book that takes place in a world that most goodreads.
It's set in the fictional town of Dempsey, but is as real and bleak a look at the projects as you're likely to get. As far as I know, of course. I was born in Bloomington, Minnesota. You know what's dangerous about Bloomington? Stray hockey pucks from the Pee-Wees practicing on the rink.
Clockers is built around a murder, but it's not a murder mystery. You're pretty much told who did the killing, and the secret is why this person shot this other guy. In the end, the surprise is that there is no surprise. Which is life, I guess, but also a gyp in dramatic terms. Like Lush Life , though, the plot is not the point. It's the place. The people, the places, the dangerous and unending cat-and-mouse between cops, detectives, drug lords and clockers.
The story is told in chapters that switch between a detective's point of view Rocco and a clocker's point of view Strike. Rocco is the somewhat-dated archetype: the cop who still believes in the Job. He's burnt out, of course, and has an endearing habit of chugging vodka from his freezer before he goes to bed. Strike is the more interesting character: a young man who drinks a ton of Yoo-Hoo to mask his ulcer, who is unapologetic about his business yet equally scared of his boss than of the cops.
Strike is drawn into Rocco's world after Strike's brother, Victor, is apprehended for murder. Rocco doesn't think Victor did it; he's after Strike. Strike is oblivious to this, because he's got to deal with the terrifying and enigmatic Rodney, a drug kingpin who also happens to run a convenience store and who preaches paternally to his young clockers about saving for the future: buy real estate, not sneakers.
Strike also serves as reluctant mentor to young Tyrone, clocker-of-the-future, until he runs into the formidable force of Tyrone's mother. Clockers ran on too long. At least for me. I'm not adverse to plot-less books, if I'm enjoying the world I'm in. Here, though, I was as desperate to escape as any of the street thugs. Moreover, some of the goings-on were a waste of time. For instance, there is a ludicrous sub-plot about a filmmaker shadowing Rocco in order to prepare for his next movie.
This leads to Rocco harboring dreams of becoming an executive producer. In such a gritty tale, these proceedings have a shiny, plastic, sitcom feel. The whole thread could have been snipped. Overall, though, this is a heck of a read. Free as in Freedom 2. Freedomland by Richard Price. The Price of Salt by Claire Morgan.
The Wanderers by Richard Price. Lush Life by Richard Price. Your Comment:. Read Online Download. Hot Free as in Freedom 2. Great book, The Wanderers pdf is enough to raise the goose bumps alone. Add a review Your Rating: Your Comment:.
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