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Snitch World

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In the new novel from noir master Jim Nisbet, the Snitch World in question is actually made up of different worlds both old and new, populated with the old-time petty criminals, like Chainbang and Klinger, but also with the modern, including a nouveau femme fatale whose tools of the criminal trade are from the new economy. Snitch World takes place in a San Francisco of menacing technology, where the old cons come up short and the crimes of the night turn into crimes done in the light of modern day—all from the glow of a smartphone. Klinger hangs out at the Hawse Hole Bar and Grille, a pretty bad dive where all he really wants is enough to have a cup of coffee, buy some cigarettes, make it through the day, and find a warm, dry place to sleep; all things that can be accomplished by the next easy grift. Little does Klinger know that the rules of the game have changed, and the stakes are higher than he could ever guess or care about. The seemingly simple act of rolling a drunk begins a series of events that get stranger and more complicated by the moment. Jim Nisbet, with his characteristic humor and brilliant prose, creates a world where to trust is to possibly sacrifice all. Snitch World includes a recent interview with Jim Nisbet, in conversation with Patrick Marks, owner of the Green Arcade, talking about writing, publishing, and technology.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 5, 2013
      A missing smartphone filled with high-tech secrets spells trouble for small-time San Francisco grifter Klinger in Nisbet’s low-key thriller, something of a companion novel to 2012’s Old and Cold, about a homeless San Francisco hit man. All Klinger wants to do is sit in the Hawse Hole bar and drink the days away, swapping stories with fellow patrons. But he’s got the phone, and an aggressive Silicon Valley femme fatale, Marci, wants it. “‘I’ve never had an orgasm,’ she suddenly announced.” To which Klinger replies: “There’s probably an app for that.” The plot is as much about displacement as it is tech spying, as the latest dot-com boom makes the city more and more unaffordable. Klinger, barely able to cover a few days in a flophouse, is a textbook noir protagonist faced with economic and personal doom. Fans of the movies Detour and Barfly will identify.

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2013
      Klinger describes himself as a resident of San Francisco's asteroid belt of petty crime and criminals, never making the big score but never doing time in the state's prison system. He's bright and affable visiting his San Franciscochic former lover, who has quit her day job, thanks to a phone app she wrote. But the $100 she gives him sends him right back to the Hawse Hole, a Tenderloin dive, where he drinks himself into oblivion doing mental arithmetic to estimate how long his money will last. A botched mugging tosses him in the path of Marci, another sexy, San Franciscochic app shark who is obsessed with the big score and happy to make Klinger the fall guy. Nisbet, who has a cult following (Windward Passage, 2010), alludes insightfully to the dualities of America's favorite city. Fortyish, homeless, alcoholic petty criminals colliding with well-educated, well-off, amoral, twentysomething grifters doesn't completely strain credulity. The Hawse Hole and its regulars are fascinating. But occasionally Nisbet's rhetorical flights, which begin thoughtfully and gracefully, go on too long and begin to seem like bafflegab.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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