When we left Joe
Coughlin at the end of Live By Night, he'd worked his way up to the
top of Tampa's gangland, but lost his beloved wife Graciela in a
shootout. He seemed ready to take his son and head for a quieter life
in Cuba. But when World Gone By opens World War II is on, and Joe is
of almost respectability in Tampa society, removed from the
day-to-day of the gangster life while acting as the consigliore to
the family headed by his old friend Dion Bartolo. But life will not
stay quiet.
The war has taken
many of the best soldiers who did the mobsters business, and a sort
of chaos is brewing, sparked, Joe and Dion think, by an informer
within their organisation. Joe's private life is about to get
complicated; he's carrying on a dangerous affair, and he's informed,
by a hit woman looking to stay safe in prison, that there is a
contract out on him. But who would want to kill Joe Coughlin, whom
everyone respects and nobody seems to hate? And he's started seeing a
ghost.
You may recall
Coughlin as a young boy, in The Given Day, where his father was a
bigshot in the Boston police and his older brother was working his
way up the blue ladder. But none of that was for Joe, and what Dennis
Lehane's novel is about is the lure of the gangster life, Joe's
inability to leave it behind, and the impossibility of squaring its
twisted morality with that of the 'straight' world. 'Our thing' may
swear by family, but as Joe knows all too well, his read family has
paid a huge price to the other family whose life he so enjoys.
On the one hand,
this is a fast-moving thriller. Who is trying to destroy the
Bartolo-Coughlin good thing? Who wants Joe dead? And as Joe moves
between a series of bad and worse men, you see the crack widening
between his personal world outside the business and the business
itself. And then slamming together very tightly. Within the pace of
the plotting, some of this is Lehane's best writing: any number of
chapters could literally stand alone as short stories (see 'Bone
Valley' or 'Names On The Wind' as examples), and the punch line of
'Names On The Wind', in which a black gangster kills the man sent to
kill him, who has just that day become a father, is telling: 'Who
knows if you would have been any good at it?'.
It's like riding a
car, which is under control, but just barely, because the driver
knows what he is doing, but you know you are headed for a crash. In
the end, it's as if Lehane himself is as much in love with the
gangster life as Joe Coughlin is, only he's detached enough to see a
bigger picture, a picture which includes ghosts. It is a marvellous
feat to be able to write a sequel that at first seems to be a lesser
version of its predecessor, and then turns out to be both simpler but
more profound.
World Gone By by
Dennis Lehane
Little,Brown £16.99
ISBN 9781408706695
NOTE: This review
will also appear at Crime Time (www.crimetime.co.uk)
This is a trilogy you MUST read in order, because it is a chronological history of one man's journey in life.
ReplyDeleteBravo, Mr. Lehane. Your talent is staggering.