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Naked Moon (North Beach Mysteries) - Hardcover

 
9780312364540: Naked Moon (North Beach Mysteries)
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Set in San Francisco in the crumbling vestiges of Italian North Beach, Domenic Stansberry’s latest novel plunges once again into the noir underworld of Dante Mancuso. This new installment of Stansberry’s critically acclaimed series, Naked Moon, unearths a past Mancuso had hoped to escape. Before becoming a private investigator, Dante worked for a secret corporate security firm---known simply as the company---that prized effectiveness over legality. When Dante left, it was not on good terms. So he made sure to take enough inside information to keep himself safe from reprisal.

Dante, however, has his own secrets; for example, he doesn’t ask his cousin Gary questions about how he keeps the family warehousing business---the one where Dante is a silent partner---in the black, while everyone else’s has failed. When SFPD Detective Leanora Chin starts asking questions, Gary turns to the company for help, which they’re willing to provide, so long as Dante agrees to settle his past debts by doing them one last favor: the type of favor that could drag him under for good.

Edgar Award winner Domenic Stansberry is one of the most talented crime novelists working today. His novels are dark, lyrical, and widely acclaimed, and Naked Moon is no exception as it captures the sense of dread, paranoia, and quiet despair that cling to a man and a part of a city living on borrowed time.

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About the Author:

DOMENIC STANSBERRY’s previous novels include The Confession, an Edgar Award winner; The Last Days of Il Duce, an Edgar Award and Hammett Prize finalist; and most recently, The Ancient Rain, a Shamus Award Finalist. He lives with his family in the San Francisco Bay area.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.:
ONE
Dante Mancuso lay on the dead woman’s bed, listening to the alley. The previous tenant, an old woman, had collapsed on the stairs of the hotel some days before, but the room had not been cleaned out. Her spotted dishes were in the drainboard, and an unfinished meal in the refrigerator. This part of town, management was not concerned with such details. Ultimately, neither was Dante. He had other reasons for being here. No matter the dead woman’s reading glasses rested on the bed stand, next to his revolver, and her clothes still hung in the closet.
He picked up the gun and eased toward the window.
Pigeons scuttered and cooed along the sill, and so he moved cautiously. He didn’t want to rile the birds or call attention to his form behind the tattered sheers.
The hotel stood just off Portsmouth Square, in Chinatown, and noise from the square echoed down the narrow alley. It traveled oddly, so that individual sounds—coughing, footsteps, snatches of talk—were unnaturally distinct yet somehow disembodied, their origins hard to trace. At the same time, he could hear one of Ching Lee’s rally trucks. The mayoral candidate had a number of such vehicles working the neighborhood: old Fords, loudspeakers planted on the hood, rollicking in Chinese.
For a moment it sounded as if this truck were right out front, then no ... maybe Stockton Street....
It was hard to tell how close ... how far....
But through all that noise, he had heard, he was all but certain, the clanging of an iron gate.
Dante Mancuso had checked in the night before, but he hadn’t given his real name. The hotel was nameless, or rather had too many names for any of them to be useful. An engraving in the cornerstone called it the Fortunato Building—named after some Italian immigrant, long since forgotten—but the fading lettering on the side entrance called it the Three Prosperities.
Meanwhile, a sign hung from the side corner, Chinese writing, neon, glass broken, shattered in such a way that the underlying ideogram—whatever it might have been—was no longer decipherable.
There was no front desk, in the traditional sense, just a clerk in the gimcrack shop below, in what used to be the building’s lobby. The clerk had given him a stamped receipt with no information other than the date, and even that was not legible.
In his other life—his real life, as it might be called—Dante lived not so far away, just the other side of Columbus, in what remained of the Italian neighborhood. He had made his way over to the hotel by means of an elaborate dodge, but in the end he had no idea if the ruse had worked. It might have been wiser to take up residence at someplace more distant, but he first had an errand to run and needed to be here, in Chinatown, within striking distance of the Wu Benevolent Association.
Rumor had it that Teng Wu, the founder of the association, still lived in the upper story. Or Love Wu, as the man was known.
Other rumors had it Wu died long ago.
Now a large pigeon flew onto the sill, scattering the smaller birds. Dante stood behind the sheers, peering down, gun in hand. The sky was still blue and brilliant overhead—too blue, it seemed, too brilliant. Closer down, dusk had gathered in the alley and the shadows darkened. Emerging from these shadows was the figure of an old Cantonese, who by some special arrangement had a key to the iron gate and lived at the end of the alley.
The alley led back behind the tenement, growing narrower with each turn, eventually ending in a patch of pavement, a dead end, cloistered in on three sides by brick buildings. The Chinaman kept his bedroll there, and a small cookstove, and a container of food with a plastic top to keep out the rats.
Earlier, exploring the alley, Dante had come across the old man at the end of the alley in the lotus position, meditating, humming one of those low Buddhist chants that was like a noise from the center of the earth.
Aside from the alley—which offered no real exit—there were two other ways out of the hotel. One down a narrow set of stairs that opened onto Grant. The other by means of a wide staircase that descended into the gimcrack shop below.
Dante had come here dressed like a workingman who had suffered some bad luck, self-inflicted or otherwise. Pants too big, loose at the hips, fabric worn and shiny at the knees. A gray work shirt buttoned to the collar. He looked like himself but not himself. He also wore sunglasses and a painter’s cap. At a glance, he fit in well enough—his expression was drawn, and he had the hunched look of a convict. But his face gave a lie to the whole thing. He was still recognizable up close, if for no other reason than his nose.
The large Italian nose—from his mother’s side—dignified or absurd, depending upon how you viewed things.
A nose like Caesar, his grandmother used to say. Like some long-dead Italian pope. Like Pinocchio, trapped inside the belly of a fish.
The joke in the middle of this face.
He stripped off his clothes and lay back down in the dead woman’s bed, listening. He had not slept much the last few days and did not know if he would ever sleep again. He carried a vial of amphetamines in his pocket but yearned for sleep.
He had a longing in him he could not describe. He was thinking of the dead. He was thinking of the old-timers who had walked these streets before. The Irish dead and the Italian dead and the German Jews, all with their demon smiles and fat suspenders, fresh from the two-dollar whore-house that used to be around the corner from the Hall of Justice, on the other side of the square, before they’d torn down the station and the morgue and moved it all South of Market. A cement-colored hotel stood there now, towering over the men playing mah-jongg.
Dante was thinking of the life he had not meant to live, but lived anyway. Of the people he had helped along into the land of the dead.
Of people he himself had killed and those whom he had caused to be killed. He was thinking of his cousin, the fool, lying on the floor with the big gash around his neck. Of his boss at the agency, Jake Cicero. And of a woman in a white dress. He imagined her in a place far away. A place that was like this place, but not like here. Foreign tongues and the smell of tropical flowers, and dark alleys that opened into a sunlit plaza underneath a church with high spires. Behind his closed eyes the woman emerged from one of those alleys into the plaza, standing in her white dress at the stairs at the foot of the church.
Meanwhile, overhead, that same sky ... too blue ... too beautiful....
There was no escape.
If he did not run their errand, if he refused, his old friends would kill him. But he knew, too, on the other hand, if he cooperated, once the errand was done, they had no intention of letting him walk away.
He had a third alternative.
He could flee.
He had lived underground, and he could get another identity. He could hide indefinitely. But even if he were able to hide, the same was not true of the woman in the white dress.
They would find her. And he would die another kind of death.
Excerpted from Naked Moon by .
Copyright © 2008 by Frances Dinkelspiel.
Published in January 2010 by Minotaur Books.
All rights reserved. This work is protected under copyright laws and reproduction is strictly prohibited. Permission to reproduce the material in any manner or medium must be secured from the Publisher.

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  • PublisherMinotaur Books
  • Publication date2010
  • ISBN 10 0312364547
  • ISBN 13 9780312364540
  • BindingHardcover
  • Edition number1
  • Number of pages304
  • Rating

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